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  • This is a transcription of a 1549 Jesuit missionary letter, composed in Ormuz on 9 October and authored by Father Master Gaspar of the Society of Jesus, addressed to brethren at the College of Jesus in Coimbra. The document comprises a detailed first-person account of Gaspar’s pastoral, evangelistic, and administrative activities across the Portuguese Estado da Índia between c. 1548–1549, including extended residence in Hormuz (Ormuz), travel through southern Arabia (Arabia Felix), Malabar (Chale/Chaliyam near Kozhikode, Tanur, Cochin), Goa, and coastal East Africa (Mombasa, Melinde, Coena). Key figures include Father Master Francisco (Provincial Superior in India), Father António González (dispatched to Chale), Father Luís de Grá, Father Melchior Núñez, Father Bulano, and local rulers such as the Raja of Tanur and the sovereign of Hormuz. The text documents the establishment of Jesuit residences and colleges, catechetical instruction among enslaved persons and converts, sacramental ministry—including mass confessions and baptisms—disputations with Muslims, Jews, and Hindu ascetics (Yogues), efforts to reform usury and concubinage, responses to seismic activity and climatic extremes, and observations on religious pluralism, social customs (including satī and ritual self-mortification), and intercommunal cohabitation in Hormuz and Malabar. It serves as a primary source for early modern Jesuit mission strategy, cross-cultural religious encounter, colonial ecclesiastical administration, and the socio-religious landscape of the western Indian Ocean world.

  • This abstract describes a historical transcription of a letter authored by Francis Xavier, S.J., dated 20th January 1549 and composed in Cochin, Portuguese India. The document comprises multiple interleaved sections—pages 1, 6, 13, and 16—detailing urgent missionary needs across early modern South and East Asia. Key figures include António Pondeiro, Father Gonçalo, Father Cosme de Torres, Friar Vicente, and Martim Afonso de Sousa, Governor and Captain-General of India. Central locations are Hormuz, Diu, Goa, Cochin, Cacotora, Malacca, the Moluccas, the Cape of Comorin, Japan, China, Tartary, and the island of ‘Chinzinguo’ (referenced via testimonies from Paulo de Santa Fé and a Japanese interlocutor educated at the College of Santa Fé in Goa). The letter outlines plans for Xavier’s imminent April 1549 voyage to Japan; advocates for the dispatch of spiritually disciplined, though not necessarily academically trained, Jesuit personnel to India and beyond; reports on persecution of Christians by a Moorish official on Cacotora; requests ecclesiastical intervention—including indulgences for two churches dedicated to the Immaculate Conception of Saint Thomas at Carangarox—and urges the Viceroy to expel Moors from Cacotora. It reflects institutional priorities of the nascent Society of Jesus regarding evangelisation, college foundation, pastoral care, and cross-cultural engagement in the Portuguese Estado da Índia.

Last update from database: 5/21/26, 12:01 AM (UTC)