India, Tamil Nadu state, Thiruvallur District, PULICAT, Dutch cemetery

28 March 2024 2 images Share: , ,
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Cemetery information:- The Portuguese established a trading post in Pulicat in 1502 with the help of the Vijayanagar rulers. They built a fort there and held this fort until 1609 when they were defeated by the Dutch. The Dutch occupied Pulicat fort in 1609. Between 1621 and 1665, 131 slave ships were deployed by the Dutch to export 38,441 Indians captured on the Coromandel coast and transported from Pulicat to be sold as slaves to Dutch plantations in Batavia. Pulicat was till 1690 the capital of Dutch Coromandel. It repeatedly changed possession, until finally occupied by the British in 1825. It became part of the Madras Presidency, which later became Madras state in independent India and renamed Tamil Nadu in 1968. The Dutch church has been built over several times and is rather dilapidated today, and the Dutch fort has fallen into ruin. The old lighthouse still stands at the opposite bank of the lake. The cemetery dating to 1622 has been taken under the wing of the Archaeological Survey of India and so has survived the passage of time. The grand, Dutch inscribed tombs and graves, carved with skeletons rather than the cross, have been quite well preserved. The cemetery lies behind the market. Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulicat Album incomplete. eGGSA captions by: Judi Meyer The GGSA Cemetery DVD only has information on the cemetery location. Cemetery ID: 6672 Google Earth Cemetery Initiative Information:- GPSID: 8003 GPS: 13 25.125, 80 18.910
MOLLER Anna Margaretha 1687-1737
MOLLER Anna Margaretha 1687-1737
MOLLER Anna Margaretha 1687-1737
MOLLER Anna Margaretha 1687-1737