St. Mark's Church | |
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St. Mark's Church, Mercara | |
12°25′13″N75°44′21″E / 12.4203661°N 75.7392854°E | |
Location | Mercara Fort, Coorg |
Country | India |
Denomination | Anglican Church of England |
Architecture | |
Style | Gothic |
Completed | 29 April 1859 |
Closed | 1947 |
Specifications | |
Length | 48 ft. |
Width | 24 ft. |
Administration | |
Diocese | Diocese of Madras |
The St. Mark's Church, is located within the Mercara Fort, Coorg, India and was raised in 1859, by the officers and men of the East India Company. The church building was funded by the Government of Madras, [1] and placed under the Church of England in India, Diocese of Madras. [2] The Church was closed after Indian independence, and taken over by the Government of Karnataka in 1971. [3] The building now houses the Madikeri Fort Museum, managed by the Karnataka State Archaeological Department. [4]
Coorg had been an independent Hindu Kingdom for many centuries, until the invasion of Hyder Ali and Tippu Sultan in 1765, resulting in large scale devastation, forcible conversion to Islam and incarceration of thousands of Kodava people at Seringapatam. Following the defeat of Tippu Sultan in the Third Anglo–Mysore War (1789–92), Coorg became independent again, under the suzerainty of the British. In 1834, the Coorg Kingdom was annexed by the British, and the last Raja Chikka Virarajendra was pensioned off on an annual privy pension of British £12,000 and banished to Kashi. Following annexation, a regiment of the Madras Army and British civil servants were stationed in Coorg. [1] [5]
The first church services for the officers and men at the Coorg Station were conducted in the Regimental Mess of the Madras Army. The church records start in 1842, where the chaplain stationed at the Mangalore military station made official visits to Coorg to conduct church services in the dry seasons. In 1850, an average of 90 people were found attending these services (p. 196). [1]
In 1847, a request was made to the Government of Madras, to fund the building of a small church at a cost of BINR 2000, which was approved by the directors of the East India Company. The officers and men collected a further BINR 3000 for the church building fund. Since the local officers and men had contributed most of the funds, Bishop Dealtry wanted the ownership of the new church to be vested with the Bishop and Archdeacon of Madras, Church of England, rather than with the Government of Madras. This was disputed by the company, and the issue was escalated to the office of the Governor-General of India, Government of British India, Calcutta, which decided in favour of the ownership being vested with the Government of Madras (p. 196-198). [1]
In 1853, the site of the ruins of a disused temple (Virabhadra Temple), [6] and the adjoining quarters of the Sergeant-Major of the 4th Regiment of the Madras Native Army, was chosen for the Church. Coorg became the primary military station and Rev. A Fenell was transferred to Coorg from Mangalore. The construction cost of the church was BINR 9650. Some of the main contributors for building the church were
And Rev. Fennel further obtained
Local subscriptions were from the officers and men of the 2nd Regiment (1847–53) and the 4th Regiment (1853–59) of the Madras Native Infantry (p. 198-199). [1]
The church at Mercara, Coorg was consecrated on 19 April 1859, by Bishop Dealtry and named after Saint Mark the Evangelist.
In 1883, the military regiment was withdrawn from Coorg. However, by that time many European had settled in Coorg, being involved in coffee plantations. Hence the church membership was not affected.
