Sunday, May 1, 2011

South Park Street Cemetery (Calcutta)

During the height of the British Raj, Calcutta served as the capital of India. Because of this, there are several historic foreign cemeteries in the city. And the grandest among these is South Park Street Cemetery.



I believe that this cemetery should by rights belong in the lofty pantheon of the world's great cemeteries, alongside Pere Lachaise, La Recoleta, and Highgate Cemetery. Upon entering the gate, the visitor is overwhelmed by a vista of towering monuments amid well-tended vegetation. Banyans of different kinds are common here, and garden plants such as crotons and dracaenas are planted lovingly along the pathways among the tombs.



The cemetery was opened on August 25, 1767, when it was an area of relatively high ground amid swampy alluvial plains. Park Street, part of which was once a causeway, was built as an access road to the cemeteries here. The cemetery was closed in the 1830s, but burials with family were permitted in the following couple of decades. A very limited number of honorary burials have taken place since, with a few in the 20th century, and one in the 21st.





The people buried here include prominent Britons of two centuries ago: sea captains, high government officials, leaders of the British East India Company, and men honored by knighthood.





Sir William Jones, a great scholar of Indian culture and botany, and an accomplished linguist whose research of the Sanskrit language launched the first serious scholarly inquiries into the origins of the Indo-European language family, is interred here in one of the cemetery's tallest monuments.

The tomb of Sir William Jones


The tomb of Elizabeth Barwell, one of the most massive pyramids in the cemetery


There are a number of legendary graves here. One is that of Charles "Hindoo" Stuart, a British major general who "went native," adopting the customs, dress and even religion of the locals. His tomb is shaped like a small Hindu temple.

The grave of "Hindoo" Stuart.


Another legendary tomb is the Dennison monument, known as the "Bleeding Tomb," because at certain times of year it appears to bleed. (Probably iron oxide leeching out during the rains.)

The Bleeding Tomb


And here's the spiral-columned tomb of young Rose Aylmer, who died of cholera a year after arriving in India.


And the grave of the Anglo-Indian poet Henry Louis Vivian Derozio, who helped inspire the Young Bengal Movement in the early 19th century.



There used to be a North Park Street Cemetery. Unfortunately, it was razed decades ago for urban expansion. Grave tablets from that cemetery were preserved and mounted in the eastern wall of South Park Street Cemetery.



On top of this, there is a small section where graves from the nearby Scottish Cemetery were moved. The Scottish Cemetery has recently been cleaned up and is under restoration.

South Park Street Cemetery contains well over 1,000 burials. If you visit (and if you're a graver, you must!), be sure to stop by the cemetery office and purchase their informative cemetery booklet for Rs. 100 (just over US$2). The proceeds go to helping maintain the cemetery.

A brief video:


On Find A Grave

South Park Street Cemetery

Getting There

South Park Street Cemetery is very centrally located in Calcutta, situated by the intersection of Park Street (now Mother Teresa Sarani) and Lower Circular Road (now AJC Bose Road). It's probably within walking distance from wherever you're staying. It is a 20 minute walk from the Sudder Street area, where the majority of the low-to-mid-level hotels that cater to foreigners are. From the Park Street Metro Station, walk along Park Street in an easterly direction, along the right-hand side of the road, for just under 1.5 km. You can't miss the gate of the cemetery.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Bangkok Protestant Cemetery

The Bangkok Protestant Cemetery is one of my favorite cemeteries in the world. Located on the banks of the Chao Phraya river in a quiet Bangkok neighborhood, it's rarely visited, easy to get to, boasts a wide variety of interesting graves, and makes a nice alternative to the usual tourist activities of the city. There are two 7-Elevens close by as well as a major international-class hotel, meaning that you're never far from food, drinks or a bathroom. There's also a little chapel where you can take shelter from the heat or rain. I could easily spend all day here!




























This cemetery contains over 1,000 visible grave plots. People of numerous nationalities are buried here, with British, German and Danish graves being the most common, but there are also Americans, Dutch, French, Russians, Poles, Chinese, Thais, and a Nigerian. Not all burials are Protestant or even Christian: there are a fair number of Jewish graves here, as at the time of their deaths there was no separate Jewish Cemetery.

Several dozen graves/plots have no headstones or legible inscriptions. Of those with legible or decipherable inscriptions, there are approximately 1,000 names recorded on the monuments here. A burial register kept by Christ Church on Convent Road (off Silom Road) records around 1,800 names.

The cemetery was founded as a royal land grant given by King Mongkut (Rama IV) on July 29, 1853. The cemetery remains open to burials on a restricted basis. A new pre-need tomb was erected sometime between November 2009 and August 2010.

The cemetery is divided into sections labeled A, B, C, etc., demarcated by concrete posts. There are some informal subdivisions: there's a small Jewish section (despite this being a Protestant cemetery), a Chinese section, a foreign missionary section, a Danish section, a few military sections, and a section for the family of Admiral John Bush. These divisions are not strict, so not all Jews are in the Jewish section, and not all burials in the Jewish section are of Jews, and so forth.

The Jewish section













The foreign missionaries section













The cemetery is well-tended by a caretaker whose family lives on the premises by the river. They have done a great deal of excellent work over the years I've visited, and each time there have been vast improvements made. A dying tree was removed and new frangipanis were planted in 2009. A lot of landscaping has been done near the entry gate, and the grounds are regularly mowed with weed-whackers during the dry season.

