Your search

Result 1 resource

  • This 1922 administrative document comprises a telegraphic form and internal postal memo originating from Lisbon, transmitted via the Italian telegraphic network under Central European Mean Time protocols. It records the transmission of a payment instruction concerning a papal bull (bulla) addressed to Bishop Macau, acting in his capacity as Minister of the Colonies within the Portuguese colonial administration. The message, assigned Lisbon telegram number 362 and dated 16 July 1919 at 19:45, instructs remittance via cheque for ecclesiastical-colonial financial settlement, with routing instructions for circuit No. 137 and delivery receipt requirements. Endorsed by Presle Saint Siege 2—likely referencing a Vatican or ecclesiastical office—it reflects financial coordination between Portuguese colonial authorities and the Holy See. The form, based on Model 30 Telegr. 1919 of the Telegraph Office, includes standard bureaucratic annotations regarding urgency, liability disclaimers, delivery confirmation, and claims procedures, alongside partially legible administrative notes concerning postal cheques, registered mail handling, and transmission protocols. A Roma-stamped circular mark dated 1919 and references to Rome Headquarters at Via Nazionale No. 149 indicate processing within the Italian state telegraph system. Illegible or uncertain textual elements are marked with scholarly caution. This document provides primary evidence of early 20th-century transnational ecclesiastical finance administration, colonial governance structures, and international telegraphic communication practices within European imperial and religious networks.

Last update from database: 11/18/25, 10:01 PM (UTC)