St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Church, Palayur

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Palayoor Mar Thoma Major Archiepiscopal Church
St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Church, Palayoor.jpg
St. Thomas Major archiepiscopal church at Palayur
Religion
AffiliationSyro-Malabar Church
DistrictThrissur
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusMajor archiepiscopal church
Location
LocationIndia Kerala India
StateKerala
Geographic coordinates(10°34′57″N 76°01′55″E / 10.5825°N 76.0319°E / 10.5825; 76.0319Coordinates: 10°34′57″N 76°01′55″E / 10.5825°N 76.0319°E / 10.5825; 76.0319)
Architecture
Architect(s)Thomas the Apostle is believed to be the architect of the Church traditionally.
Rebuilt under Giacomo Fenicio (AD 1600- 1607)
StyleBlend of Kerala, Persian and Portuguese Architecture
Date established52; 1970 years ago (52)
Specifications
Direction of façadeWest
Dome(s)1
MaterialsLime and Mortar

St. Thomas Major archiepiscopal church, is located at Palayur (historically known as Palur), in Thrissur district in Kerala on the west coast of India.[1] According to Saint Thomas christian tradition, the Syrian church was established in 52 AD by St Thomas, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ.[2] It is the first church in India, and Saint Thomas performed the first baptism in India here, therefore this church is called an Apostolic Church credited to the apostolate of St. Thomas, who preached and also introduced Christianity to the people here.[3][4] It is part of the Ēḻarappaḷḷikaḷ (seven major churches) that he established in India, the others being at Cranganore, Kokkamangalam, Kottakkavu, Kollam, Niranam, and Chayal (Nilackal).[5][6][7] The original small church structure has been retained at the original site. But substantial improvements around it were carried out during the 17th century by Giacomo Fenicio as necessary, without sacrificing the main sanctity of the place.[8][9][10]

Icon of Throne of Mar Thoma Sleeha

History[]

Legend[]

Interior of the Palayur Church, one of the oldest Christian church in India and one of the seven founded by St. Thomas the Apostle in 52 AD.

According to Saint Thomas christian tradition, Apostle Saint Thomas traveled from Muziris (Kodungallur) and landed at Palayur by boat through the backwaters. At that time, Palayur was a stronghold of the Brahmins and also of Jews. He came to visit the Jewish merchants at Palayur at Judankunnu (meaning the hill of Jews) and to preach the Christian gospel. The place has since become a dry land but its historicity as a boat jetty called locally 'Bottukulam' has been preserved as a monument to St. Thomas (see picture).[11][12][13]

Of the seven churches originally established by St. Thomas, only three – Palayur in the Syro-Malabar Catholic Archeparchy of Thrissur, Kottakkavu in the Syro-Malabar Catholic Major Archeparchy of Ernakulam-Angamaly, and Niranam in the Malankara Orthodox Diocese of Niranam – could claim continuity, while the remaining four churches have undergone several changes in their locations.[14]

It is also believed that St. Thomas stayed in India for 17 years: 4 years in Sindh (now in Pakistan), about 6 years in Malabar Coast, and 7 years at Mylapore in Tamil Nadu. The Indian Postal Service of the Government of India brought out two commemorative stamps, in 1964 and 1973, in honour of the historic arrival of St. Thomas in India in 52 AD.[15]

Saint Thomas was proclaimed 'The Apostle of India' by the Holy See. His skeleton remains were brought to India in 1953 by Cardinal Eugene Tisserant.[15] Furthermore, a document called ‘Nagara Grandavariola’ kept by a local Brahmin family (who had moved out from Palayur during the preaching) testifies to the date of the gospel work of St. Thomas. The document states:

Kali year 3153 (52 AD) the foreigner Thomas Sanyasi came to our village (gramam) preached there and therby causing…[16]

