Terreiro de Jesus
The Terreiro de Jesus is a plaza of great historic and cultural importance located in the Historic Center of Salvador de Bahia in Brazil. The square is located in the oldest part of the city and abuts the Praça da Sé. Officially the plaza is known as the Praça 15 de Novembro.
History
After the foundation of Salvador by the Portuguese, Governor-General Tomé de Sousa granted the Jesuits a land grant in the northern section of the new city. The Jesuits, led by Father Manuel da Nóbrega constructed a small chapel and the Colégio dos Jesuítas (Jesuit School).[1] The presence of many Jesuit priests in the area surrounding the church and school led to the plaza being known as the "Terreiro de Jesus." Construction on the Jesuit School finished in 1590. Portuguese explorer and naturalist 1584, Gabriel Soares de Sousa, who visited Salvador in 1584, wrote one of the first formal descriptions wrote one of the first descriptions of the Terreiro de Jesus. In his book Notícia do Brasil (1587) Gabriel Soares de Sousa described the Terrerio de Jesus as "... ocupa este terreiro e parte da rua da banda do mar um suntuoso colégio dos padres da Companhia de Jesus, com uma formosa e alegre igreja..."[2]
The initial church constructed on the site in the sixteenth century was very small. Between 1652 and 1672, the Jesuits build a larger, palatial church, which contemporary observers considered to be the most impressive religious building in 17th century Brazil. The Mannerist facade of the building was built with marble imported from Portugal. The interior had magnificent tile walls, an elaborate painted wood ceiling depicting notable Jesuits, and furniture inlaid with tortoise shell.[3]
In the early nineteenth century, the old Jesuit School building functioned as a hospital. In 1808, it became home to the first medical school in Brazil. The colonial building was destroyed in a fire in 1905, and was replaced by a new building with eclectic style and neoclassical design.[4]
References
- ^ "Colégio do Jesuítas da Bahia - Primeiro Curso de Nível Superior no Brasil". www.bahia-turismo.com. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
- ^ Sousa, Gabriel Soares de; Seguro), Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen (Visconde de Porto (1851). Tratado descriptivo do Brazil em 1587 (in Portuguese). Typographia Universal de Laemmert.
- ^ Smith, Robert C. (1948). "Jesuit Buildings in Brazil". The Art Bulletin. 30 (3): 187–213. doi:10.2307/3047183. JSTOR 3047183.
- ^ Preite Sobrinho, Wanderley (18 February 2008). "Primeira faculdade do Brasil completa 200 anos". Folha Online. Retrieved 27 November 2018.