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  • This is a composite administrative document from the Portuguese Estado da Índia, comprising multiple dated fragments (1626–1627) originating primarily from Goa and Macau, with marginalia, seals, and archival provenance indicating custody by colonial archives in Bahia, Lisbon, Rio de Janeiro, and Macau. It records deliberations of the Council assisting the Government—comprising royal ministers, treasury officials (Junta da Fazenda), and the Council of Finance—regarding fiscal exigencies confronting the Royal Exchequer amid severe constraints on revenue from Portugal. Key figures include António d’Almeida de Morais, Luís Morguinha, and the Count-Nuno, Viceroy of India; locations encompass Macau, Mozambique, Japan, Diu, Goa, Lisbon, and the Cape Verde coast. The document details contractual arrangements for state-supervised voyages—particularly the Macau–Nagasaki trade (*Viagem do Japão*), voyages to Mozambique, and intra-Asian commerce—specifying valuations in *xerafins*, *réis*, *vinténs*, and *patacas*; conditions for forced labourers (*forçados*); revenue assignments (*adrogo*); freight duties (*imagens*); and fiscal concessions to confraternities such as the *Virgens do Cabo*. It reflects tensions between municipal autonomy (notably Macau’s bid for administrative independence) and central colonial authority, mechanisms for revenue farming, contested appointments (*provídos*), and the integration of hybrid fiscal instruments—including Chinese imperial contributions, ecclesiastical obligations, and mercantile consortium agreements (*Empreza*)—within the imperial financial architecture. The material is essential for research on early modern Iberian colonial finance, maritime trade governance, and the administrative history of Portuguese Asia.

  • This 1626 official correspondence, originating from the Senate of the Leal Senado (Municipal Council) of Macau and addressed to the Portuguese monarch, documents fiscal and administrative challenges within the Portuguese colonial enclave in China during the early 17th century. The letter, dated 14 November 1626 and signed by Diogo Cabral de Deus and other council officials, explains the city’s inability to comply with royal directives to fund the stipends of the Bishop and Chief Magistrate (Oidor) from the *caldeirão*, a municipal revenue fund already overextended by obligations to local and regional authorities, religious orders, charitable institutions, and military expenditures. It highlights severe financial strain caused by recent losses and debts incurred through privately funded fortifications and garrisons from Goa and Manila. The document further commends Dom Felipe Lobo, Captain-General of Macau, for maintaining stability with local Chinese Mandarins, and strongly recommends Dom Diogo de Valente, Bishop of Japan, for ecclesiastical leadership, praising his moral authority and dedication to both divine and royal service. Marginal annotations summarise key points, including strained finances and diplomatic relations. Seals from the Arquivo Histórico Ultramarino and Arquivo de Marinha e Ultramar confirm provenance from Portuguese colonial archives. This primary source provides critical insight into the fiscal constraints, governance structures, and Church-state dynamics in Portugal’s Asian territories under the Iberian Union, as well as the strategic importance of Macau in Sino-Iberian relations.

Last update from database: 6/16/26, 6:13 PM (UTC)