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This abstract describes a 1590 historical document: a confidential letter composed in Tabriz on 23 August 1590 by Amriq Demacedo, a Portuguese ecclesiastical agent residing in Shiraz, Persia, addressed to Father Master Gaspar, his ecclesiastical superior. The letter details diplomatic and jurisdictional tensions between Portuguese interests and Safavid Persian authorities, centring on the contested conversion and removal of a woman—formerly wife of a local Cide—from Chaul to Shiraz, her subsequent detention by Portuguese agents allegedly for entry into religious life (*espurz*), and the Cide’s formal complaint before Shah Abbas I (referred to as *Shahamaz*). It records interventions by high-ranking Persian officials including the *Xatamaz* (a senior administrative or military commander), the *Xa adozado* (a titled sovereign or viceroy), and the *Blessed Natumarz*, alongside correspondence with Abrem Cab (King of Shiraz and Captain-Major of the Persians), Abre Cad (a regional dignitary), the King of Cara, and the ruler of Kermān. The text documents the siege of Ormuz instigated by Persian forces, grievances concerning illicit Portuguese commercial activity—including wine trade in violation of *sharīʿa*—financial hardship, logistical strain among Portuguese and Safavid personnel (*sefrawos*), and urgent appeals for ecclesiastical advocacy, stipend restoration, and confidential handling due to surveillance by Muslims and disloyal Portuguese. The letter was conveyed by António Mendes de Linhares and reflects concerns over sovereignty, religious jurisdiction, and colonial entanglement in late-sixteenth-century Persian Gulf politics.
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This abstract describes a multi-page historical document comprising spiritual correspondence and theological instruction, dated to the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century, originating from the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in the Portuguese colonial sphere. The text includes a letter attributed to ‘Master Gaspar’ (page 47), addressed to an unnamed religious brother, alongside earlier material (pages 1, 43, 44) bearing marginal annotations and an unclear signature possibly reading ‘J. P.’. Key locations referenced are Ormuz and Goa—strategic centres of Jesuit activity in the Persian Gulf and western India—and the College of St Paul in Goa is explicitly named. Central figures include Master Gaspar, Father António Gomes, and Fernão (identified as a collaborator in shared apostolic labour). The document articulates core Jesuit spiritual ideals: radical poverty, absolute chastity, and total obedience, framed through Augustinian and Pauline theology, martyrdom discourse, and ascetic discipline. It addresses vocational discernment, endurance of persecution, the transformative power of the Cross, and practical arrangements for relocating a daughter under ecclesiastical guardianship. The language reflects Counter-Reformation spirituality, employing period-specific colonial and theological terminology consistent with Iberian missionary contexts. This transcription serves as primary evidence for studying Jesuit formation, spiritual rhetoric, and transcontinental religious networks in early modern South Asia and the Indian Ocean world.
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This abstract describes a historical document comprising a multi-page transcription of a 1580 Jesuit correspondence, dated 13th October 1580 and originating from the College of Bom Jesus in Ormuz. The text includes a letter attributed to Ep. Antonio Mendes Dalinda [?], addressed to an unnamed ‘Most Serene Majesty’ and referencing negotiations involving Persian political affairs, particularly concerning Shāh ‘Abbās (rendered as *Xalamaz*), the Safavid monarchy, and the city of Tabriz. It further references Father M. Gaspar’s reply to earlier letters sent from Shiraz and Tabriz, and cites figures including Zeide, Salamar, Xarad, and Lavarij. Key themes include Jesuit missionary activity in Safavid Persia and Portuguese-controlled Ormuz; theological reflections on divine providence, free will, and ecclesial authority; concerns over Muslim religious practice—including possession and study of a defective Qur’an—and allegations of conspiracies among local elites to surrender Ormuz to the Ottomans. The document contains marginal annotations, an illegible crowned shield seal, and reflects contemporary colonial terminology, liturgical usage (e.g., Coverdale Psalter), and early modern Catholic intellectual frameworks. It serves as a primary source for studying Iberian missionary diplomacy, Safavid–Portuguese relations, and Jesuit historiography in late sixteenth-century western Asia.
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