In 1868, Rev. J W Wynch obtained government grant for modifying the vestry into a chancel. This was completed in 1870, costing INR 3940, during the time of Rev C H Deane. Further repairs were done to the flooring and roof in 1881 and 1877. [1]
The church is built in the Gothic style, with stained glass decorative windows. [4] [7] The building measures 48x24 ft2, with 2 small rooms in the west side with doorways between them and the nave. One of these rooms served as the store room and the other as the vestry for the choir. The chancel which was added in 1871, has a breadth of 20 ft. and depth of 22 ft. The organ chamber was raised in 1896 by raising local subscriptions(p. 199) [1]
There are memorial inscriptions for Major. Frank Vardon (died 1860) of the 25th Madras Native Infantry by Westmacott and for the wife of Surgeon-Major Barclay (died 1863). The stained glass on the west window, depicting 'Lord as the Good Shephard' was raised in memory of Rev A Fenell (died 1897). The lectern was donated by Mrs. J S Trelawney and the altar vases were donated by Mrs. J T Morgan (p. 200). [1]
The building of the St. Mark's Church, now holds a museum of artefacts and memorabilia from the British period, Hindu and Jain sculptures, village deities and antique weapons. [8] The museum also has a section dedicated to Field Marshal K M Cariappa, displaying his awards and honours. The museum is maintained by the State Archaeological Department, Government of Karnataka. [4] [7] Coins and documents of the erstwhile Kingdom of Coorg are also displayed. [3]
Kodagu district is an administrative district in the Karnataka state of India. Before 1956, it was an administratively separate Coorg State, at which point it was merged into an enlarged Mysore State.
Madikeri is a hill station town in Madikeri taluk and headquarters of Kodagu district in Karnataka, India.
The district of Kodagu in present-day Karnataka comprises the area of the former princely state of the same name.
Madikeri Fort, also called Mercara Fort, is a fort in Madikeri, in the Kodagu district of the Indian state of Karnataka, first built by Mudduraja in the second half of the 17th century. Mudduraja also built the palace within the fort. It was rebuilt and restructured in granite by Tipu Sultan, and the site was then renamed Jaffarabad. Madikeri Fort is one of the many forts built or rebuilt by Tipu Sultan during his reign in the second half of the 18th century. In 1790, Dodda Vira Rajendra took control of the fort. The palace underwent renovations by Linga Rajendra II from 1812 to 1814. The British made additions to the fort in 1834. Notable structures in the fort include two stone statues of elephants at the northeast entry and a church in the southeast corner.
The captivity of Kodavas (Coorgis) at Seringapatam was the period of capture, deportation, and imprisonment of Kodava Takk speaking Coorgis who rebelled against Tippu Sultan, the de facto ruler of the Kingdom of Mysore, they were caught during a number of attempts to suppress their rebellion in the 1780s.
The siege of Bangalore was a siege of the town and fortifications of Bangalore during the Third Anglo-Mysore War by forces of the British East India Company, led by Charles, Earl Cornwallis against a Mysorean garrison, while Tipu Sultan, Mysore's ruler, harried the camps and positions of the besiegers. Arriving before the town on 5 February 1791, Cornwallis captured the town by assault on 7 February, and after six weeks of siege, stormed the fortress on 21 March.
Nadikerianda Chinnappa (1875–1931) was an Indian compiler, poet, translator, army man, police officer, cricket player, singer and philanthropist from Kodagu.
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Coorg Province was a province of British India from 1834 to 1947 and the Dominion of India from 1947 to 1950. Mercara was the capital of the province. It was administered by a Commissioner and later, Chief Commissioner appointed by the Government of India. The Chief Commissioner, was usually based in Bangalore. From 1834 to 1881, the Chief Commissioner, was also the Commissioner of Mysore. From 1881 to 1940, the Chief Commissioner was usually the British Resident to the princely state of Mysore.
The Karnataka Central Diocese is one of the twenty-two dioceses of the Church of South India covering the central part of Karnataka.
The Kingdom of Coorg was an independent kingdom that existed in India from the 16th century until 1834. It was ruled by a branch of the Ikkeri Nayaka. From 1780 to 1788, the kingdom was occupied by neighbouring Mysore but the Rajah of Coorg was restored by the British and became a protectorate of the British East India Company on 26 October 1790. In 1834, the then Raja of Coorg rebelled against British authority, sparking the Coorg War. The brief conflict led to the British to annex the kingdom in the same year, who transformed the region into a province of British India.
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