The
Dutch conquest of Malacca from the
Portuguese Empire in 1641 saw the proscription of
Roman Catholicism and the conversion of existing churches to
Dutch Reformed use. The old
St. Paul's Church at the summit of St. Paul Hill was renamed the
Bovenkerk (Upper Church) and used as the main parish church of the Dutch community. In 1741, in commemoration of the centenary of the capture of Malacca from the Portuguese, the Dutch
burgher community decided to build a new church, replacing the aging
Bovenkerk. The foundation stone was laid by the Malacca-born captain of the Malacca burghers, Abraham de Wind, on behalf of his father, Claas de Wind, a prominent burgher who had been the
secunde (deputy governor) of Malacca. The church was completed 12 years later, in 1753, and replaced the
Bovenkerk as the primary Dutch Reformed Church in Dutch Malacca. With the signing of the
Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824, possession of Malacca was transferred to the British
East India Company and in 1838, the church was re-consecrated with the rites of the
Church of England by
Daniel Wilson,
Bishop of Calcutta, and renamed Christ Church. The maintenance of the church was taken over by the government of the
Straits Settlements in 1858. Originally painted white, the church and neighbouring
Stadthuys building were painted red in 1911, and this distinctive colour scheme has remained the hallmark of Malacca's Dutch-era buildings since. ==Architecture==