In this post, I will upload photographs from the Dutch cemetery of Fort Cochin. The focus will be on the known Dutch graves alone. It has to be remembered, although the cemetery has 104 grave monuments, only 13 Dutch inscriptions have survived (sharedcemeteries.net)! Excluding a few other tombstones with English epitaphs, the majority of the graves remain anonymous as their inscriptions are lost irrecoverably. In an earlier post, I had discussed in detail about these tombs and their locations inside the cemetery. However, I took all those images outside the boundary walls of the cemetery, as it is generally not open to visitors. For the first time I had the opportunity to access the Dutch cemetery of Fort Cochin. I extend my sincere gratitude to Rev. Kurian Peter, Vicar and Chairman of the St Francis CSI Church, Fort Cochin, for not only giving me the permission to access the cemetery, but also providing complete freedom and time to explore the grave monuments. I was inside the cemetery for about an hour on my own, the only concern was whether the thick vegetation and the dense green carpet of creepers were hiding any poisonous reptiles.
The site sharedcemeteries.net has an excellent series of articles on Dutch monuments inside this cemetery and a map to locate them. Incorporating here are the photographs which I took inside the cemetery. All the known Dutch graves (13 nos) and the close-up views of their corresponding gravestones are included here. I hope readers would now get a better understanding of the Dutch monuments.
The 13 Dutch funerary monuments uploaded in the ascending chronological order (oldest to youngest) are:
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
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)
Both photographs were taken on September, 2023
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)
Lower photograph: September, 2023
D12) Johannes Wolff and Catharina Sara Smit (died, 18 September 1815 and 15 November 1820)
STATISTICS-DUTCH CEMETERY (Dutch Monuments)
Number of graves with Dutch inscriptions- 13
Number of photographs uploaded- 27
(All photographs were taken on June, 2023 unless specified otherwise)
In the upcoming post, I will include the detectable British graves
inside the cemetery, most of them have never been published online.
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