Palayur St.Thomas Monument

Historical legend records that when Saint Thomas landed at Palayur, he witnessed the sight of Hindu Brahmins, after their ablutions in a local tank. They were offering prayers by chanting mantras (the Vedic tradition of India for spiritual transformation), hymns to god in the form of Argyam or Tharpanam (water held in the palms) to the Sun god, a practice also said to be followed in Harappan and Persian cultures. Amused by the sight of water being thrown up by the Brahmins, from the palms of their hands, which was falling back, he challenged the Brahmins stating that the water they were offering was not being accepted by the Sun god as it was falling back into the tank. He made a deal with them stating that his God would accept the offer of water if he threw it up in the same way as they did: the water would not fall back. If he proved this then his God was superior and the Brahmins would have to embrace Christianity. He performed this miracle (summoned the Holy Trinity, completed the sign of the Cross and threw water held in his palms up into the air, which remained still in the air at a height) and with this miracle he converted a number of Brahmins and Jews in Palayur to Christianity.[17] Thereafter he baptised the converts in a nearby water tank, now known as "Thaliyakulam" which is referred to as The First Baptism Pond, "The Birthplace of Christianity in India". The Brahmins who did not convert to the faith gave the epithet of the 'Shapa Kadu' or "Cursed Place" to Palayur and migrated to Vembanad to purify themselves.[18][14][19]

Historical accounts on Palayur Church[]

St. Thomas Syro-Malabar Church, Palayoor
  • Account of East Syriac bishops

In 1504, Mar Yaballaha, Mar Denha, Mar Yaqob Abuna and Mar Thoma, the four East Syriac bishops consecrated for India by the Catholicos-Patriarch Mar Eliyah V, mentions the Christian community of Palur in a letter addressed to the Catholicos-Patriarch.[20][21]

The countries of India are very numerous and powerful and their distance is about six months journey. Each country has a special name by which it is known, and our country in which the Christians are found is called Malabar. It has about twenty towns, out of which three are renowned and powerful Karangol [Kodungallūr], Pallur, and Kullam [Kollam], with others that are near them.

— MacKenzie 1901, p. 11
  • Archdeacon Giwargis of Christ as Bishop of Palur

Archdeacon Giwargis of Christ was selected as the suffragan and coadjutor of Mar Abraham in the diocesan synod of Angamaly. Following this, the Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Mar Abdisho IV Maron, by a patriarchal decree dated 25 August 1566, appointed Giwargis of Christ as the Bishop of Palur and suffragan to Archbishop Mar Abraham of the Indian ecclesiastical province.[22][23]

In 1578 Mar Abraham wrote a letter to Pope Gregory XIII, requesting papal confirmation for the appointment of his archdeacon as the bishop of Palur and as his successor. The letter is dated 2 January 1578.[23]

St. Givargis of Christ

By the letter dated 3 January 1579, Pope Gregory XIII confirmed Giwargis of Christ as the administrator of the Archdiocese of Angamaly, in case of vacancy through the death of the Metropolitan Mar Abraham. On 4 March 1580, the pope confirmed his appointment as the Bishop of Palur and coadjutor of the Archbishop of Angamaly, Mar Abraham.[23]

On 5 March 1580, the pope wrote a letter to the entire clergy and people of the Archdiocese of Angamaly, urging them to obey Metropolitan Mar Abraham and Giwargis of Christ, the bishop of Palur.[23][24]

We, then being solicitous for your salvation and the tranquillity of your Church, exhort and advise you and by virtue of the power committed to us by Christ, also order you not to suffer yourselves to be infected by that pest [the reference is to the activities of Metropolitan Shemon], but evade it by all means: flee from his words and sermons; fear him as the enemy and eradicator of the Catholic faith, your salvation and the glory of Christ: eject him out of your community and gathering, permit him not to dwell among you nor to remain in your places. The same you should do with the rest of the heretics and schismatics lest corrupted by their pestiferous doctrine and contagion you should perish. Be you therefore obedient to your lord Archbishop Abraham and also to George, bishop of Palur, and live steadfast in the sincerity of Faith, in the simplicity of morals and in the unity of the holy mother the Church. Thus you attain to that eternal felicity and glory, which God has prepared and reserved for those who would live piously and holy...

— Giamil 1902, p. 608
  • Renovation under Giacomo Fenicio

Rerum Indicarum (volume III) by Pierre du Jarric gives part of a letter by James Fenicio, a Jesuit missionary in the Zamorin's territory. This letter is the earliest European account of the Palur Church; as quoted above it has no date, but evidently belongs to the period between 1600 and 1607.[25][26] The missionary had obtained permission to erect four churches in the Zamorin's territory:[27]

I devoted all the remaining available time to the erection of these churches, and to the Christian inhabitants of this village [Palur]. I used to give them instructions as I chanced to meet them. As the church of Palur dedicated to Saint Cyriac [Quriaqus], which was the oldest (primus) among all the churches in Malabar, and renowned for favours and graces obtained, and for this reason much frequented, I devoted myself more especially to it. The stone church which I began two years ago [enclosing, apparently, within it the primitive building] had risen to the height of the windows. At this stage no one would dare to pull down the old wooden building, fearing to be struck down by sudden death: it stood surrounded by the walls of the new erection, but after I had prayed and removed their timidity, the old structure was pulled down, and the new building stood out in such fine proportions that the Hindus, the Mahomedans, and the Jews flocked to see it.