The section close to the river













The cemetery suffers from a major problem: flooding. If you visit during the wet season, expect to find a good proportion of the cemetery inaccessible, though you can still walk along the central drive and walk among the graves close to the river. It's during this time that vegetation can grow uncontrollably, obscuring graves especially in the corner to the far left of the entry gate. Infestations of the invasive Channeled Apple Snail (Pomacea canaliculata) are evident, with their pink egg sacs on gravestones in the wet season, and empty shells on the ground in the dry season. The best time to visit is in the dry season (February-April).

The most impressive memorial is that of Henry Alabaster, an advisor to King Chulalongkorn. The memorial looks like a small church. Alabaster's actual grave is elsewhere in the cemetery. Other prominent people buried here include missionary Dan Beach Bradley.

Henry Alabaster memorial

















Grave of Dan Beach Bradley

















A brief video

I can't get enough of this wonderful place!

On Find A Grave


Getting there

The address is Soi 72/5, Charoen Krung Road.

By riverboat: Take the orange-flag riverboat heading south and get off at the last stop, which is the Wat Rajsingkorn pier (S3). Walk to the main road, turn left, and then make the next left after the Thailand Tobacco factory. Walk through the brown-painted metal gate.

By BTS: Take the BTS to the Saphan Taksin station. Exit, and walk south along Charoen Krung Road for about 25 minutes. Shortly after the Ramada Menam Riverside Hotel, you'll reach Soi 72/5.

By bus: take bus 1 or 15. Tell the conductor you want to get off at Menam Riverside.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Liuzhangli Cemeteries

Liuzhangli Cemeteries is an informal name for the huge, sprawling complex of graveyards in Taipei. They are located along the narrow and winding Chongde Street, near Liuzhangli MRT station.





Among the cemeteries located here are the following:

Jile Cemetery
Taipei Public Cemetery No. 6
Muslim Cemetery
And three White Terror cemeteries.

Prior to the arrival of the Kuomintang, this area had been primarily tea-growing land, owned and farmed by local families for a century and a half. It has long been the tradition of farmers to bury their loved ones on family-owned land, and thus graves began appearing on the hillsides. A tomb dated 1831 has been spotted here, but there may be even older graves. But when the KMT took control of Taiwan, they declared the entire area a place for burials. Here is the final resting place of KMT heroes and victims, folks rich and poor, soldier and civilian, famous and anonymous. There are even a few foreigners buried here.

This area is particularly fascinating because of the sheer variety of different styles of tombs visible here. Some are demarcated by horseshoe-shaped walls, some are shaped like loaves of bread, some like little houses, some grand monuments, some just tiny stones. There are graves of Buddhists, Taoists, Muslims, and Christians. If there's one place in Taiwan to get a good overview of the diversity of grave styles, this is the place.

A horseshoe-shaped tomb, and above it, a house-shaped tomb


A loaf-shaped tomb


The tomb of the Taiwanese activist Chiang Wei-shui


Getting there:
To reach the cemeteries, exit Liuzhangli MRT station, turn right and walk immediately across the street. The next street is Chongde Street. From there, you can walk a couple km up the road, or take a cab. In the lead-up weeks before the Qingming Festival, free shuttle services are available on this road on the weekends. A convenient place to start exploring is the at prominent white pagoda.

On Google Street View:

Pagoda area

Tours:
Interesting, informative tours of this area are often given by Linda Gail Arrigo.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

British Cemetery (Kathmandu)

Nepal offers few opportunities for cemetery research. However, within the city of Kathmandu lies a true gem of a cemetery. It's the British Cemetery.



This is a lovely little graveyard that offers the visitor a break from the chaos of the city. The cemetery is small--fewer than 100 marked interments--but it's well tended by caretakers who live on site. It's adorned with camellias, poinsettias, frangipani, ficus, agave, flame vine and more.



The cemetery, known to the locals as Kapur Dhara, was founded in 1816, the year that the Gurkha War ended and the British Embassy was established. The earliest marked interment is that of Robert Stuart in 1820. The cemetery is on the grounds of the British Embassy, though it's now no longer contiguous with the main complex of the British Embassy since much of the former embassy land was transferred to establish the Indian Embassy.



Not many people here are famous. Perhaps the most well-known interee is Boris Lissanevitch, the founder of the famed Yak & Yeti Hotel.



The oldest graves are the first ones you encounter after entering though the gate. There are only seven marked interments from the 19th century, and the monuments for them are all quite grand.



Many of the graves are those of adventure seekers who met with tragedy. One of the most poignant graves is that of the Wilkins family, who died in a plane crash in 1992. I paused an especially long time while visiting their grave.



One of the most interesting graves is that of Micheal (sic) John Cheney. It features both a Christian cross and a small Buddhist stupa.



Well worth a visit, and off the beaten tourist path.

On Find A Grave

British Cemetery

Getting there

From Thamel: Walk east along Tridevi Marg (the street where the Fire & Ice pizza restaurant is) to the intersection with Kanti Path, where the gateway to the Ministry of Education is. Then walk north. Cross the next major intersection and keep walking north (Lazimpat Road) and then up the side street past the Department of Geology and Mines and the British Embassy. When you reach the Indian Embassy, walk along the narrow walled street that angles westward. After about five minutes you will reach the gate of the cemetery. It will be locked: knock at the gate, and the caretaker should come and let you in. If that doesn't happen, go back to the British Embassy and inquire there about visiting. (To maximize your chance of entry into the cemetery, it may be wise to go on a weekday.)