Mattancherry Palace - INDIA
Located at a distance of 10 kilometers from Ernakulam city, Cochin,
Mattancherry Palace is a storehouse of ancient paintings and art forms.
The Mattancherry Palace came to be known as the Dutch Palace after the
Dutch carried out some renovation and extension work.
When was it built: Around 1555
Who built it: Portuguese
Where is it located: Mattancherry, Kochi, Kerala, India
Why was it built: As a Royal Palace
Architectural Style: Fine mix of colonial and Kerala style of architectures
Visit Timing: 9:45AM–1PM, 2–4:45PM on all days excepting Fridays.
How to Reach: Mattancherry is around 10km away from
Ernakulam, which is well-connected with other cities of India by rail.
Avail bus or boat service from Ernakulam to reach Mattancherry. Cochin
International Airport, is well-connected with several national cities
and a few international ones, is the nearest airport from Mattancherry
at a distance of around 45 km.
Mattancherry Palace, also called Dutch Palace, is located in
Mattancherry, on the banks of the backwaters of Kochi (erstwhile Cochin)
in Kerala, India. It is an architectural chef d'oeuvre of the 16th
century illustrating a fine mix of colonial and Kerala style of
architectures. This palace, built on the conventional Kerala style of
N?lukettu with four buildings set around a quadrangle, was gifted by the
Portuguese to the Raja of Kochi, Veera Kerala Varma. Extensions and
renovation works were done in the palace by the Dutch in the 17th
century following which it became popular as the Dutch Palace. The
palace that also houses a temple of goddess Bhagavati in the courtyard
today stands as a famous museum that holds exquisite and intricately
detailed ancient Kerala murals illustrating Hindu temple art as also
portrait gallery of the Rajas of Kochi having rare collection of royal
artefacts. The Palace not only offers a brief view of different
architectural styles under one roof but also the grandeur and lifestyle
of the royals in the bygone era.
History : The Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama received a warm welcome from
the rulers of Kochi when he landed at Kappad in 1498. The Portuguese
were allowed to build factories. The Palace was constructed by the
Portuguese in the mid-16th century sometime around 1555 and presented as
a generous gift to the King of Cochin, Raja Veera Kerala Varma. Many
sources mention that it was built and gifted to the King to mollify him
and make amends for plundering a temple in the area. While others opine
that it was a goodwill gesture to secure trade privileges. Several
attacks inflicted by the Zamorins of Calicut were warded off by the
Portuguese and eventually the Rajas of Cochin practically came under the
vassalage of the Portuguese. In 1663 the Dutch took over. They
conducted some extension and major renovation works in the Palace.
Renovations were also made subsequently by the Rajas that gave it a more
Hindu texture which over the centuries and the Palace has emerged as
one of the most significant places that illustrate primitive Hindu
Temple Art. The Kings of Kochi used this Palace as royal residence for
around two centuries and held significant rituals and functions like the
coronation ceremony. It was declared as a Government of India protected
monument in 1951. The upper floor of the double storied building that
include the bed chamber, coronation hall, dining hall and ladies chamber
among other rooms holds the present museum that was set up in May 1985.
Architecture & Design : The Place that displays a blend of colonial and Kerala style of
architecture is in the shape of a quadrangular building constructed in
the traditional N?lukettu style of Kerala architecture. Typifying
conventional Kerala mansion, this Palace has four wings on four sides
with a courtyard at the centre which is an abode to a small temple. The
temple is dedicated to the tutelary deity of the Kochi royal family,
Pazhayannur Bhagavathi. A Shiva temple and a Krishna temple are also
placed on two sides of the Palace. The architectural blend is eminent
from the designs of the arches and the dimensions of its chambers that
exhibit European style of architecture. The wooden ceiling of the Dining
Hall is elaborately decorated and the floor of the Palace is adorned
with one of the exceptional type of Kerala flooring that although
display a look of polished black marble is in fact made of a mix of
burned coconut shells, plant juices, charcoal, egg whites and lime.
Attractions at the Palace : The rich mural paintings embellished on the walls of the Palace
executed in vivid colours applying tempera technique illustrating Hindu
temple art are one of the main attractions of the Palace. The themes of
these murals are based on the two great Indian epics, the ‘Ramayana’ and
the ‘Mahabharata’, as also on other mythological legends associated
with Hindu gods. Some of them also include scenes from works of the
great Classical Sanskrit writer and poet, Kalidasa - particularly his
Sanskrit epic poem ‘Kumarasambhavam’. The Palliyara that is bed chamber
of the King located at the southwest corner of the building, left from
the entrance, is an eye-catcher. The room with low wooden ceiling adorns
around 48 paintings covering the wall surface of 300 sq. ft. These 16th
century paintings are the earliest ones of the Palace which are themed
on the ‘Ramayana’. Themes from Krishna Lila also finds place in some of
them. The coronation hall of the palace which is one of the rooms in the
upper floor displays some of the striking murals displaying great
compositions like sleeping Vishnu referred as Ananthasayanamurti; Rama’s
coronation; Goddess Lakshmi seated on a lotus; and Lord Shiva and
Goddess Parvati seated with Ardhanariswara among others. Floral designs
in wood craft ornate the hall’s ceiling. It also displays portraits of
the Kings of Kochi starting from 1864.
The Palace also exhibits various weapons like ceremonial spears,
daggers, sheathed swords and artilleries like cannon, an ivory
palanquin, golden thread woven ceremonial dresses of the Kings, royal
caps, royal umbrellas, a howdah, stamps and coins of those era and royal
furniture among others. The 17th and 18th century drawings of the Dutch
showing important plans of Cochin are also under display.
A Visit to the Palace : Mattancherry Palace, a reminiscent of the influence of the Portuguese
and the Dutch today stands as one of the finest museums in India from
both historical and architectural perspectives. Over the years it has
become one of the prominent tourist destinations of Mattancherry
attracting both national and international tourists round the year.
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