CHINESE PAGODA AT NEGAPATAM.
  • CHINESE PAGODA AT NEGAPATAM.
    http://www.fullbooks.com/The-Travels-of-Marco-Polo-Volume-222.html


    Sir Walter ELLIOT, K.C.S.I., to whom Yule refers for the information
    given
    about this pagoda, has since published in the _Indian Antiquary_,
    VII., 1878, pp. 224-227, an interesting article with the title: _The
    Edifice formerly known as the Chinese or Jaina Pagoda at Negapatam_,
    from which we gather the following particulars regarding its
    destruction:--

    "It went by various names, as the _Puduveli-gopuram_, the old pagoda,
    Chinese pagoda, black pagoda, and in the map of the Trigonometrical
    Survey
    (Sheet 79) it stands as the Jeyna (Jaina) pagoda. But save in name
    it has
    nothing in common with Hindu or Muhammadan architecture, either in
    form or
    ornament."

    "In 1859, the Jesuit Fathers presented a petition to the Madras
    Government
    representing the tower to be in a dangerous condition, and requesting
    permission to pull it down and appropriate the materials to their own
    use...." In 1867 "the Fathers renewed their application for leave to
    remove it, on the following grounds: '1st, because they considered
    it to
    be unsafe in its present condition; 2nd, because it obstructed light
    and
    sea-breeze from a chapel which they had built behind it; 3rd,
    because they
    would very much like to get the land on which it stood; and 4th,
    because
    the bricks of which it was built would be very useful to them for
    building
    purposes.'

    "The Chief Engineer, who meanwhile had himself examined the edifice,
    and
    had directed the District Engineer to prepare a small estimate for
    its
    repair, reported that the first only of the above reasons had any
    weight,
    and that it would be met if Colonel O'Connell's estimate, prepared
    under
    his own orders, received the sanction of Government. He therefore
    recommended that this should be given, and the tower allowed to
    stand....

    "The Chief Engineer's proposal did not meet with approval, and on
    the 28th
    August 1867, the following order was made on the Jesuits'
    petition: 'The
    Governor in Council is pleased to sanction the removal of the old
    tower at
    Negapatam by the officers of St. Joseph's College, at their own
    expense,
    and the appropriation of the available material to such school-
    building
    purposes as they appear to have in contemplation.

    "The Fathers were not slow in availing themselves of this
    permission. The
    venerable building was speedily levelled, and the site cleared."

    In making excavations connected with the college a bronze image
    representing a Buddhist or Jaina priest in the costume and attitude
    of the
    figures in wood and metal brought from Burma was found; it was
    presented
    to Lord Napier, in 1868; a reproduction of it is given in Sir Walter
    Elliot's paper.

    In a note added by Dr. Burnell to this paper, we read: "As I several
    times
    in 1866 visited the ruin referred to, I may be permitted to say that
    it
    had become merely a shapeless mass of bricks. I have no doubt that
    it was
    originally a _vimana_ or shrine of some temple; there are some of
    precisely the same construction in parts of the Chingleput district."

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