By: Sneha Mary Mathew
Published in: *The Wire*
Date: December 31, 2025
Source:
https://thewire.in/the-arts/the-murals-of-cheppad-early-christian-art-in-india
The story of Indian Christian art is often treated as a blank slate before
the colonial era. The murals of Cheppad are the powerful, vivid rebuttal to
that silence.
“For the ancient Churches of these Christians, built many years before the
arrival of Portuguese in India, were all of them adorned with these (*Saint
Thomas Crosses
<https://www.sahapedia.org/saint-thomas-crosses-the-pahlavi-inscribed-granite-crosses-of-south-india>)*,
both in painting and sculpture.”
∼ Francisco de Gouvea

Gouvea, a 16th century Portuguese chronicler, wrote these word
<https://archive.org/details/JesuitsInMalabarVolI/page/n79/mode/2up?q=painting>
s
<https://archive.org/details/JesuitsInMalabarVolI/page/n79/mode/2up?q=painting>
 about Kerala’s ancient Christian community in the *Jornada do Arcebispo de
Goa Dom Frei Aleixo de Menezes (The Journey of the Archbishop of Goa Dom
Frei Aleixo de Menezes).* He was documenting the Archbishop’s tour of the
region before Menezes presided over the Synod of Diamper in 1599. It was
this controversial council that brought the St Thomas Christians, also
known as the Nasrani, under the authority of the Roman Pope.

Whether Gouvea travelled with the Archbishop, or wrote based on the
bishop’s notes, is a separate matter and worthy of discussion. However, the
book is unequivocal proof of a stunning fact — long before European
missionaries came to India with their Western outlook on Christian art and
aesthetics, the churches of Kerala already had a thriving and rich
indigenous artistic tradition.

But what did this art look like? How did it evolve in the cultural crucible
of the Malabar Coast, free from Western influence? The St George Orthodox
Church in Cheppad holds the clue. Here, on the three walls of the holy
sanctum, lies one of the most significant and overlooked treasures of
Indian art history — the Cheppad Murals.
Legacy on the walls

Believed to be from the 13th century, the Cheppad Murals are the oldest
surviving church murals in the region. This breathtaking panorama unfolds
across 48 panels, with the left and right walls comprising paintings drawn
in three layers. The top layer of both walls represents the apostles. The
central image in the central wall, drawn with great importance, is the
Ascension of St Mary, which is also seen in other mural paintings in Kerala
churches. An extensive biblical narrative covers the walls  — from Old
Testament scenes of Adam and Eve and Noah’s Ark to the life of Christ,
meticulously detailed from His birth to His Ascension.

Above them all, the apostles are depicted, each with a feature tied to
their story. In Christian art, apostles or saints are often identified
through distinctive symbols, and the Cheppad murals follow this convention.
St Paul is shown with a sword, alluding to his martyrdom by beheading. St
Peter holds a key, a reference to early Christian tradition portraying him
as the keeper of heaven’s gates. St Thomas carries a carpenter’s tool,
linked to the tradition that he came to India in the guise of a carpenter.
St Andrew appears with an X-shaped cross, recalling the form of the cross
on which he was believed to have been martyred.

But, why decorate a church so elaborately? One account from Gouvea’s book
offers a clue. When he asked a local Christian about his faith, the man
mentioned a painting, explaining it was “how they remembered God” — as the
old man, the young man, and the pastor. (The word “pastor,” perhaps is the
result of a misinterpretation by Gouvea, but the statement points directly
to the community’s belief in the Christian concept of the Trinity). Indeed,
a representation of the Trinity is also part of the Cheppad murals, where
the Father is depicted as an old man with a triangular halo, a young man
with a circular one representing the Son, while the Holy Spirit is a dove.

This visual theology lesson served a primary function — it was a communal
Bible for the people. As St Gregory the Dialogist (Pope of Rome, c.
590–604) once wrote, “For what writing presents to readers, this a picture
presents to the unlearned who behold, since in it even the ignorant see
what they ought to follow; in it the illiterate read.”

This powerful insight not only affirmed the value of sacred imagery in the
Latin West but also resonates with how visual narratives functioned in
Kerala’s churches — as a form of theological instruction accessible to all,
regardless of literacy. But to see the murals as mere teaching tools is to
miss their deeper purpose. Art is also a mirror, reflecting a community’s
identity. The St Thomas Christians of Kerala were deeply integrated with
the region’s local culture. Their church architecture borrowed from temple
designs, and their customs blended with the cultural traditions of Kerala.
Their art was no different. In the nativity scene at Cheppad, figures are
depicted in local attire — a conscious choice to make the sacred story
familiar.

