Fundacao Oriente
<http://www.google.co.in/search?hl=en&q=%22Fundacao+Oriente%22&meta=> later
today, March 10, kicks off a lecture series series that continues its
earlier Indo-Portuguese historical and cultural interactions. Some of the
topics are interesting, and the speakers are mostly people one could look
forward to meeting.

This Thursday, from 6-7 pm, Dr Glenn J Ames
<http://www.google.co.in/search?hl=en&q=%22Glenn+J+Ames%22&meta> has a
catchy title for his talk -- 'A Tale of Four Cities: The Provincia do Norte
in an Age of Decline and Rebirth, 1640-1683'.

The 'Provincia do Norte'
<http://www.google.co.in/search?hl=en&q=%22Provincia+do+Norte%22&meta=>
  or the Northern Province, was the hardly-northern not-far-from-Bombay edge
of the colonial Portuguese empire in South Asia. Dr Ames here tells the
story of four cities -- Diu, Daman, Chaul and Bacaim (today's Vasai) -- in
the rebuilding of the Estado da India
<http://www.google.co.in/search?hl=en&q=%22Estado+da+India%22&meta=> of the
17th century, as the Portuguese colonial state here was then known.

He's Professor of French and Portuguese history at the University of Toledo,
USA <http://www.utoledo.edu/>. He's currently in Goa as a Senior Research
Fellow of the American Institute of Indian Studies.

His earlier books include 'Renascent Empire? The House of Braganza and the
Quest for Stability in Portuguese Monsoon Asia, ca. 1640-1683'
<http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/15504.ctl> and Vasco da
Gama: Renaissance Crusader (2005)
<http://www.ablongman.com/catalog/academic/product/0,1144,0321092821,00.html>.

In this session, Dr Ames' argument is that the Portuguese by the late
'seventeenth century, were beseiged by both European rivals (like the Dutch)
and indigenous powers like the Mughals and Bijapur.

Comments he: "The decade which began with the loss of Cochin to the (Dutch)
VOC <http://batavia.rug.ac.be/> and the reluctant transfer of Bombay to the
English, ironically also marked the beginning of three decades of vital
reform for the Estado da India".

His study looks at the geo-political, religious and economic challenges
confronting the Portuguese Crown in Asia, between 166301700 and more. He'll
look closely at the importance of the "Provinces of the North" in this
reformation process.

On March 17, Prof Jean-Pierre Angenot, a Belgian-turned-Brazilian known for
his TADIA (The African Diaspora in Asia) Network
<http://www.mail-archive.com/goa-research-net@goacom.com/msg00139.html> ,
explains the history and geography of the current-day often-neglected
African diaspora in India.

On March 24, journalist-turned-Kala Academy member secretary Vinayak V
Khedekar talks on 'traditional communication technique -- phonology' while a
week later photographer Sunil Vaidyanathan talks on 'India through my lens'.
--
FN
------------------------------------------------------------------------
d88888b d8b   db   Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa India
88'     888o  88   f r e d @ b y t e s f o r a l l . o r g
88ooo   88V8o 88   http://www.bytesforall.org * http://fn.swiki.net
88~~~   88 V8o88   Phone 0091.832.2409490 Mobile 09822 122436
88      88  V888   784 Nr Lourdes Convent, Sonarbhat Saligao Goa 403511
YP      VP   V8P   Writing ... with a difference, on issues that matter

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