Your search

  • This archival document comprises a composite set of sixteenth- to seventeenth-century Portuguese colonial administrative records, primarily dated between 2 March 1626 and 6 March 1666, originating from the Estado da Índia and concerning fiscal, maritime, and jurisdictional matters across Macau, Goa, Mozambique, Japan, and associated territories. Key figures include António de Oliveira de Morais, António Armigante, Luís Morguinhão, João Nunes de, João de Soares, Lourenço de Carvalho, and Julião de Campos Barreto; prominent institutional actors are the Council assisting the Governor-General, the Treasury Council (Conselho da Fazenda), the Count of Mirandela, and the Viceroy of India. The core subject matter encompasses contractual arrangements for state-sponsored maritime voyages—particularly the Macau–Japan trade, Mozambique expeditions, and China–Manila commerce—including valuation of cargoes (e.g., 33,000 xerafins for Afonso de Mello de Calão’s Macau voyage), stipulated remuneration for provisioned officials (30,000 xerafins per *largem*), conditional royal approval (*cláusula de aprovação condicional*), and mechanisms for revenue extraction such as the proposed quarter-share (*quarta parte*) of income from the Confraternity of the Immaculate Conception (*as Virgens*). Additional themes include customs administration (establishment of *alfândegas*), regulation of forced labour (*forçados*), fiscal disputes over *faias*, *briga* ceremonial fees, ecclesiastical revenues (*proventos*), and the political status of Macau vis-à-vis Portuguese India. The documents reflect acute fiscal constraints on the royal exchequer, recurrent concerns over revenue leakage to private traders (*Laldardo*), and efforts to balance colonial autonomy with metropolitan control. All materials derive from the Arquivo Histórico Ultramarino and Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal, bearing archival stamps and marginalia confirming provenance and registration. This transcription is intended exclusively for scholarly analysis of Iberian imperial administration, maritime economics, and colonial governance in early modern Asia and Africa.

Last update from database: 6/27/26, 9:50 AM (UTC)