Thanks MaryAnn and Diane! I'm looking forward to reading his works.
 
Nancy Jean
 
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [AZORES-Genealogy] Naming of Expostos
Date: Sat, 9 Aug 2014 09:11:17 -0700

You might also try searching at http://books.google.com. They have links to 
sellers and a link to Worldcat to search for the books in libraries that might 
be near you. Google also tells you if eBooks are available. Some books have 
previews available. I suggest searching by the author's name in this format 
"José Maria Eça de Queirós" (with the quotes). I seemed to get more results 
that way even for individual books. The results will include both English and 
Portuguese versions. Diane George From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of MaryAnn Santos
Sent: Saturday, August 09, 2014 7:02 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Naming of Expostos Yes, there are in English 
translations.  Amazon has copies of The Sin of Father Amaro ranging in price 
from $6.50 to $2,423.64!! I think that  must be a typo. An english translation 
of The Maias by Queiroz came out a few years ago and is another excellent read. 
I thoroughly enjoyed The Relic, too. I read it first in English and then in 
Portuguese. Although I think it's out of print now. Since I live in  NYC I buy 
a lot of used books at Strand. They have great deals on hardcover new and used 
books (and paperbacks) and you can buy them online. Here's the link. 
http://www.strandbooks.com/ MaryAnn   On Sat, Aug 9, 2014 at 9:37 AM, nancy 
jean baptiste <[email protected]> wrote:MaryAnn,
 
Are these books available in English? Do you know how many he has written?
 
