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  • This abstract describes a 1545 historical document comprising a multi-page ecclesiastical letter authored by Friar Manuel Fernandes, a Franciscan missionary stationed in São Tomé, and addressed to Dom Paulo Gestavo, Bishop of Goa, then based at the 10th Legion of Saint Faith (São Fé) in Goa. Dated 8 May 1545, the letter details Fernandes’s spiritual resolve to travel to Macassar (modern-day Makassar, Sulawesi) to evangelise recently settled Spaniards under two local kings, outlining plans to translate core Catholic prayers—including the *Pater Noster*, *Ave Maria*, and a General Confession—into their vernacular for sacramental use pending arrival of linguistically competent confessors. It references contemporary geopolitical conditions in Jaffnapatam (northern Ceylon), where investiture of its designated ruler—the ‘Fijiano’—was deferred due to intervention by a vessel from the King of Pegu, and notes the presence of Father Francisco de Mansilhas and other Malabar missionaries among the ‘Fianos’ at Cape Comorin, having wintered previously in Mozambique. The text includes marginal annotations, archival page numbers (5, 7, 97), and a humble Franciscan self-designation; no official seal or legible signature is present. Intended for scholarly analysis of early modern Iberian missionary activity, colonial administration, and inter-Asian religious exchange, the document reflects period-specific terminology, theological framing, and administrative concerns within the Portuguese ecclesiastical sphere.

Last update from database: 5/2/26, 4:01 AM (UTC)