— Jarric 1615, p. 50–51

From the Jesuit annual letter of 1607, Domenico Ferroli quotes a note from Fenicio:[28]

"I cannot"-so he writes "easily describe the difficulties I encountered in going to Palur... When I arrived at Palur, the Zamorin invited me to dinner. I put on, on purpose. a sad and serious countenance, and said I had taken food already... I determined to preach in four parishes, as the Bishop of Angamale had begged of me, but I stopped longer at this Church of St. Quiricus, which is very old and famous for miracles... Two Kinglets, having in vain appealed to their idols, made vows in this Church with the object of getting an heir. God heard them. One determined to feed 500 or 1,000 of the faithful. The second called about 4,000. The first then, not wanting to be beaten in generosity, is preparing a larger invitation. Knowing that great crowds would be coming. I adorned the Church and arranged a grand procession, which was much admired and praised"...

— Ferroli 1939, p. 409–410

This is one of the Seven churches traditionally assigned to the time when Saint Thomas preached in Malabar. The wooden structure must undoubtedly have been very old, and constructed no doubt of teak which grew all over the country even in comparatively recent times: at that early age the supply must have been very plentiful.[26]

  • Dom Alexis de Menezes and the Synod of Diamper

Antonio de Gouvea, a Portuguese missionary and chronicler of Dom Alexis de Menezes, records in his book "Jornada Dom Alexis de Menezes" about the church of Palur and other churches present nearby in the Kingdom of Zamorin:

On his way he was given letters from the Cassanars and Vicars whom from the Synod he had sent to the church of Pallur (Palayur), dedicated to the glorious Saint Cyriac Martyr, the last of this Christian community on the Northern side, in the lands of the king Samorin five leagues from Panane (Ponnani), a place well-known to the Portuguese and to our fleets, which meant to them a big disturbance with which the devil had deceived all those people, and the people of Anamaque (Enammavu) and Mutem (Mattam) and Chatacolangaree (Chattukulangara or Arthat Kunnamkulam), all in the lands of the king Samorin, and close to each other...

— Malekandathil 2003, p. 442–443

He explains how Menezes corresponded with them through letters to gain their support for his Synod of Diamper and latinisation programme. Gouvea also specifies that Palur church had a vicar and it was dedicated to St. Cyriac. He also states that Palur is the last of the Saint Thomas Christian communities in the North, in the kingdom of Zamorin. He further reports an incident in the Palur church when three of their leading men enacted a drama by playing the roles of Saint Thomas and Saint Peter, the Apostles, and Saint Cyriac, the patron saint of the church. Throughout the play, Saint Thomas and Saint Peter argue with each other as to whose law is superior and applies to all of them. The drama concluded with a message from Saint Cyriac, ruling that both the laws of Saint Peter and Saint Thomas are equal and thus the Saint Thomas Christians had no obligation whatsoever to Saint Peter, nor to his apostolic see in Rome, but to the apostolic see of Babylon, which was of Saint Thomas. Gouvea interprets this event as one induced by Devil and comments that their actions are 'iron-bound under the 'law of Saint Thomas'.[29]

In 1602, Francis Roz, the Bishop of Cranganore and the first Latin prelate of Saint Thomas Christians, made a pastoral visit to the church of Palur.[30]

  • Edapally Padiyola of 1632

In 1632, Saint Thomas Christians under the leadership of Archdeacon Givargis of the Cross met at Edapally Church on 25 December 1632 and drew a resolution against the Latin Jesuit Archbishop Stephen Britto. This document introduces them as Malankara Mar Thoma Nasranikal (Saint Thomas Christians of Malabar), and their geographical distribution is set between Kollam in south and Palur in north.

  • Account of Joseph Maria Sebastiani

Joseph Maria Sebastiani, the Vicar Apostolic of Malabar appointed by the Pope, on his first journey to Malabar in 1657, visits Palur church and meets the Vicar. He calls Palur, "primo luogo della Christianita della Serra" the primary place of Christianity in Malabar.[31]

  • Angamaly Padiyola of 1787

Angamaly Padiyola was a resolution signed by the representatives from 84 Syrian Catholic (Paḻayakur) churches. Palayur (Paluru) comes 79th in the list of churches that attended.