Thank you,
Nancy 
 From: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 8 Aug 2014 14:07:21 -0400
Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Naming of Expostos
To: [email protected] you, John. I had forgotten about Father Amara 
and as an aside, The Sins of Father Amaro is an excellent read - as are all of 
the Queiroz books I've read. MaryAnn  On Fri, Aug 8, 2014 at 1:16 PM, 'John 
Raposo' via Azores Genealogy <[email protected]> wrote:In my researching 
experience, I have noted the following: When people from the villages went to 
the convents in Ponta Delgada and Ribeira Grande to have foundling babies 
placed with them, there was not, necessarily, a connection between the foster 
parent and the baby. As for the villages, if an unmarried (or widowed) woman 
was pregnant, I think that in such small places where everybody knew everybody 
else, I doubt that the pregnancy could go unnoticed. And, the parish priest, 
who heard confessions at a time when people really worried about what would 
happen if they died in a state of mortal sin, must have known what his 
penitents were up to. I think that when a baby was left at somebody's door in a 
small village, everybody knew, or thought they knew, who the mother (and maybe 
the father) were. Sometimes these children might have been left at the doors of 
relatives, but they would have required a nursemaid, i.e.a woman with breast 
milk. As for names, again, there is no one answer. Babies who were placed with 
and stayed with the same family to adulthood (as opposed to being shipped out 
as servants from family to family) sometimes took the family name. Sometimes an 
"exposto" took a name, e.g. Bettencourt, with no apparent rime or reason. 
However, a closer look shows that the Bettencourts were a prominent family in 
the village and perhaps it was an open secret that this baby was the offspring 
of the squire's son (or daughter). Infant mortality for expostos was much 
higher than among non-exposto babies. The state paid a stipend for the first 
few months of life for babies placed with nursing foster-mothers. When the 
subsidy stopped, the infant mortality rate rose substantially. Eça de Queiroz 
touched on this subject in his novel O Crime do Padre Amaro; one of the 
characters made her living by taking in unwanted/illegitimate babies of the 
socially promminent and arranging for their deaths. Eloise Cadinha, a member of 
the List, sent me her notes on this subject, and with my thanks to Eloise, I am 
enclose them:  Most of us as we research our ancestors will find an exposto or 
two.  It is indeed miraculous that they were able to survive to adulthood, to 
marry and to have children.  Expostos - a translation. A very sad situation.
The following is my poor translation of part of an article written by Henrique 
Bras 1884-1984) in Boletim de Instituto Histórico da ilha Terceira, 1947. "In 
the last three centuries there is a long list of filhos da igreja (children of 
the church), also known at times as baptism records, of unknown fathers and 
mothers in the parish registers of Terceira, who were often baptized with the 
most noble or notable or the very rich people of Terceira who stood as 
godparents.  At a more recent time the number of children secretly abandoned at 
the rodas (wheels) had greatly increased, and  in spite of the many recently 
born innocents who died when abandoned, and of the few to whom the fear of 
discovery still did not keep them from strangling babies before they saw the 
light of day.  Providing the support of these children who survived became on 
of the most difficult problems for the various city 
halls on the island, demanding a new special tax...which the people agreed was 
needed but not without grumbling and finding fault with the new tax.   On April 
29, 1800, the Conde de Almada, Captitão General of the Azores, in Angra, 
informed an official of the Royal Court that in the ten years the cathedral 
registered annually an average of 97 expostos baptized and also registered an 
average of 83 who had died!  And this was only those engeitados (abandoned 
ones) who had arrived at the cathedral to be baptized, those that had been left 
in the Casa da Roda, and this record was only for Angra.   The city council 
continued without resources to provide for these children and thought about 
creating a lottery for that purpose.   It needs to be said: with a population 
of about 10 to 12 thousand people, there were yearly on an average 97 recently 
born abandoned children of unknown parents, legally registered and of which 83 
of these died -- naturally by affectionate handling, sheltered and well wrapped 
care.  [My note: the author mentions Carlota, a weaver of Angels, from the 
famous  novel by Eça de Queiroz, . I asked a cousin if he knew of this novel, O 
Crime do Padre Amaro, and he said      that he had read it long ago, and it was 
about a woman who got rid of unwanted infants.  She killed them by wrapping 
them up and drowning them in the river.  She was referred to as something like 
the "maker of angels."  The idea being that she was creating angels by killing 
them.] On the October 20, 1782, the vicar of the diocese of Angra, Dr. João 
Vieira de Bettencourt, gave the rector of the cathedral, Pedro da Camara 
Merens, the commission to organize a private book to register the baptisms and 
deaths of these abandoned children. In the year of 1783 there were registered 
120 baptisms and 81 deaths of expostos:
In 1784, 94 baptisms, 73 deaths
In 1785, 97 baptisms, 86 deaths
In 1786, 94 baptisms, 105 deaths
In 1787, 86 baptisms, 100 deaths
In 1788, 100 baptisms
In 1789, 95 baptisms
There were no deaths recorded for the years 1788 and 1789 but were continued 
the following year.  One can see that in 10 years the births and deaths of the 
foundlings was amazing.   "Painful emotions squeeze the soul when one looks 
through the pages, tiny tragedies sown through this private book of the 
cathedral.  The records indicate the names of the amas (wet-nurses) nominated 
by city hall for each exposto.  They were single women, 'loose' women, married 
women and widows.   In the Casa da Roda...in the city of Angra, there was the 
rodeiro (the man in charge of the wheel) and he had at least one assistant, in 
order to rescue quickly any of the new guests secretly left at the door in the 
silence of the night. The newly born was left there, shivering in the cold 
until the door providentially was opened.  It was rare to announce a visit to 
the Roda, for fear of the discovery of the mother which was of great importance 
to the municipality, in order to avoid the expense of providing a wet-nurse for 
