In the previous series of posts, I wrote about the Portuguese funerary monuments in Cochin. We also saw Dutch and English funerary markers in St Francis church, but it is not the only site in Cochin where you find them. In the upcoming posts, I will briefly go through a few other places in Cochin area where the Dutch and the British graves are still preserved.
1) Dutch Cemetery of Fort Cochin
Like St Francis church, the Dutch Cemetery of Fort Cochin is a well known tourist spot. The 18th-century cemetery is only a walk-able distance (c. 300 m) from the St Francis church and has both Dutch and English graves. The tombs have no cross symbols, which is a rare phenomenon even in the protestant cemeteries of Kerala today. The graveyard is not open to the public, but the tombs are visible from the main entrance and the western boundary near the beach side. However, if you want to access the graves and properly explore the epitaphs, you must enter the compound, and for that you need permission of the C.S.I. church authorities who manage the site now. The cemetery was established in 1724, but the oldest surviving tomb is dated from 1784 only. The site originally was the location of an orphanage and in old Dutch maps, the street was called Weeshuijsstraat (Orphanage Street).
A few interesting facts about the Dutch Cemetery of Cochin:
The date of establishment-1724
The area of the cemetery-1500 sq.m (c. 37 cents)
The total number of existing funerary monuments-104
The number of funerary monuments with a visible Dutch script-13
The oldest surviving Dutch tomb-Johan Daimichen (d. 30 August, 1784)
The youngest Dutch tomb-Catharina Sara Smit (d. 15 November, 1820)
The largest Dutch tomb-Aletta Augustina Thiel (d. 20 November, 1784)
The best preserved Dutch epitaph-Johannes van Blankenberg (d. 2 April, 1794)
The oldest surviving English tomb-Charles Rolland (d. 1807)
The youngest English tomb-Joseph Ethelbert Winckler (d. 15 September, 1913)
The tallest funerary monument-English (unknown identity)
(Courtesy for the burial dates: sharedcemeteries.net and Roberts & Chekkutty, 2017).
There is a popular misconception that the Dutch Cemetery of Cochin is the oldest European cemetery in India (see here, here and here).
Ironically, there are several cemeteries in India established by the Dutch in
the 17th century (eg. Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh etc), so the
18th-century Dutch Cemetery of Cochin is actually one of the youngest! Sir Charles Allen Lawson in 1861 (British and Native Cochin, p.26) writes: "Near to the Church (St Francis) is the old Dutch Cemetery, a small, square plot enclosed with high walls. The tombs flat,dome and pyramid shaped are occasionally diversified by broken pillars, urns and sarcophagi, all more of less blackened by exposure; the grass rank and wild here and there lost sight of among bushes of a beautiful orange-flowered weed that infests this part of India". Nothing much has changed in the cemetery even after several decades, but the paved path is a recent addition.
Dutch Cemetery at different time intervals
Photographs taken on August, 2015; February, 2017; October, 2022 and February, 2023
Rene ten Dam and team (Dodenalkers.nl Foundation) has surveyed the cemetery in 2020 and have shared their observations in the website here. According to this latest survey, only 13 grave monuments can be found with a Dutch text or a reference to a Dutch person. If you are interested to know more about them, Valentine Wikaart has an excellent series of biographical articles in the same site. There is also a very helpful map for the cemetery with the position of all the graves marked. Though the total number of the grave monuments are estimated to be around 104, it is not possible to distinguish how many of them are Dutch and English tombs separately, since most of the graves lack a legible epitaph now.
The 13 Dutch epitaphs are as follows:
D1) Johan Daimichen (died 30 August, 1784)
D2) Aletta Augustina Thiel (died 20 November, 1784)
D3) Jacob Bernard Weinsheimer (died 1 March, 1790)
D4) Johannes van Blankenberg (died 2 April, 1794)
D5) Johan Adam Cellarius (died 15 June, 1796)
D6) Adriaan Poolvliet (died 10 September, 1799)
D7) C & C (died 14 October, 1799)
D8) Dorothea Lambertina Zeijsig (died 10 November, 1800)
D9) Cornelia Elisabeth Vogt (died 11 February, 1804)
D10) Samuel Homans (died 1808)
D11) Helena Elizabeth Muller (died 12 December, 1814)
D12) Johannes Wolff and Catharina Sara Smit (died 18 September 1815 and 15 November 1820)
D13) Unknown 82-year old
(credit: sharedcemeteries.net; the labels D1 to D13 are my additions)
Once you are inside the graveyard, you can explore the monuments with the help of the map from sharedcemeteries.net. However, for a casual visitor, the locked cemetery is inaccessible. Nevertheless, you can still observe most of the graves, specially from the western boundary, provided the graveyard is cleared of the overgrown vegetation. I have not accessed the cemetery so far, but from the photographs I took outside the compound at different time periods, and using the above mentioned map, I could locate the 13 tombs precisely except that of Samuel Holman, which is partly hidden under vegetation and sandwiched between other grave monuments. For all those who cannot enter inside the cemetery, but still prefer to know the position of tombs, I am hereby uploading two images where all the 13 graves are marked, the labels used are as given above. Also including are 3 British tombs, two of them can be easily identified, but the third one which is also the tallest monument in the cemetery, has an illegible epitaph, so far, I could only read the words "Sacred to the Memory of the Beloved Wife...".
The English epitaphs included in this study are:
E1) Peter Winckler (died 23 September, 1841 or 1842, age 78)
E2) Lieut. Col. Arthur Frith (died 22 April, 1824, age 57)
E3) A woman of unknown identity (n.d.)
(Courtesy for the burial dates: Roberts & Chekkutty, 2017).
Location of the Dutch (D1 to D13) and English (E1 to E3) Tombs in the Dutch Cemetery.
The following are some more photographs I took of the cemetery and its surroundings. The close-up views of a few Dutch and English tombs are also included. The same labeling is used as above, and all photographs were taken outside the cemetery.
Enlarged views of the Dutch grave monuments
Enlarged views of 3 British grave monuments
Entrance of the cemetery with the foundation date (A. D. 1724).
The south and east boundary walls are captured here, the entrance gate is at the middle of the eastern boundary wall.
Views of the cemetery from the Eastern boundary wall
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