Chennai from Mark's Side of the Bus

September 21, 2107. Thursday

The airport in Chennai

Street signs

I would have loved to stop here.


I have no idea what this building is.

nor this one, but they are pretty

The hospital

Gorgeous pots.  Those would not have been easy to take home




Some signs still say Madras


St Mary's





Some more information



The painting mentioned previously





Memorials in St. Marys



On the way back to the bus we passed these. Not sure how they work, being E-toilets. We were not brave enough to find out



Not sure what this building is. There seem to be a lot of those.



Beach at the Bay of Bengal

No one swims in the Bay of Bengal, but they do enjoy the beach

This is Gandhi.

The Cathedral  of St. Thomas




History Bit:
St Thomas, one of the twelve disciples of Jesus, arrived at Muziris in present-day Kerala state in India from the Roman province of Judea in A.D. 52 and preached between A.D. 52 and A.D 72, when he was martyred on St. Thomas Mount
A vast majority of early writings point to St. Thomas’s apostolic ministry in India specifically Cranganore along the Malabar coast from 52 A.D to 68 A.D. His journey through Kerala resulted in numerous conversions. After spending 10 years on the Malabar coast he is said to have traveled Eastwards across the Deccan Plateau, Arriving in Mylapore in 68 A.D. The cave at little mount used to be his favourite preaching spot. A 2000 years old never drying, miraculous stream of water on rock face is said to be a shining example of the apostle’s divine exploits. The church atop St. Thomas mount was built by Portuguese in 1547 to mark the spot here. It was on this St. Thomas Mount that the apostle was killed by a lance which pierced through his back.
His mortal remains were believed to be buried in the location over which the present day Santhomes Cathedral Basilica stands. Sometime in the 10th century A.D a group of Nestorian Christians from Persia founded the Christian village of San Thomes and proceeded to build a church over the burial site of St. Thomas. This structure fell to ruins between 14th and 15th century. In 1522 the Portuguese moved the apostle’s remains to a new tomb and church which attained the status of Cathedral in 1606.
Pope Pius XII honored the Cathedral Church of the Archdiocese of Madras - Mylapore raising it to the rank of Minor Basilica by apostolic brief dated 16th March 1956. Massive following and immense devotion of people to a very ancient image of the Blessed Virgin also known as “Our Lady of Mylapore” was among the motives that prompted the Pope to bestow this honor.
There was 118 years of insecurity and uncertainty from the time the Golconda’s occupied San Thome in 1662 to 1780. No considerable changes happened to the original structure of the church built in 1523. It was only in 1893 that his Excellency Dom Henrique Jose Reed da Silva, Bishop of Mylapore resolved to build a new church with the tomb of the apostle in the centre. The second small tower in the centre of the existing cathedral points to the exact place where the apostle was buried. The present Gothic style church was completed in 1896 and duly consecrated by Rt. Rev. Dom Henrique Jose Reed da Silva, the first Bishop of the diocese. In 1956 the church was elevated to the status of a Minor Basilica.
San Thome Basilica is the principal church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Madras and Mylapore. In 1956, Pope Pius XII raised the church to the status of a Basilica Minor, and on 11 February 2006, it was declared a national shrine by the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India. The San Thome Basilica is a pilgrimage centre for Christians in India. The church also has an attached museum.


A much better photo than the one I took!

 We have been to Rome, and now India. I think we should go to Spain to see the only other known Apostle's tomb



Good night

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two year

 Keeping this alive for the moment