The Christian Culture Diploma was first begun in 1976 in the Vidyalankara Mandapaya which was the former name of the present day University of Kelaniya. It was started as a course affiliated to the Department of Pali and Buddhist Studies and the position of the Department Head was held by Prof. W.S.Karunaratne.
At the very beginning, three female students and a Catholic Priest applied for this course for the academic year which started from May 1976. When the courses lacked the required number of students, a second intake was made in which there were six Buddhist Priests and another three female students for the Christian Culture Course. Accordingly the first batch of the BA Special Degree in Christian Culture was commenced in 1977 and the students who obtained the best results in at the first year examination were selected for this Special Degree.
The degree programmes such as Arabic and Islamic Culture and Tamil and Hindu Culture were moved to the University of Peradeniya in the academic year 1980/ 81. As a result of that some members of the staff and the undergraduates of the Department of Western Classics was joined the University of Peradeniya. Subsequently the course was offered by a new department called "Classical Studies" merged with the Christian Culture Course of which the Department Head position was chaired by Dr. Anthony Fernando. Since then, the Head of the Department position was held by the lecturers based on seniority, representing both the subjects. The former Heads are;
Professor Antony Fernando
Reverend Dr. Nihal Abeysinghe
Professor Kamani Jayasekera
Professor Shirley Lal Wijesinghe
Senior Lecturer Mrs. Isha Gamlath
Senior Lecturer Mrs. Neeta Lowe
Senior Lecturer Mr. Wijith Rohan Fernando
The aim and objective of the department is to produce students of a higher intellectual quality with a human understanding and outlook of issues to enable them to observe beyond the surface. This is mainly done through the analytical and critical study of the classics and its environment in which it flourished. In addition to that we expect to produce employable graduates of a higher intellectual quality who are able to develop deep into the mystery of being human while living socially through the application of scientific methods developed by human and social sciences.
The department aims to train employable and socially responsible graduates in Christian Studies and Classical Culture by strengthening their analytical, communication, research, and cultural interpretation skills for professional and community engagement.
Think critically and interpret culture through Christian Studies and Classical traditions
Communicate with confidence in academic, professional, and public settings
Conduct meaningful research in religious and cultural studies
Understand society and context to engage with real-world issues
Lead with ethics and responsibility in their careers and communities