THE ‘GOANESS’ OF GOAN CHURCHES

By

DALE LUIS MENEZES 

The lush Goan landscape is dotted with many spectacular and magnificent 
churches. The whitewashed façades of the churches makes it impossible for any 
of us to pass by and not notice them. However, many will not know the history 
of the architectural evolution of these churches – the when, how and why. Since 
the day I started contributing articles to newspapers on some unique historical 
events and monuments of Goa (mainly churches), the problem of locating reading 
material that would provide some details and improve and augment my 
understanding of Goan churches has been frustratingly scant. However, I have 
consulted with fruitful results, Fr. Moreno de Souza’s four volumes in Konknni 
(in Romi script) featuring the churches of Salcete, Tiswadi and Bardez.
        
Whitewash, Red Stone by Dr. Paulo Varela Gomes, a professor at the University 
of Coimbra, Portugal and who formerly was the delegate of the Fundação Oriente, 
Goa, was a welcome addition to my personal library. I feel this book will 
forever change our understanding about the architecture of Goan churches and 
also function as a harbinger, altering in the process, our understanding of 
Goan social history as well. The crux of Dr. Gomes’ book is to emphasize the 
‘Goaness’ of Goan churches. The first line of the first page of this 
fascinating book makes this abundantly clear: “The Catholics of Goa and other 
former Portuguese possessions in India created churches and houses that are 
unique in the world history of architecture.”

The story of the architectural evolution of Goan churches begins in the City of 
Goa in the 16th century. From there Dr. Gomes takes us on a guided tour 
throughout Goa, picking some of the most spectacular and magnificent churches 
for his discussion and shows us how they represent watershed moments in the 
history of the church architecture of Goa and how Portugal is not the only 
region to have influenced the architecture of Goan churches. “But apart from 
its European origin, the European inputs that influenced Goan builders and 
patrons from the 16th to the 20th centuries did not originate from Portugal 
alone and sometimes did not originate from Portugal at all. Certain essential 
typological traits in Goan churches simply do not exist in Portuguese 
architecture. They bring to our memory places like northern and central Italy 
(exterior side elevations, niches along the interior of the naves), or Flanders 
(vaulting systems). This is hardly surprising considering that the religi
 ous orders within which most architects of Goan churches were trained in the 
16th and 17th centuries were multi-national bodies with priests of pan-European 
origin or who had travelled extensively throughout Europe,” he says.
        
Speaking of the non-Portuguese and sometimes even non-European influences on 
the Goan churches, Dr. Gomes mentions the Islamicate influence (social and 
cultural complex historically associated with Islam and the Muslims, both among 
Muslims themselves and even when found among non-Muslims) from the court of 
Bijapur. The octagonal towers employed in the façade of the St. Francis of 
Assissi church comes from Bijapur “…due to the influence of the architecture of 
the more important political and cultural centre of the Deccan in the second 
half of the 17th century: the Sultanate of Bijapur. European ambassadors, 
merchants and artists travelled to Bijapur frequently. The Bijapuri court was 
highly cosmopolitan, cultivated and open to people of all creeds.”
        
Dr. Gomes also tells us about the role of the caste system in making the 
decision as to where a church should be located and also shaping the 
architecture of the Goan churches. The European priests, shrewd as they were, 
did not want the churches they were building to identify with any particular 
caste group which inhabited a particular area and hence they chose locations 
that were far from the settlement. The churches also left an impressive mark on 
the sylvan landscape of Goa. The ganvkars who took over the churches that the 
Jesuits and Franciscans had built and later enlarged and renovated them make 
interesting reading.
        
The distinctly Goan church did not evolve overnight. Dr. Gomes after extensive 
travelling and sifting through centuries-old documents and architectural styles 
and influences, informs us, “The cupoliform-façade churches, a Goan ‘invention’ 
if ever there was one, constitute the climax of the evolution toward a 
characteristically Goan church…”

The last major development in Goan church architecture is the influence of the 
Gothic architecture from 19th century onwards. These are called neo-Gothic 
churches because there were some Goan elements in it. This type of architecture 
developed chiefly in Bardez and Marmugão and the reason Dr. Gomes gives is 
that, “…all neo-Gothic Goan churches of the 19th and early 20th centuries, and 
all the neo-Gothic transformations of existing churches, took place in Bardez 
and in the area of Marmugão. [As] Marmagão was a hub of British economic 
activity since the Anglo-Portuguese economic treaty of 1878, which determined 
the building of a railway between British India and the harbour of Marmugão. 
Bardez, on the other hand, was a region from where thousands of people migrated 
in the second half of the 19th century to Bombay, establishing in that city a 
number of burgeoning Goan colonies.”
        
When I first saw this book, I wondered why a history of Goan church 
architecture should be named Whitewash, Red Stone. Reading through this book, I 
realized that since the whitewash was unique to the Goan churches and has 
become the hallmark of contemporary Goa and the red laterite stone being widely 
used in Goa, the title was not only apt but also very smart. The neatly bound 
and printed book has as many as 200-odd photographs and illustrations and they 
not only help the reader in understanding the case that Dr. Gomes is making but 
also aid in understanding the various architectural terms and features. 

Lastly, what I liked about this book is that the voice of Dr. Gomes is not one 
from the patronizing West. Dr. Gomes is Portuguese and the fear that the biased 
world-view of Portuguese Orientalism or Luso-tropicalism might have slipped in 
his work can be very real. But Dr. Gomes has moved beyond such isms and has 
opened new avenues for contemplating our own history and heritage.
        
Comments/feedback @ 
http://daleluismenezes.blogspot.com/2011/08/goaness-of-goan-churches.html 

First published: GT, August 27, 2011

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