Francis Itty Cora //free\\ Link
He was a 16th-century Syrian Christian from the Knanaya community, a man of quiet faith and deep roots in the pepper-rich lands of Kottayam. But his name survives not for what he owned, but for what he sought.
In 1506, during the Portuguese occupation, he convinced the Archbishop of Angamaly to let him search. For months, he wandered the Malabar coast, tracing old songs and half-forgotten landmarks. And then, on a hillock near present-day Ernakulam, he found it—half-sunken in earth, covered in wild roots, but intact. francis itty cora
Itty Cora became obsessed with finding it. He was a 16th-century Syrian Christian from the
Legend says that around 1500 years before his time, in the year AD 345, a group of 400 Syrian Christians—families, deacons, and their bishop Mar Joseph of Uraha—had arrived in Kodungallur. With them, they carried a precious relic: a stone cross inscribed with an ancient Pahlavi script. That cross, known as the Knanaya Cross, was later lost—hidden, perhaps, in the deep forests of Mattancherry, or buried beneath the rubble of time. For months, he wandered the Malabar coast, tracing

