In the plastic bag was a large old dirty blue photo album with old photos of my siblings in the 1960s, a small photo album which I made for my mother long ago after she died, and a pack of photos which belonged to my grandfather/father.
I think my grandfather sent this photo to my father in Kirkby, near Liverpool in England, for an exhibition about the history of Malacca or something similar. This photo was among many that my father had used for the said exhibition. I remember going through a handwritten letter (in pencil) for these photos. The text was written in English by my Malay grandfather. It explained what each photo was about. I don't remember where I had placed the letter. It maybe in a box in my bedroom next to my sejadah. I will check the text for this photo when I find the letter again.
The Portuguese captured Malacca from the last Sultan of Malacca in 1511. The fort was built in 1512 and was completed in 1518. The structures had Portuguese names. The Dutch renamed structures within the fort when it conquered and ruled Malacca from 1641 onward.Text for the above photo which is B/W. (The Portuguese names are followed by the Dutch names within brackets.)
Top left:
MALACCA FORT: CONJECTURAL RECONSTRUCTION
Showing Dutch additions (in colour) to the Portuguese works (black).
Based on Leupe's plan, Bort's report, Abdulla's account, and contemporary practice in fortification.
B: sea-level earthwork battery covering sands
G: gates rebuilt with guardhouses
D: drawbridges
S: sluices controlling moat
R: ravelin covering Victoria & flanking Emelia
The scale is in yards: 0, 100, 200
Top right:
Profile of Landward Defences (not to scale)
(fort), covered way, breastwork, berm, moat
(breastwork fitted with pointed stakes)
The fort itself, beginning at top left, going clockwise:
S, D, R
San Domingo (Victoria) Enlarged by Bort
Madre de Dios (Emelia) Casemated [Mother of God, chapel for the Portuguese Christians]
Moat dug 1673-4
Onze Mille Virgines (Henriette Louise) Casemated
G, D, S
Santiago (Wilhelmus)
Hospital Dos Povres (Mauritius) (hospital of the poor/pauper hospital; nearest the Straits of Malacca)
San Pedro or Curas
(Frederick Hendrick)
Middleburgh Half Bastion 1660
Warehouse (smallest of 3 and attached to Slavenburgh)
Slavenburgh
Governor's Residences & Offices (Stadhuys)
B, G, D
Customs House
Mora (Ernst Casimir) (probably to keep the king's coronation stone or similar to Stone of Scone)
Warehouse (trapezoid, standalone)
Warehouse (long rectangle and attached to Stadhuys)
Hospital Real (Amsterdam) (royal hospital; nearest the Malacca river)
Hospital (unspecified, located at south-centre between the Stadhuys and St Paul's Church)
St Paul's Church (up on the hill behind the A' Famosa today)
External links:
http://borneotip.blogspot.com/2011/07/malacca-fort.html
Reviews - A_Famosa_Fort-Melaka_Central_Melaka_District
http://archnet.org/library
http://khleo.tripod.com/tour.htm#tor2
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