Abstract:
The present investigation attempts to shed light on a relatively unknown
architecture that is the original and indigenous church architecture of Kerala.
According to a time honored tradition, St. Thomas, a direct disciple of Jesus
Christ brought Christianity to Kerala in the 1st century itself. Over the years, when
this community had grown, the need for new churches arose and the local
builders built them in the way they had conceived a religious building. As this
architecture matured through ages, it assumed a separate and original
architectural identity, which was totally ethnic by nature. The Portuguese arrived
in Kerala in 1498 and their misunderstanding in differentiating the cultural part
from the religious part of Kerala Christians, resulted in an attempt by them to
introduce a new and alien style of church architecture there, which eventually
succeeded in replacing the vernacular architecture. The aim of this investigation
was to (i) reconstruct the original form of Indigenous church architecture of
Kerala before it was modified by the European architectural intervention, (ii) to
compare the original church architecture to the other religious architecture in the
study area and the church architecture of the West, to find out the possible
influences that molded the original form and also (iii) to evolve feasible strategies
to conserve this architectural heritage.
To achieve this, firstly, the literature on the development of Christianity
and church architecture in Kerala, church architecture of the West as well as the
temple architecture of other religious buildings in Kerala were reviewed
thoroughly and inferences drawn. A list of all church buildings in Kerala built
mostly before 16th century was identified based on the literature review and an
in
extensive primary survey was conducted in all these churches by using pre
tested schedules. The schedule was prepared based on the literature survey as
well as observation made in the oldest existing churches in Kerala. The survey
data were processed and the architectural elements and characteristics, which
were commonly present (in more than 60 per cent of the sample churches) in the
indigenous churches were deduced. Further, the original form of pre-Portuguese
Kerala church was reconstructed by using those deduced architectural elements
and characteristics as indicators. To study further about the reconstructed modal,
a detailed architectural study, including measure drawing, was conducted on
purposely selected sample churches.
A comparative analysis of architectural elements and characteristics of
indigenous churches of Kerala, church architecture of the West and the temple
(Jain, Buddhist and Hindu) architecture of Kerala was done to understand the
possible influences that molded the characteristic features of indigenous church.
To undertake the comparative analysis, most important architectural variables
have been considered. This comparative analysis made a break-through and
revealed that the indigenous church architecture was purely based on vernacular
architecture of Kerala, religious as well as secular, to the larger extent. It has
been observed from this study that achieving homogenous regional identity
between buildings of different religions was the norm of the past and the
demarcation line between Hindu, Jain, Buddhist, Muslim or Christian edifices was
imperceptible. The study concludes with plausible recommendations to conserve
the indigenous church architecture, which is an integral part of the rich cultural
heritage of the State.