World Travel GuidesUNESCO World Heritage Site Dutch Graveyard


Exotic Tours of Asia
 Compare Hotel Room Rates from different Booking Sites  Asia Travel Guide     


The Dutch Graveyard is a small cemetery in Malacca first used at the last quarter of the 17th century. It is located at the foot of the St Paul's Hill. Despite its name, only five Dutch graves remains there today, the balance 33 belonging to British officers and their wives. It's a case of gatecrashing a party, six feet under. That is because the cemetery was used first by the Dutch, between 1670-1682, and later by the British, between 1818-1838.



The Dutch Graveyard. The grave with the tall column belongs to two army officers killed in the war in Naning, Malacca, in 1831-32.

Initially, the British their dead on St. Paul's Hill. Only in 1818 that they began to bury here. The first burial was that of John Kidd, a sea captain, while the last was the wife of a British army offier. Today the Dutch Graveyard has been gazetted as a national monument by the Antiquities Act of 1976.

Photo of the Dutch Graveyard


This British grave is on St Paul's Hll, on the way to the Dutch Graveyard. The British first buried there before deciding to use the Dutch Graveyard.

Return to Malacca Travel Guide
Return to Malaysia Travel Guide
or visit Melaka UNESCO World Heritage Site


Get my latest updates on Google+



Find a hotel









Point - Click - Discover!

Thanks for visiting this webpage. To continue exploring, choose another destination!


My World Travel Guides - celebrating a beautiful world beautifully.

Accessories for your trip