Accounts of post-Seventeenth century writers[]

Cross at Palayur Church
  • Joannes Facundi Raulin (1745)
Palayur Church is listed as Pallur or Palor by Joannes Facundi Raulin in Historia Ecclesiae Malabaricae in 1745.[32]
  • Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron (1771)
Palayur Church is listed as Pallour by A. H. Anquetil-Duperron in Zend Avesta, volume I in 1771. The church is listed as a Syrian Catholic Church in the territory of the Zamorin.[33]
  • Paulinus of St. Bartholomew (1794)
Paulinus of St. Bartholomew lists the church as Palur or Pallur under the Catholic Church, in India Orientalis Christiana in 1794.[34]
  • Thomas Yeates (1818)
Palur, with a church, is listed in the catalogue given in Indian Church History by Thomas Yeates in 1818.[35]
  • Thomas Whitehouse (1873)
In Lingerings of light in a dark land: Researches into the Syrian church of Malabar published in 1873, Thomas Whitehouse observes:

Of palur, little can be said having any special interest. It was the most northern of the seven ancient churches, with Quilon as the most southern. The village at present is an unimportant place and lies off any main road, about a mile or so S.E. of Chowghaut... Pálúr may have been once much such a trading colony as that at Quilon and Cranganore in ancient times; but its church is now in the hands of the romanists...
Gouvea narrates, in his account of a visitation by Archbishop Menezes,that in order to bring the proceedings of the Portuguese Archbishop and his synod at Udiamparur into odium, three of the leading men of place performed a farce or morality play in the church. One of the speakers impersonated St. Peter, another St. Thomas, and the third, who acted as umpire, St. Cyriac, to whom the church was then dedicated.
— (Whitehouse 1873, p. 31)

"Cottapaddy and Mattathil, designated as Syro-Roman (churches), are a little further north, but all within an easy distance of Palur, which must be regarded as the ancient mother church of this neighbourhood, though now eclipsed by her more wealthy daughters."

— Whitehouse 1873, p. 175
  • William Logan (1886)

Volume II of Malabar Manual authored by William Logan, the collector of Malabar District during 1875–1887 and a long time civil officer in British India, gives the following description of the church in Palayur:

...half a mile east of Küttingal, there is a Syro-Roman Catholic church, called the Palayur church, which is noted as being one of the seven original churches of Malabar. The congregation believe that St. Thomas the Apostle preached at the place, and it is noteworthy in connection with the suggestion made at p. 202 of Vol. I, that in immediate proximity to the existing modern church there is a mound with small debris strewn about it, which is still known as the site of the Jews' church," and which was evidently occupied by a building of some kind in former times... The modern church is a tiled building, 86 feet in length and 34 in breadth. It is under the See of the Patriarch of Babylon.

— Logan 1887, p. ccccxi

Palur Copper plates[]

Palur Copper Plates also known as Palayur Chempu Pattayam or Palayur Cheppēd is a set of four copper plates that were discovered from the Palayur Church. These have inscriptions in old Malayalam and Tamil Vattezhuthu script, and gives accounts of several the monetary and land deals of the church. The four plates are dated from 1606 (Kumbham 781 Malayalam Era), 1677 (Chingam 852 M. E.), 1681 (Mithunam 856 M. E.) and 1743 (Meenam, 918 M. E.) respectively. These plates were discovered in the 1920s by Henri Hosten, a Belgian Jesuit priest. The 4th plate, dated 1743, was the first to be deciphered and was published in the Travancore Archaeological Series in 1921.[36][37] Following this, the second plate (dated 1677) and the third plate (dated 1681) were also published in the Travancore Archaeological Series in 1927 by A. S. Ramanatha Ayyar.[38]

The plates provide details such as the names of the vicars of Palayur, namely Itty in 1606 and Chakko in 1677 and 1681. According to the first plate, the place name is Palur (in 1606) and in the second and third plates the place name evolves to Palaiyur (in 1677 and 1681) and finally in the fourth to Palayur (in 1743). The name of the patron saint of the church is mentioned as Maquriaka (in 1677) and Maquri (in 1681), both being Malayalam renderings of the Syriac name Mar Quriakose.[38] These four plates are preserved at the Palayur Church Museum.

