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Pages in category "Alumni of Ladies' College, Colombo" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. D.
Hameed Al Husseinie College: First Muslim Boys' School in Sri Lanka 15 November 1884 Sri Lanka Muslim Society Western: Colombo: Colombo: Colombo: National: Kiriella Central College 1885 Sabaragamuwa Ratnapura Ratnapura Kiriella National Southlands College, Galle: Girls' High School: 1885 [e] Wesleyan Methodist Mission: Southern: Galle: Galle ...
Ladies' College is a private girls' school in Cinnamon Gardens, Colombo, Sri Lanka, founded on behalf of the Church Missionary Society by Lilian Nixon in 1900. The school is managed by the Anglican Church of Ceylon , and falls under the Diocese of Colombo .
Methodist Girls' High School (Tamil: மெதடிஸ்ட் பெண்கள் உயர்தரப் பாடசாலை Metaṭisṭ Peṇkaḷ Uyartarap Pāṭacālai, also known as Methodist Girls' College) is a provincial school in Point Pedro, Sri Lanka.
Wariyapola Sri Sumangala College, Kandy 1AB 3500 Kandy Gangawata Korale Sri Rahula College, Kandy: 1AB 2362 Kandy Gangawata Korale Girls' High School, Kandy: 1AB 5299 Kandy Gangawata Korale Mahamaya Girls' College, Kandy: 1AB 4569 Kandy Gangawata Korale Pushpadana Girls' College, Kandy: 1AB 2650 Denuwara Yatinuwara Kadugannawa National School ...
Zahira College (National School), Anuradhapura 1AB 1154 62 Kebithigollewa Medawachchiya Maithripala Senanayake Central College, Medawachchiya 1AB 2940 128 Kekirawa Kekirawa Kekirawa Central College, Kekirawa 1AB 3141 118 Thambuththegama Thambuththegama Thambuththegama Madya Maha Vidyalaya, Thambuththegama 1AB 3541 127 Thambuttegama Thalawa
Devi Balika Vidyalaya is a public national girls' school in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Girls are admitted at grade six, based on the results of an island-wide scholarship examination . Like other national schools it is controlled by the central government , as opposed to a provincial council.
Chundikuli Girls' College was founded on 14 January 1896 by Mary Carter of the Church Mission Society of the Anglican Church. The school had only 9 students but by the end of 1896 the number had grown to 30. In 1900 CGC became a grant-in-aid school. The Old Girls' Association was inaugurated in August 1915 by then principal Sophia Lucinda Page.