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Post Info TOPIC: Appendix 4 Ancient Church at St. Thomas Mount


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Appendix 4 Ancient Church at St. Thomas Mount
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Appendix 4

Ancient Church at St. Thomas Mount

The ancient Church on St. Thomas Mount had been a landmark to

mariners for more than four hundred years. In the l6th and 17th

centuries, when the Portuguese and the Armenian ships and vessels

in the Bay of Bengal sighted the church, the sailors offered their

thanksgiving prayers for their safe voyage and then saluted from

their artillery. The church on the hill has been in undisturbed

possession of the diocese of Myalapore for more than 400 years.

It later became the property of the Archdiocese of Madras-

Mylapore and since 2003 of the diocese of Chingleput.

The name of the hill before the arrival of the Portuguese is not

known. The Bishop of Cochin, Dom Frey Andre da Santa Maria,

in a record left in 1600, mentions that the Mount was called by

some “Monte de Nossa Senhora” (Mount of Our Lady) while

others called it “Monte Grande” (Great Mount) to differentiate it

from the other one, called “Little Mount”.

The vernacular name came in this Way. The hill was a grant to the

Church by the Kings of Bisnagar (Vijayanagar). Their imperial

language being Telugu, they called it “Fringy Condah”, Condah in

Telugu meaning hill. The is a reference to Fringy Condah in the

Mackenzie Manuscripts, now at the India Office in London. The

Tamilians called it Firingi Malai; ‘malai’ in Tamil means hill. We

have now to find the meaning of the word “Fringy” or “Firingy”.

Some historians have translated it as “Franks” while others as

“Europeans”. That the word is now taken to mean “Europeans”,

may be true, but it was not the original meaning of the word. The

famous Arab historian Zinadin in his “Historia dos Portugueses do

Malabar” offers the clue. He tells us that the Arabs called the

Portuguese by the name of “Frangues”; and this word became

Fringy and Firingi. Hence the name of the hill given by the imperial

146

Court of Vijayanagar - “Fringy Condah” - probably in 1749 when

the village around was ceded to the East India Company.

The British however, when they transferred their Garrison to that

place called it “St.Thomas Mount”. And so it is known now. Many

Portuguese families had already settled at the foot of the hill from

1523.

Who built the Church?

Fr.Gaspar Coelho, Vicar of St.Thomas’ Church in Mylapore

recorded in 1543 that Diego Fernandes, a Portuguese, arrived in

Mylapore for the first time in 1517. And it was he who built on the

top of the hill in the year 1523 a small Oratory over the foundations

of a very ancient Church. The same Bishop mentions that already

at that time the place was famous as a centre of pilgrimage.

Thus we see that the Mount was famous and much frequented

already before the Portuguese commenced any religious activity

there. As the Oratory of Diego Fernandes (which was dedicated to

the Mother of God) was very small and the number of pilgrims was

increasing, Fr. Gaspar Coelho, Vicar of San Thome, thought it

necessary to build a bigger church. On the 23rd March 1547 the

foundations were dug and in the same year a church was built. This

Church was known as the Church of Our Lady of the Mount, and

soon it was called the Church of Our Lady of Expectation, the

titular feast being always celebrated on the 18th December. The

arch that separates the sanctuary from the body of the church

bears the title of the Church in Portuguese, “Senhora da

Expectacao”, “Our Lady of Expectation”.

The “Monte Grande”, or as we now call it “St. Thomas Mount”,

was from 1523 part and parcel of the Parish of San Thome. How

long did it continue under the long jurisdiction of the Vicar of San

Thome? We cannot give the year, but can definitely say that it must

have continued till at least 1561, for in this year Fr.Gaspar Coelho,

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as Vicar of the place got an interpretation of the inscription on the

Bleeding Cross on the Mount and sent it to the Bishop of Cochin,

who in the following year sent it to Portugal to Cardinal Dom

Henrique.

St.Thomas Mount became an independent parish some time after

1561. The Church of Our Lady of Expectation suffered much

damage during the invasion of Hyder Ali, and it was repaired twice

or even more. Fr.Manuel Barradas, S.J., writing in 1562 records

that Fr.Gasper Coelho, who discovered the Bleeding Cross of the

Mount and built the Church on the top of the hill in 1547, was buried

in this Church.

The Hill church has been the official Parish Church in the locality

for many years. However, from 1887 St. Patrick’s Church at the

foot of the Hill has been used as the Parish Church, being more

convenient for the growing population.

After St. Thomas Mount became part of the Archdiocese of

Madras-Mylapore, the dynamic Archbishop Louis Mathias

constructed a Calvary reminding the faithful of the fact that it was

this mount which was the Calvary of St. Thomas himself. And all

along the steps leading to the top of the hill, stations of the Cross

have been erected. Scores of pilgrims climb up to the hill daily as

they meditate and pray the traditional way of the Cross. It is a very

meaningful manner of visiting the place hallowed by the martyrdom

of the Apostle Thomas. And every year a diocesan way of the

Cross led by the Bishop himself in the afternoon of the Palm

Sunday attracts thousands of devotees from all over the city and

the suburbs. The memory of the death of the Apostle thus finds

ample expressions.

And we may also proudly state that the Pope John Paul II was

himself a pilgrim on St. Thomas Mount when he visited Chennai on

5th February 2004. And from the top of the hill, he blessed the large

concourse of people gathered all along its slope, thus bringing great

honour to the memory of the Apostle.



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