Structure[]

Old photograph

Following the migration of the Hindu Brahmins from Palayur, the Church was built incorporating the old Hindu temple, which was deserted. The church, as built, was thus a fusion of Hindu architectural style in respect of ornamentation with a Persian church plan. The roof of the church rises like a tower above the nave. The approach or entrance is like a Hindu style mandapa – in Indian architecture a pillared outdoor hall or pavilion for public rituals.[39]

Giacomo Fenicio, an Italian missionary, built the new church around the small old teak wood church, after getting due permission from the locals who were not only superstitious but also sentimental about retaining the old Church. However, after the church was fully completed and after the priest had delivered a proper sermon, the local people agreed to demolish the old wooden structure, which resulted in the Church looking elegant. The original altar consecrated by St. Thomas is still retained. But during Tipu Sultan's invasion of Kerala in the 18th century, the church was destroyed by fire.[40] Thereafter it was re-built.[14]

Festival[]

A major festival that is held every year at the venue of the church, which lasts for two days, has a striking similarity to the Hindu festival held at Trichhur, a district town 28 kilometres (17 mi) away from the church, on the same days, with lot of fanfare of pageants, orchestra and pyrotechnics.[citation needed] During the Lenten season, the popular festival celebrated is called the 'Palayur Mahatheerthadanam' or Great Pilgrimage, conducted under the auspices of the archdiocese, when thousands of devotees, without caste distinction, participate in the festival.[14]

Visitor information[]

The Palayoor church is well connected by a road, rail and air services network. Palayoor is at a distance of 28 kilometres (17 mi) from Thrissur on the State Highway. It is on the Thrissur-Chavakad route, via Pavaratty. By train, it is on the Thrissur-Guruvayur broad gauge line, at a distance of 24 kilometres (15 mi). From Guruvayur, the Hindu temple town, the church is 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) by road. Nedumbasserry International Airport is only 80 kilometres (50 mi) from Palayoor.[41]

Important places to visit near the church precincts are: the Boat Jetty (Bottukulam) where St Thomas landed at Palayoor; the Thaliyakulam, the pond where St Thomas baptized the local people; the replica of Chinna Malai (small hill of Mylapore-Chennai) where St. Thomas attained martyrdom in 72 AD; 14 scenes from the life of St Thomas sculpted in granite; the Jubilee Door in front of the entrance of the main hall of the church (depicts various important Biblical events, carved in Burmese teak); and the historical museum where many objects of archaeological, historical and artistic value are displayed (includes the vessels and articles used by St. Thomas during his stay here).[8][14]

Bibliography[]