the child -- and so that justice also intervened.   Sometimes a little one was 
carried there by a caring person saying he had found the abandoned child in 
some hidden place. Thus on 16 September 1782, Francisco da Silveira, 
gravedigger of Sao Pedro, Biscoitos, arrived at the Roda with a bundle.  It was 
a baby girl who had been placed at the door of the home of the sexton of the 
church. She was soon baptized and given the name Delfina.  This man delivered 
this baby to the Roda knowing that she would not cost the finder any money for 
finding the child.  He also presumed that she would be cared for, but this 
child died and her death was not recorded in the church register.   The Casa da 
Roda was next to the residence of the pai dos engeitados (the father of the 
abandoned ones) who was a councilman in the senate of the city hall, and who 
had the municipal duty to care for the expostos, and also the place elected by 
the municipality for the receiving of these abandoned ones.   This councilman 
had a most distressful mission.  The city did not have money for the number of 
abandoned children growing larger each year, and for the prompt payment for the 
wet-nurses, and for this and for other reasons, the milk from these women was 
not sufficient to fulfill the need for these babies.   The expostos arrived at 
the Casa da Roda and there they waited two to fifteen days for a wet-nurse.  
The priest noted the baptism of the children in the register: baptized in the 
Casa da Roda, with the name of Francisco, found very young and had not been 
given a wet-nurse and he lasted a few days; Jose, baptized in the Casa da Roda, 
died without a wet-nurse; Manuel after being 
baptized died in the Casa da Roda. One particularly unhappy exposto to whom the 
godfather, Cosme de Mascarenhas, the bell ringer of the cathedral (this man 
throughout the years became godfather to nearly all the newly baptized 
expostos), gave the name Abraão (Abraham), and none of the wet-nurses wished to 
care for him the priest wrote in the record of baptism (20 March 1783, p19, 
book number 1).  The bell 
ringer had discovered that the newly born child was Jewish and had given him a 
suitable name.  These wet-nurses ... they  refused to nurse this newborn 
heretic.  Sixteen days passed, with Abraham suffering and in pain, until he 
finally died.   These death records note the approximate age of the child.  
These unfortunate children said farewell to their miserable existence between 
three days and three months.  Few of the expostos reached the age of 1 year and 
very few beyond one year.   The author did not know if the position of the city 
official in charge of the wet-nurses was lucrative -- but he did know that it 
was truly an industry.  The wet-nurses naturally came from the poorest sections 
of the city and outlying areas, but it was the city that provided most of the 
wet-nurses.  At times it was not enough and the city had to go to the peasants 
in villages such as Sao Bartolomeu and Santa Barbara.  It was an industry that 
had wet-nurses who could kill off these charges with hideous rapidity.  The 
wet-nurses received three expostos each year, one following the other after the 
death of the one before.        [The author listed three wet-nurses and the 
infants received.  One of them in 1785       had 5 expostos.  Inacio, April 5; 
Marilia, May 17; Violante, July 22; Antonio, Aug 20; Mateus, Sept 21.] This 
private book of the expostos from the cathedral made it easy to study them. In 
previous times it was extremely difficult to learn about them because there 
were no statistics.  But whoever turns the first pages of this register of the 
cathedral rarely turns two pages.  There were many reasons why children were 
abandoned by their mothers and fathers. Some of the reasons being: an 
illegitimate child,  extreme poverty and too many mouths to feed, perhaps the 
death of the father, or just simply an unwanted child.   One can research the 
smaller villages and not find a single exposto in the baptism records..  At 
least this has been my experience.  In the larger towns and villages many 
expostos are found, certainly many abandoned from the smaller villages. In 
years of famine more children were left as foundlings.  These abandoned 
children were left at churches, convents, and at the doors of many homes.   
Many children were left at convents.  In many of the convents through Europe 
there was what was called the Roda, or the Wheel.  It was a wheel that could 
spin from the outside of the building to the inside.  Goods or other articles 
for the convent were left on the wheel, and usually there was some kind of a 
bell to let the nuns know that something had been left on the wheel.  In time, 
desperate mothers and fathers left their children on the wheel.   In reading 
some of the exposto baptism records in certain villages, the priest notes to 
which mother in the village the child was given.  The child had to have a 
nursing mother, and usually one can check back and find that nursing mother in 
the record.  And sometimes the priest noted where the child had been found.   
When an exposto (male) married he had already a surname or perhaps was given 
one at the time of the marriage. I wish I knew more about this.  As for 
surnames of the exposto,  they run the gamut from Azevedo to Xavier.  As for 
the exposta (female) I don't think she was ever given a surname, or at least I 
can't remember seeing one on her marriage record or on the baptism records of 
her children.   Many parents when abandoning their children believed it would 
only be for a certain period of time.  When the child was left at the convent 
or at church or at the doorstep some clues were left so that the parents could 
later claim their child.  Notes sometimes were left with the name of the child, 
or perhaps a certain type of clothing, or an embroidered blanket, some colored 
ribbons.  These were the clues and apparently the church did keep a record of 
these possible identifiers.     John Miranda Raposo On Friday, August 8, 2014 
10:18 AM, Herb <[email protected]> wrote: I'm sure this topic has been 
discussed here before, but I don't recall seeing it.  When an exposto was born 
and baptized and given to a family to be raised, did he take on the adopting 
family's names, or did he use his real parents names? Did the new parents 
always know who the real parents were? These were small villages and everybody 
basically knew everybody's business.  It didn't take long for news to travel 
from one end of Mayberry to the other, right? Herb-- 
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