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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Jews of Palayur  





3 Christianity in Palayur and Palayur Church  





4 Industry  



4.1  Coir  



4.1.1  Palayoor coir company  









5 How to reach  



5.1  Road  





5.2  Train  





5.3  Air  





5.4  Waterways  







6 See also  





7 Monuments at Palayoor  





8 References  





9 External links  














Palayur






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Coordinates: 10°3456N 76°0208E / 10.582139°N 76.035534°E / 10.582139; 76.035534
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Palayoor)

Palayur
Palur
town
Palayur Church
Palayur Church
Coordinates: 10°34′56N 76°02′08E / 10.582139°N 76.035534°E / 10.582139; 76.035534
Country India
StateKerala
DistrictThrissur
Languages
 • OfficialMalayalam, English
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
680506
Telephone code+91487
Kerala Syrian architecture

Palayūr, also called Palayoor and historically as Palur, is a town near Chavakkad, Thrissur district, India. It is famous for its ancient church, Palayur Mar Thoma Church, which is believed to be one of the seven major churches founded by Saint Thomas the ApostleinMalabar in 52 AD. It is the assumed to be first Christian Church in India.[1][2][3]

History

[edit]

According to Saint Thomas Christian tradition, Saint Thomas arrived in 50 AD at Muziris (Kodungallūr) with Jewish merchants for the propagation of Jesus Christ's message and through the sea route reached Palayur in 52 AD and built the Church here.[4] Palayur also had a flourishing Jewish settlement known as the Judankunnu (Jews' Hill).[5] Palayur was connected from the first century onwards even up to this day to other ancient trade centres of Kerala, especially Muziris, by rivers and backwaters. The river and backwater system in the erstwhile Cochin State opens out into the sea at Chettuwaye, Cranganur and Cochin with the three of the seven Thomasine churches at Palur, Kodungallur, and Parur connected together by this system. People from far off lands have found their way to Kerala and to Palayoor since ancient times. The coast was familiar country to the Phoenicians, the Romans, the Arabs and the Chinese long before Vasco da Gama arrived in 1498.[6]

Palayur was the stronghold of the Brahmins. When St. Thomas arrived from Kodungallur, Jews had a settlement at Palayur, two thousand years ago. Ruins of an ancient Jewish synagogue are still seen outside of a Brahmin temple about a furlong away from the Church.[1]

Jews of Palayur

[edit]

Palayur was an important settlement of Jews in Malabar.[7] The remnants of Jewish synagogue is known as the Judankunnu, literally meaning the 'hill of the Jews'.[5][8] Palayur, popularly known as Palur among the Mappila Jews, is of great importance in many their Malayalam folk songs and other local Jewish traditions.[9]

Christianity in Palayur and Palayur Church

[edit]
Palayoor Church

Palayur Mar Thoma Major Archiepiscopal Church Palayur. is unique in that the present church has a continuous history of two millennia and stands on the same spot where the apostle first established it. The first church founded by St. Thomas continued to exist for many centuries and we know that in 1607 the Italian Jesuit Giacomo Fenicio with permission from the ecclesiastical authorities, to construct a more convenient church around the existing old structure for the parish of Palayur.[4]

The church was under Mar Elias Mellus and Mar Mikhail Agustinos during their tenure.

The Thrissur Archdiocesan authorities are today wholeheartedly committed to the cause of developing Palayur into the focus of national and international pilgrim tourism in South India. The Palayur church was elevated as the first Archdiocesan pilgrim centre on 16 April 2000. The relic of St. Thomas conveyed from Ortona, Italy was established in the main altar of the church. The 30 km long annual Lenten Mahatheerthadanam or great pilgrimage on foot from the Thrissur to Palayur has conducted in every year.[10]

Industry

[edit]

Coir

[edit]
Thaliyakulam

Palayoor coir company

[edit]

Chavakkad was once the center of the coir industry. After cultivation, coir production was the most important source of livelihood for the people of the coastal areas.

In 1957, Fr., who was co-vicar of Palayur Church.  A coir industry unit was set up at Palayur under the leadership of Mathews Thaiparambil. the unit was located at the site of the Palayur SABS Convent.  The ropes required for the Palayur church (manikayar, coconut tying rope) were mainly used by the Maayu export company to provide employment to the locals.  Home-based and small units operated here.  Workers from other areas came here in search of work.

Years later the church's coir company ceased to exist.  After that a coir society was started in Palayur North under the leadership of Poonthath Muhammaduni.  Today the industry is at a complete standstill.  Coir was made from Palayur and nearby areas and shipped from Chavakkad ferry to Kochi and Kozhikode.

The reality is that the coir industry was the most important non-agricultural sector in Kerala during the formation of the state of Kerala.

How to reach

[edit]

Palayoor is a part of Trichur District and is located on the west Coast of Kerala. By road it takes 28 km to reach Palayur from Trichur. It is on Trichur – Chavakkad route, via Pavaratty. To travel by train catch Trichur – Guruvayur train (24 km). From Guruvayur to Palayoor take a bus or a taxi/auto rickshaw (2 km). Nedumbasserry International Airport is only 80 km from Palayoor.

Road

[edit]

Buses ply regularly between Palayoor/Chavakkad/Guruvayoor/Thrissur and all major towns in Kerala and South India.

Train

[edit]

Direct trains connect Thrissur with all major Indian cities like Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, Chennai, Bengaluru, Coimbatore, Trivandrum..... Some trains proceed from Thrissur up to Guruvayur.

Air

[edit]

Waterways

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Monuments at Palayoor

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Logan, William (1887). "Ponnani Taluk". Malabar Manual. II: ccccxi.
  • ^ Menon, A. Sreedhara (1962). Kerala District Gazetteers: Trichur, Kerala, Volume 7. Superintendent of Govt. Presses. pp. 72, 100, 611.
  • ^ Hope, W. (1876). "Story of Kunnamkulam Mission from 1853 to 1873". The Coral Missionary Magazine. London: W. Wells Gardener: 83.
  • ^ a b Ayyar, A. S. Ramanatha (1927). "Two Copper Plate Records from Palaiyur". Travancore Archaeological Series. IV Part I: 84–91.
  • ^ a b Jussay, P. M. (2005). Jews of Kerala. University of Calicut. ISBN 9788177480917.
  • ^ Whitehouse, Thomas (1873). Lingerings of light in a dark land: Researches into the Syrian church of Malabar. William Brown and Co. pp. 31–32.
  • ^ Yisrael, Muzeon (1995). Slapak, Orpa (ed.). "The Jews of India: A Story of Three Communities". catalogue, Israel Museum Jerusalem. 399. UPNE: 14, 28 &61. ISBN 9789652781796.
  • ^ Koder, S. S. "A Hebrew Letter of 1768 by Yechezkel Rahabi". Journal of Rama Varma Archaeological Society. 15. Cochin: 1–6.
  • ^ Zacharia, Scaria; Gamliel, Ophira (2005). Karkulali – Yefefiah – Gorgeous : Jewish Women's Songs in Malayalam with Hebrew Translation (in Malayalam and Hebrew). Ben Zvi InstituteThe Hebrew University of Jerusalem. ISBN 9789652351005.
  • ^ "PALAYUR CHURCH, CHAVAKKAD". thrissurkerala.com. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  • [edit]
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