Notes
  1. ^ Logan, William (1887). "Ponnani Taluk". Malabar Manual. II: ccccxi.
  2. ^ Menon (1962), p. 72, 100, 611.
  3. ^ Sheshadri, Veena (2013). India: A to Z. ISBN 9789351184263.
  4. ^ Limca Book of Records: India at Her Best. Hachette UK. 2018. ISBN 9789351952404.
  5. ^ William, Logan (1887). "The People: Religion: Christianity". Malabar Manual. I: 199.
  6. ^ Whitehouse (1873).
  7. ^ Velu Pillai, T. K. (1940). Travancore State Manual. p. 664.
  8. ^ a b Menon 1962, pp. 100, 72
  9. ^ "About Syro-Malabar Church". Archived from the original on 12 May 2008. Retrieved 29 September 2009.
  10. ^ "The Syro-Malabar Church". Syro Malabar website. Retrieved 29 September 2009.
  11. ^ Cheriyan pp. 38, 40
  12. ^ Varghese 2006, pp. 254, 470–471
  13. ^ Traveller in India, Volumes 8-9. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. 1964. p. 44.
  14. ^ a b c d e George Menachery. "Palayoor Church of St. Thomas Thrissur Kerala India". Retrieved 29 September 2009.
  15. ^ a b "Overview". Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  16. ^ Kurikilamkatt 2005, pp. 173, 183
  17. ^ Ninan, M. M. (11 September 2018). The Acts of the Apostle Thomas. pp. 76–80. ISBN 9780359081882.
  18. ^ Evans, F.B. (1933). Madras District Gazetteers Malabar. Vol. 1. p. 478.
  19. ^ Menon 1962, pp. 72, 100, 101
  20. ^ Mingana, Alphonse (1926). The Early Spread of Christianity in India. University Press. p. 471. ISBN 9781617195907.
  21. ^ MacKenzie, Gordon Thomson (1901). Christianity in Travancore. Travancore Government Press. p. 11. ISBN 9781230341651.
  22. ^ Pallath, Paul (2018). The Provincial Councils Of Goa. Vadavathoor: Oriental Institute of Religious India. pp. 76–77. ISBN 9788188456222.
  23. ^ a b c d Pallath, Paul (2017). Rome and Chaldean Patriarchate in Conflict: Schism of Bishop Rokos in India. Vadavathoor: HIRS Publications. pp. 55–57. ISBN 9788187576907.
  24. ^ Giamil, Samuel (1902). "Genuinae Relationes inter Sedem Apostolicam et Assyriorum Orientalium et Chaldaeorum Ecclesiam". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (in Latin). Rome: Ermanno Loescher. 35 (1): 608. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00030112. ISBN 9780837078656. OCLC 689175631.
  25. ^ Jarric, Pierre du (1615). Thesaurus rerum Indicarum. Sumptibus Petri Henningii. p. 50-51. ISBN 9781166491291.
  26. ^ a b Medlycott, Adolphus E. (1905). India and the Apostle Thomas: An Inquiry, with a Critical Analysis of the Acta Thomae. p. 30 note. ISBN 9781463208530.
  27. ^ Menachery, George. "Indianchristianity".
  28. ^ Ferroli, D. (1939). Jesuits in Malabar. Vol. I. pp. 409–410.
  29. ^ Malekandathil, Pius, ed. (2003). Jornada of Dom Alexis de Menezes: A Portuguese Account of the Sixteenth Century Malabar. Kochi: L. R. C. Publications. pp. 442–446. ISBN 9788188979004.
  30. ^ Thekkedath, Joseph (2001). From the Middle of the Sixteenth to the End of the Seventeenth Century (1542-1700). Church History Association of India. p. 76.
  31. ^ Sebastiani, Joseph M. (1666). Prima Speditione All'Indie Orientali (in Italian). Rome: nella stamperia di Filippo Maria Mancini. p. 88. Archived from the original on 4 August 2016.
  32. ^ Raulin, Johannes Facundos (1745). Historia ecclesiae malabaricae. Rome: ex typographia Hieronymi Mainardi. p. 427-429.
  33. ^ Du Perron, Anquetil (1771). "Zend Avesta" (in French). I. N.M. Tilliard: clxxxv. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  34. ^ Paulinus, a. S. Bartholomaeo (1794). "India Orientalis Christiana'". Typis Salomonianis: 267 and map. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  35. ^ Yeates, Thomas (1818). Indian Church History. London: A. Maxwell. p. 134.
  36. ^ Aiyar, K. V. Subrahmanya (1921). "Palaiyur Plate of Kollam 918". Travancore Archaeological Series. III: Part 1: 211–214.
  37. ^ Hosten, Henri (1936). Antiquities from San Thomé and Mylapore.
  38. ^ a b Ayyar, A. S. Ramanatha (1927). "Two Copper Plate Records from Palaiyur". Travancore Archaeological Series. IV Part I: 84–91.
  39. ^ Church History Association of India (1969), p. 93.
  40. ^ Wenger, Estefania (2017). Tipu Sultan: A Biography. Vij Books India. ISBN 9789386367440.
  41. ^ Church History Association of India (1969).
References
  • Cheriyan, C. V. (1973). A History of Christianity in Kerala, from the Mission of St. Thomas to the arrival of Vasco Da Gama (A.D. 52-1498) (1973 ed.). Kerala Historical Society. - Total pages: 163
  • Church History Association of India (1969). Indian Church History Review, Volume 3 (1969 ed.). Church History Association of India.
  • Menon, A. Sreedhara (1962). Kerala District Gazetteers: Trichur, Kerala, Volume 7. Superintendent of Govt. Presses.
  • George, V. C. (1972). Apostolate and Martyrdom of St. Thomas (1972 ed.). Kottayam Dt., Fr. Joseph Vadakkekara. - Total pages: 193
  • Kurikilamkatt, James (2005). First voyage of the Apostle Thomas to India: ancient Christianity in Bharuch ... (2005 ed.). Asian Trading Corp. ISBN 81-7086-359-7. - Total pages: 264
  • Varghese, Theresa (2006). Stark World Kerala (2006 ed.). Stark World Pub. ISBN 81-902505-1-5. - Total pages: 816
  • Whitehouse, Thomas (1873). Lingerings of light in a dark land: researches into the Syrian church of Malabar (1873 ed.). William Brown & CO.

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