This is the current functional cemetery of St Francis CSI church in Fort Kochi. Remember, the same church maintains the Dutch Cemetery of Fort Kochi. This cemetery is located at a place called Veli, 2 km south of Fort Kochi. Like the Dutch Cemetery, this graveyard is also not open to visitors, and I understand it is only accessible during the funeral services. However, unlike the Dutch Cemetery, its boundary walls are shorter in height and the graves can be easily viewed from outside. You can still trace a few old tombs amidst several modern graves in the cemetery. The old tombs resemble the British monuments in the Dutch cemetery. According to the inventory given in Roberts and Chekkutty (Malabar II-Christian Monuments, 2017, pp. 136-145,), this is the 'old Protestant Cemetery' which began in 1790, and it was called the "New Church Burial Ground" after 1855. The inventory has 103 graves, both Dutch and English, but the majority are from the British period. Out of the 103 graves listed, the oldest are for Jacob Wendelen Van der Sloot (d. 1739, age 60) and David Scale (d. 1788, age 68); 96 of them are dated from the 19th century; 4 from the early 20th century and one undated. The youngest grave monument is for Joseph Ethelbert Winckler (d, 15 September, 1913), the Port Officer who erected a memorial for the 'Great Fire of Cochin' (see my earlier post on the 'Pillars of the old Santa Cruz Cathedral').
However, some things do not add up in the inventory. For example, the first documented burial in the cemetery is reported to 1790, yet the inventory has burials dated from 1739 and 1788. The graveyard is called the 'Old Protestant Cemetery' without a location given, whereas the 'Old Dutch Cemetery' is wrongly placed in Veli (instead of Fort Kochi, see Roberts and Chekkutty, 2017, p. 145). In addition, the authors claim that the old protestant cemetery was restored through the Royal Dutch Embassy and the Archaeological Survey of India in 2012. Nonetheless, it is the 'Dutch Cemetery', where the Embassy carried out the restoration works, and the ASI is not involved in the protection of Veli cemetery. Also, there is some overlap between the names. For instance, in the inventory, the last burial of the cemetery is of Joseph Ethelbert Winckler (d. 1913), but this grave is in the Dutch Cemetery according to others (eg. T. W. Venn, 1947). Similarly, the list has the grave of Pieter Winckler (d. 1841), the grandfather of J. E. Winkler in Veli Cemetery, but his tomb is actually in the Dutch Cemetery (see my previous post).
Santa Cruz Cathedral Cemetery
Currently, the Protestant St Francis CSI cemetery shares boundary with the graveyard
of the Catholic Santa Cruz Cathedral. I had the opportunity to access
the Catholic cemetery. On a quick tour, the oldest grave I could find there is from
1892, and the rest of them all appeared modern (20th century onward). There were also graves under demolition, so may be some of the old monuments have already been lost.
A Dilapidated Tomb in the Cemetery
Grave Monument with a late 19th Century Burial (1892)
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