Church of Saint Paul, Malacca

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Saint Paul's Church
Malay: Gereja St. Paul
St. Paul's Church Malacca 2012.JPG
Religion
Affiliation Christianity (originally Roman Catholic, later Dutch Reformed, now a museum)
Ecclesiastical or organizational status in ruins
Year consecrated 1521
Location
Location Malacca City, Malacca, Malaysia
Architecture
Type Church

Saint Paul's Church is a historic church building in Malacca City, Malaysia, that was originally built from 1566 to 1590. [1] It is the oldest European building east of India. It is located on the summit of St. Paul's Hill.

Contents

History of the church

The first Catholic Church in Malacca was Our Lady of the Annunciation, built by Afonso de Albuquerque at the bottom of the Hill near the castle A Famosa in 1511. It later became the Cathedral Our Lady of the Assumption.

In 1521, a Portuguese fidalgo or nobleman, Duarte Coelho built a chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary and known as Nossa Senhora da Graca (Our Lady of Grace), then Nossa Senhora Madre de Deos (Our Lady Mother of God). Coelho built the chapel as an act of gratitude following his escape from a Chinese fleet during a storm in the South China Sea. [2]

The chapel was deeded to the Society of Jesus in 1548 by the Bishop of Goa, João Afonso de Albuquerque, with the title deeds received by St. Francis Xavier. The chapel was demolished in 1566 and the Jesuits built a new church named Nossa Senhora da Annunciada (Our Lady of the Annunciation). This church had three altars dedicated to Saint Ignatius of Loyola, the Eleven Thousand Virgins, and the Good Infant Jesus. the walls of the chancel were probably covered with azulejo tiles. The tower was equipped with a clock-dial. [1]

A burial vault was opened in 1592 and many people of distinction were buried there, including Pedro Martins, the second Bishop of Funay, Japan. [3]

Association with St. Francis Xavier

In 1548, St. Francis Xavier, with the help of fellow Jesuits Fr. Francisco Peres and Brother Roque de Oliveira, established a school in the premises of the chapel known as St. Paul's College. This was perhaps the first school in the modern sense to be established on the Malay peninsula. [4] [5]

Xavier used the chapel as his base for his missionary journeys to China and Japan. On one of those journeys, Xavier fell sick and in 1552 in Shangchuan Island, China he died.

In 1553, the body of Xavier was disinterred from Shangchuan Island and temporarily buried at the chapel before it was finally shipped to Goa. An open grave in the church still exists today that claims to mark the place of Xavier's burial. However, there is no historical evidence to connect this vault with Xavier.

In 1922, Fr. Jules François, parish priest of St Francis Xavier Church, started to celebrate a yearly Catholic mass in the Church. It is still celebrated today.

Renaming and abandonment

Interior of the church Melaka-St-Paul-Dutch-graves-and-tourists-2186.jpg
Interior of the church

With the conquest of Malacca by the Dutch in 1641, the church was renamed for Dutch Reformed use as St. Paul's Church also known as the Bovenkerk ('church on the top' (of the hill)). The church remained in use as the main church of the Dutch community until the completion of the Benedenkerk (Christ Church Malacca, the 'church at the bottom' (of the hill)) in 1753. [3] The old church was then subsequently deconsecrated. The nave and the chancel of the church continued to be used as a churchyard.

As early as 1744, the church was used as a powder magazine. When the British occupied Malacca in 1824, the church continued to be used as a powder magazine.

Excavations and later additions

Old Portuguese tombstones in the church Melaka-St-Paul-Dutch-graves-2185.jpg
Old Portuguese tombstones in the church

Efforts to preserve records of monuments from the past such as the tombstones found in St. Paul's Church were photographed by Robert Norman Bland, resident councillor of Malacca, and published in his 1905 work Historical Tombstones of Malacca. [6]

Now-defunct lighthouse Malacca Light, Malacca Town.jpg
Now-defunct lighthouse

In 1814, William Farquhar built a lighthouse in front of the church. This consists mainly of a lantern and gallery mounted on an arched base and is solely accessible from ground level via a small ladder. It is an approximately 13-metre (43 feet) high, three-storey square white tower, which adopted basic elements from neoclassical architecture with no outbuildings, assuming an angular form different from many of its cylindrical and cone shaped counterparts throughout the region. [7]

In 1924, the old Portuguese burial vault in the chancel of the church was partially uncovered. Further excavation was done in 1930 by the president of the newly formed Malacca Historical Society, Major C. E. Bone.

In 1932 tombstones that were scattered around in the vicinity of the church were aligned along the walls and the main door of the church as reopened. [3]

In 1953, a statue of St. Francis Xavier was erected in front of the ruins of the church in commemoration of the 400th anniversary of his sojourn in Malacca. The statue is missing its right hand. Sources differ as to how the statue came to lose this limb: one local legend has it that the statue's arm was broken due to being struck by lightning. [8] Another source mentions that the day after the statue was consecrated, a large casuarina tree fell on it, breaking off its right arm. [9] This explanation is likely to be inaccurate, as the statue is shown with both arms intact in a 1961 documentary by Filem Negara Malaysia (now FINAS). [10] A Straits Times article from 1967 reports that the fingers on the statue's right hand were taken by visitors in the belief that they could be used as lucky charms. [11] Incidentally, the right forearm of Xavier was detached in 1614 as a relic. [12]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 Cardon, Fr. R.; Elkins, L. (1947). "The Old Church on The Malacca Hill". Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 20 (1 (141)): 188–234. ISSN   2304-7550.
  2. Tye, Timothy. "About Nossa Senhora da Annunciada". EarthDocumentary: World Budget Travel Guides. Archived from the original on 24 November 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  3. 1 2 3 "The ruins of St. Paul's Church". The Historical City Of Malacca. Maleisie.be. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  4. Cardon, R. (1938). Catholicism in the East and the diocese of Malacca, 1511-1888. The Paris Foreign Missions. pp. 4-6. "As soon as he arrived there, Francis hastened to get the approbation of his friend the Viceroy, Don Afonso de Castro, for the opening at Malacca of a school. On the 28th May, 1548, Father Francisco Peres and Brother Roque de Oliveira arrived at Malacca where they were given an enthusiastic reception by the population and the clergy. The following day, de Oliveira opened the school in a house close to the Hospital. [...] Within a few days, 180 children frequented the school."
  5. "The first school in Malaysia". The Historical City Of Malacca. Maleisie.be. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  6. Nunn, Bernard. "Some Account of Our Governors and Civil Service." One Hundred Years of Singapore, Being Some Account of the Capital of the Straits Settlements from Its Foundation by Sir Stamford Raffles on 6 February 1819 to 6 February 1919. Ed. Walter Makepeace, Gilbert E. Brroke, and Ronald St. John Braddell. Vol. I (1). London: John Murray, 1911. [140] 69–148. Print.
  7. Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of West Malayasia East Coast". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill . Retrieved 24 May 2008.
  8. Cherrygarden, Fred (21 September 2023). "Francis Xavier Statue, Malacca, Malaysia". Atlas Obscura . Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  9. Tye, Timothy. "About The Statue of St Francis Xavier". EarthDocumentary: World Budget Travel Guides. Archived from the original on 3 April 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  10. "RETROSPEKTIF: MALAYA". YouTube . Filem Negara Malaysia. 19 March 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  11. "Riddle of a saint's missing fingers". National Library Board . Straits Times. 23 July 1967. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  12. "Cappella di san Francesco Saverio". Chiesa del Gesu di Roma. Archived from the original on 17 June 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2011.

2°11′34″N102°14′56″E / 2.1928°N 102.2490°E / 2.1928; 102.2490