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  • a qual foi enviada ao "Ministério do Reino", a pedido de José de Torres. No entanto, como se prova pela nota do mesmo José de Torres, de 24 de Maio de 1864, ele nunca a recebeu e deve portanto actualmente admitir-se a hipótese de se tratar de um manuscrito definitivamente perdido. (Veja-se reprodução da nota que se encontra colada ao exemplar do Catalogo dos Manuscriptos da Bibliotheca Publica Eborense de Joaquim Heliodoro da Cunha Rivara - Tomo I, Lisboa, Imprensa Nacional, 1850, p. 405, existente no Gabinete do Director da Biblioteca Pública e Arquivo Distrital de Évora).

  • This 18th-century manuscript, compiled in Macau between 1742 and 1745, comprises transcribed administrative and ecclesiastical records concerning the dispute over Ilha Verde (Green Island) between the Jesuit Company of Jesus, Macanese municipal authorities, and Chinese mandarins from 1622 to 1745. Based exclusively on original documents preserved in the Secretariat of the Jesuit Province of Japan at the College of Madre de Deus in Macau and the Procuratorate of the Province of India in Lisbon, the text details the historical claims, financial expenditures, and legal arguments surrounding the Jesuits’ occupation and development of Ilha Verde. It includes formal declarations, protest letters, financial accounts up to 1745, and references to earlier events beginning in 1622, when the Jesuit Visitor Alexandre Valignano initiated the use of the island for convalescence and agricultural purposes. The document outlines the Jesuits’ acquisition of burial rights from local Chinese landowners, their construction activities, and subsequent conflicts with Cantonese mandarins who ordered the demolition of buildings, citing concerns over fortification. It further records interventions by high-ranking Chinese officials such as Haitao Si and Haitao Lo, municipal responses from the Macau Senate, and correspondence involving Jesuit figures including Gabriel de Mattos, Nicolau Longobardo, and António Leite. The compilation also contains notarial certifications, legal justifications grounded in Chinese land customs, and assertions of Portuguese sovereignty in Macau, supported by historical treaties, tribute payments, and mutual commercial agreements. Financial summaries detail expenditures exceeding 17 million taéis on fortifications, housing, and maintenance of the island up to 1745. As a composite historical record, this manuscript provides critical primary evidence on colonial-administrative dynamics, Sino-Portuguese relations, and the role of religious orders in early modern maritime Asia.

Last update from database: 10/31/25, 12:01 PM (UTC)