St. Mary's Church Paul

St. Mary’s Church Paul

Built during the Portuguese occupation in 1521, for religious purposes. The location of this church is located on a hill next to Kota A Famosa or Santiago Gate. Although the age of this building is more than 500 years, it remains intact until now despite facing several phases of war during the past.

To get to this place, you need to go up the stairs located behind the Santiago Gate. Around 5-6 minutes, you will get here by climbing the stairs. Along the path of this staircase, you can witness the surrounding beauty of the garden landscape that can withstand stunning the eyes.

Through the area of ​​the church grounds, you can see some interesting destinations in Melaka famous such as the Ocean Museum, Taming Sari Tower & even, you can also see the wide spread Malacca Straits in front.

Saint Paul’s Church is a historic church building in Malacca City, Malaysia, that was originally built in 1521, making it the oldest church building in Malaysia and Southeast Asia. It is located at the summit of St. Paul’s Hill and is today part of the Malacca Museum Complex comprising the A Famosa ruins, the Stadthuys and other historical buildings.

History of the church

The original structure was a simple chapel built in 1521 dedicated to the Virgin Mary and known as the Nossa Senhora da Annunciada (Our Lady of the Annunciation). The chapel was built by a Portuguese fidalgo or nobleman, Duarte Coelho, as an act of gratitude following his escape from a storm in the South China Sea.

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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 then further enlarged in 1556 with the addition of a second floor, and a belfry tower was added in 1590. The chapel was then renamed the Igreja de Madre de Deus (Church of the Mother of God).

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

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.

Xavier used the church 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 church before it was finally shipped to Goa. An open grave in the church still exists today marking the place of Xavier’s burial.

Reconsecration and abandonment
Interior of the church

With the conquest of Malacca by the Dutch in 1641, the church was reconsecrated for Dutch Reformed use as St. Paul’s Church also known as the Bovenkerk or High Church. The church remained in use as the main church of the Dutch community until the new Bovenkerk (better known today as Christ Church Malacca) was completed in 1753.

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The old church was then subsequently deconsecrated and the structure modified and strengthened as part of the fortifications of Malacca. The nave of the church was then used as a churchyard.

When the British occupied Malacca in 1824, the church was used as a powder magazine and was allowed to deteriorate further.

Excavations and later additions 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 from 1904 to 1907, and published in his 1905 work Historical Tombstones of Malacca.

Now-defunct lighthouse

In 1849, a now-defunct lighthouse, which consists mainly of a lantern and gallery mounted on an arched base and is solely accessible from ground level via a small ladder, was installed in front of the church as an additional beacon for ships travelling along the Strait of Malacca. 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.

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. It was in this period that the tombstones that were scattered around in the vicinity of the church were affixed to the walls.

In 1952, 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. Another source mentions that the day after the statue was consecrated, a large casuarina tree fell on it, breaking off its right arm.

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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). 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.

Incidentally, the right forearm of Xavier was detached in 1614 as a relic.

  • orionservicee

    orionservicee

    February 9, 2024

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