Photo: February, 2017. Yellow arrow marks the tomb.
Anyone who has seen the ‘Dutch Cemetery’ at Fort Cochin will notice a tall funerary monument located near the center of the graveyard. The characteristic feature of this grave is a cylindrical multi-layered pillar tapering into a dome-shaped apex. Interestingly, this impressive sepulcher is not Dutch but a British monument. We know this because the faintly legible inscription on the first half of the epitaph is in English. With some effort, I could read the first three lines of the tombstone, at least partly, which says:
1- SACRED
2-TO THE MEMORY OF…
3-BELOVED WIFE…
It is unfortunate that the last part of the 2nd line which has the name of the deceased has faded significantly over time. The end of the 3rd line and the first half of the 4th line which have the details of her husband are also difficult to decipher on the first go. No doubt, she is someone important and influential to get such a monumental burial in the cemetery.
In the rare volume, 'St Francis' Church Cochin' (1947), the author Venn, T. W., reports of two massive graves in the Dutch Cemetery, both belonging to women, whose husbands were British Military Officers (p. 21). One of the tomb was named after “Marie, wife of Captain Evans, of the 7th M.N.I.”. Venn however, does not give the full name of Marie or her husband, nor the date of her death. In the inventories collected by Roberts and Chekkutty (2017), there is reference to “Evans, Maria-wife of 7th M.N.I. Capt. Charles Evans, died 13 July, 1822, age 23”, but her burial site is mistakenly recorded in the Old Protestant Cemetery, Veli (Roberts and Chekkutty, 2017, p. 139).
Even though the inscription is faintly visible in our tombstone of concern, going carefully through the 4th line from the top, I could decipher the name ‘EVANS' and the preceding letters 'CHAS' (Charles). In a higher resolution photograph that I took recently from the Dutch Cemetery, the last word of the third line can also be read, and it has the letters 'CAPT' (Captain). Based on these data, I would propose the first 4 lines of the tombstone as follows:
1-SACRED
2-TO THE MEMORY OF MARIA
3-THE BELOVED WIFE OF CAPTAIN
4-CHAs (CHARLES) EVANS…
Therefore, the tallest monument in the Dutch Cemetery of Fort Cochin belongs to an English woman named Maria, wife of British Captain Charles Evans in the Madras Native Infantry, who died at the young age of 23 on 13th July, 1822. It would be interesting to know what the remaining portion of the epitaph says. Regarding Maria and her husband Capt. Charles Evans, and their connection to Cochin, hopefully, future research can throw more light.
For the complete inscription and more details, see the updated post here.
References
Roberts, John Cantwell and Chekkutty, N P (2017)-Malabar II: Christian Memorials Wynad to Travancore 1498-2014
Venn, T W (1947)-St Francis' Church Cochin
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