It is the second-largest city of the island and the capital of Central 
Province of modern Sri Lanka. Its geographic location has made it a 
major transportation hub in the island: while Kandy being the gateway to
 the Central Highlands
 of Sri Lanka, the city can be reached by major motorways in every 
direction of the island. The railway line from Colombo, the sea port on 
the western coast runs via Kandy to the farthest point of Badulla in the Central Highlands. 
     The main roads Colombo-Kandy and Kandy-Nuwara Eliya are two of the most scenic roads of Sri Lanka; Colombo-Kandy
 road passes through rubber plantations and rice paddies, Kandy-Nuwara 
Eliya road cuts through paddy fields and seamless tea plantations. Both 
roads claw their way up winding, rounding over the rings of hills.
You can visit bellow places in Kandy city and nearby the city.
- Palace of the Tooth relic
 
The monumental ensemble of Kandy is an example of construction that associates the Royal Palace and The Temple of the Tooth (Palace of the tooth relic) is the place that houses the Relic of the tooth of the Buddha.
 Originally part of the Royal Palace complex of the Kandyan Kingdom, it 
is one of the holiest places of worship and pilgrimage for Buddhist 
around the world. It was last of a series of temples built in the places
 where the relic, the actual palladium of the Sinhalese monarchy, was 
brought following the various relocations of the capital city.
The Palace of the Tooth relic, the palace complex and the holy city 
of Kandy are associated with the history of the dissemination of 
Buddhism. The temple is the product of the last peregrination of the relic of the tooth of Buddha and the testimony of a religion which continues to be practiced today.
- Royal Palace
 
The Royal Palace of Kandy
 is the last Royal Palace built in the island. Although only part of the
 original palace complex remain. The Temple of the Tooth was part of 
this complex, due to the ancient tradition that stated that the monarch 
is the protector of the relic though which the ruler of the land. It 
today houses the National Museum Kandy which holds an extensive collection of artifacts from both the Kandy Kingdom and the British colonial rule.
- Lankatilaka Temple
 
The Lankatilaka Temple is considered to be one of the best preserved 
examples of traditional Sinhalese temple architecture. Built on a rock, 
the temple is reached by a long series of rock cut steps. An arched 
passage of the image house leads through a Mandapa (hall) into the inner
 sanctum which is richly decorated with beautiful floral designs. The 
two side walls and the ceiling are decorated with paintings. In the 
inner sanctum is a colossal seated image of the Buddha.
- Gadaladeniya Temple
 
The Gadaladeniya Temple's design is of South Indian origin with a Devale
 attached to it, similar in character to the Natha Devale and the Gedige
 of Adahana Maluwa. The main shrine room has a seated Buddha statue and 
the remains of some paintings of the Gampola period.
Among other important temples around Kandy are Dodanwela Devale (shrine), Embakke Devale (shrine), Galmaduwa 
Vihara temple, Handagala Vihara temple, Lankatilaka Vihara, Medawala 
Vihara and Nalanda Gedige.
Not only that places you can visit hanthana mountain range and knuckles mountain range also those places are in 1600fts above from sea level.
(Source - From Wikipedia)







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