Interestingly, this blending of Christian theology with native aesthetics
was not unique to Kerala. It appeared all along the route where the
Nestorians preached and worked. Also known as the Church of the East, the
Nestorian Church is a branch of Eastern Christianity that originated in the
Sasanian Empire (modern-day Iran and Iraq) during the fifth century.
Records suggest that the St Thomas Christians were in active communion with
the Nestorian Church, and all liturgical assistance was provided by them
until the Portuguese interfered. A striking parallel can be found in
Nestorian Christian art from China of the same period, where sacred symbols
were reimagined through Buddhist and Taoist visual idioms. These were not
mere adaptations — they reflected a deeply rooted theological identity
shaped by place and time.

Stylistically, the murals are a fascinating hybrid. Vibrant reds and greens
fill bold, black outlines, echoing the aesthetics of Indian folk painting,
as seen in the charmingly direct depiction of Noah’s Ark. Yet this is
blended with a distinct West Asian aesthetic of the 12th and 13th century,
inherited from the Syriac tradition. The figures are often rigid and
frontal, with large, wide-open, almond-shaped eyes that gaze into a
timeless, sacred space. Christian works of art often reflect doctrinal
debates. In the Cheppad murals, certain prominent Nestorian beliefs are
clearly evident, such as the depiction of Christ’s suffering and His human
form alongside His divinity, echoing the doctrine of Christ as both fully
man and fully God. Yet, assigning the entire mural to a single tradition is
difficult, as its many themes display a blend of influences. This likely
points to collaboration or contact between different Christian traditions.

Located near the historic port of Kollam, the Cheppad Church may have
served as a convergence point for such exchanges. The ordered arrangement
of the murals suggests they were painted in a single phase rather than
across different periods. Early Portuguese records and travel accounts
mention bishops and priests from Armenian, Babylonian, Persian, and Syrian
backgrounds in the region, supporting the possibility of diverse liturgical
and theological inputs.

In this light, the role of these theological guides in conjunction with the
mural artist’s interpretations and the patron’s expectations are central to
interpreting the nuances of the murals. Together, they influenced not only
what was painted, but how the community’s beliefs, values, and local
traditions were expressed on the walls. At the same time, a detailed study
of the Cheppad murals’ themes can uncover hidden collaborations and offer
deeper insights into the layered history of early Christianity in the
region.
Between survival and silence

This vibrant, independent tradition faced an existential threat with the
arrival of the Portuguese. The Synod of Diamper in 1599 sought to “purify”
the local church of its “Nestorian errors,” a campaign that was not just
theological but also artistic. Gouvea himself records that Archbishop
Menezes visited the Cheppad Church and ordered archives and records to be
burnt. While the murals are not specifically mentioned as having been
destroyed, they survived in an atmosphere of cultural purge.

Centuries later, the murals faced a different kind of threat: a
well-intentioned but unscientific intervention. During a church renovation
in 1952, the sanctum was preserved, but a local painter was commissioned to
“correct” the artworks. The techniques used are undocumented, but experts
like researcher Gibin Varghese suggest the murals were likely far more
colourful originally, with many details potentially lost or painted over
during this process.

Even today, the neglect continues. A protective layer, applied by the
Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) years ago, has faded, leaving much of
the original work exposed to the elements. Dampness, flaking paint, and the
slow fading with  time, are taking their toll. There has been no modern,
scientific restoration effort to save them.

Ancient Christian communities across the world developing their own
distinct artistic traditions is a well-covered aspect in Religious Studies
and Art History. But the story of Indian Christian art is often treated as
a blank slate before the colonial era. The murals of Cheppad are the
powerful, vivid rebuttal to that silence. They are a vital chapter in
India’s multicultural story, proving that an ancient community forged its
own unique visual language to express its faith.

To allow them to fade away would not just be an artistic loss, but an act
of historical amnesia. Renewed attention and urgent conservation are needed
to ensure this fading testament can continue to tell its remarkable story
for generations to come.

*Sneha Mary Mathew is a research scholar at BSIP, Lucknow. She is
interested in the socio-cultural history of Christians in Kerala and enjoys
capturing and sharing people’s stories.*

*This article was originally published by the **MAP Academy*
<https://mapacademy.io/?utm_medium=Thewire&utm_source=syndication&utm_campaign=Thewire_syndication>*,
an open-access online resource focused on South Asian art and cultural
histories.*

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