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Post Info TOPIC: CHAPTER VIII The Shrine on the Hill


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CHAPTER VIII The Shrine on the Hill
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CHAPTER VIII

The Shrine on the Hill

THE heap of ruins on St. Thomas Mount spurred the religious

curiosity of the Portuguese. Excavations conducted on the spot

have led historians to the belief that the earliest church on the hill,

after the one built by the Apostle, was that of the Armenians,

erected about A.D. 530. These Armenians were in very long

possession of the shrine. The Portuguese, who are known more as

church builders than as empire seekers, realised the dire need of a

decent church on this sacred spot. An oratory was, accordingly,

raised by Diego Fernandes in 1523, in honour of the Mother of

God. Before long this oratory was found too small for the rising

number of pilgrims and settlers. A more suitable church was now

decided upon. Some 200 Parduas were duly collected to start the

work. How the work was begun and carried on is best learned from

the statement of Bishop Andre of Cochin, who came on a Pastoral

visit to this place in 1589:

‘When the Portuguese arrived at this place, there existed no

edifice on the Mount; there were, however, some foundation walls

only that were above the level of the ground nearly one cubit, laid

from West to East, which appeared to be those of a very small

oratory; on these foundations, Diego Fernandes erected an oratory,

in 1523. This oratory was vaulted (had a dome) and was dedicated

to the Mother of God; it was so small that it could hardly contain

eight persons. They wished to begin the work of a new church in

the year 1547, in the month of March, Gaspar Coelho being the

Vicar and Gabriel de Athaide, the Captain at the time. For this

purpose they went to the Mount, viz., the Captain and the Vicar

with twelve respectable men of this town; having resolved to build

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the church around the old one, the master-builder applied his strings

and measuring tapes and having thereafter, begun to dig the

foundations on Tuesday, the 22nd of the said month of March, they

came across other foundations, of which they were not aware

hitherto. These foundations were laid from West to East, thus

showing that a more ancient church had stood in the place. As they

went on digging along the same and had dug nearly three cubits,

they came upon the Holy Stone, which at present forms the reredos

of the altar of the Church of Our Lady.’91

The original church which the Portuguese built, under the

direction of Father Caspar Coelho, Vicar of San Thome, was later

extended and embellished by the Armenians. Coja Safar, an

Armenian, was responsible for the extension in 1707, He died in

1725 and was buried in this Church. A tablet on the outer side of

the northern wall of the church bears the following, inscription:

‘Coja Safar Zacharias had this porch at the door of the church made

in the year 1707’. The church, as it stands today, measures. 109 by

87 feet and bears the royal arms of Portugal on the facade of the

porch that faces the West.

Perched on a hill higher than all the others, the church is

visible from miles around. It is on record that whenever the

Portuguese and Armenian vessels spotted it from the sea, they did

not fail to greet it with a salvo of their artillery.92 The ground all

round the church was formerly paved with bricks. Some bricked

patches have survived to this day. All along the border of the hilltop

some sort of seats were constructed, which have since left no

traces. A beacon fire used to be lit up on the hill every night for

mariners to steer their ships by.

The arch that separates the sanctuary from the body of the

church, bears the title of the Church in Portuguese: Senhora da

Expectacao i.e. Our Lady of Expectation. On the main altar the

Augustinian emblem shows the influence of the Augustinian Order,

ever since the Diocese of Mylapore was, erected under an

Augustinian Bishop, Dom Sebastiao de Pedro, in 1606. A picture of

St Thomas painted on wood, is fixed high up in the wooden reredos

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of the altar. Two circles crown this picture and the name of Peter

Uscan is, inscribed as the donor, round the smaller circle. The

picture represents St. Thomas praying before a cross among

boulders. Perhaps the painter followed the belief that the cross

above the altar at St. Thomas’ Mount was carved by St. Thomas or

that, at any rate, he died praying before it. There is a wooden pulpit

in the Armenian style with winged angel-heads, a mermaid with a

cross above the head, equal-armed crosses with trefoil extremities.

The pulpit is a monument of Armenian art and is quite in good

condition in spite of exposure for close upon two centuries. The

name of the donor, who presented it in 1727, is inscribed on its

wooden support.

Visitors enjoy the sight of twelve exquisite and almost lifesize

paintings of the twelve Apostles which adorn the walls of the

church. Their originals were the gift of Peter Uscan. The pictures,

as they now stand, were painted by a Franciscan Missionary of

Mary after the originals, which were fast crumbling to pieces. Some

of the pictures are an improvement on the original. Pictures on the

walls are arranged in the following order. From left to right: St.

Peter; St. James, the Greater; St. Thomas; St. John; St. James the

Less; St. Matthew; St. Thaddeus; St. Matthias; St. Bartholomew; St.

Simon; St. Paul; St. Philip; St. Andrew. In between the tenth and the

eleventh painting hangs an inspiring picture of Our Lord. The

background of the pictures shows the manner of death of the

Apostles. Each Apostle holds an emblem: St. Peter, the keys and a

cross; St. James, the Greater, a pilgrim’s staff, a gourd and a script;

St. Thomas, a book and a lance; St. John, a poisoned chalice; St.

James the Less, a book and a beam; St. Matthew, a book and a

carpenter's rule; St. Thaddeus, a book and a club; St. Matthias, a

book and a hatchet; St. Bartholomew, a book and a sword; St.

Simon, a book and a saw; St. Paul, a book and a dagger; St. Philip,

a book and a cross; St. Andrew, a book and a St. Andrew's cross.

Ten of the thirteen Apostles have a book.

On the eastern side of the church a small vaulted building,

which shows pitiful signs of dilapidation, was once a hermitage. In

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The Church on St. Thomas Mount, which was built by the Portuguese in 1523 and extended in

1547. Coja Safar, an Armenian, extended it further in 1707.

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The main altar in the Church on St. Thomas Mount. The altar is on the spot where St. Thomas is

traditionally known to have been martyred.

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course of time it served as a watch-tower and a powder magazine.

Four huge stones of granite fixed all round it and a big hole on its

terrace show that a flagstaff once stood there. In pre-Portuguese

times, this building also played the part of a light-house. The

graveyard on the south-western slope of the hill is used by the

Franciscan Missionaries of Mary to inter the members of the

congregation who pass away in the city.

Near the south-eastern end of the church there stands a strong

pile of buildings occupied by the nuns of the Institute of the

Franciscan Missionaries of Mary. Their residence on the Mount is

known as ‘Holy Apostles’ Convent’. It was founded in 1901. In the

initial stages, a lace-school and a creche were conducted by the

nuns. Later, the convent became a sort of sanatorium for the

members of the Institute coming from all parts of India. In 1931,

the novitiate of the Institute was started in this convent to train the

Oblate Sisters, but was closed down during World War II. At

present, only a few professed nuns with some tertiaries reside here

for the chief purpose of taking care of the church and also of

playing hospitable guides to numerous pilgrims and tourists to the

place. One more activity has been added: the maintenance of a

creche for babies of all castes and creeds without any government

grants.

 



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