Thanks for posting Val. This is a fascinating historical article about the 
building of the church. 
A few questions for the group:


1. I'm intrigued by the jaggery. Was it used as a glue? Or was it a form of 
heat insulation? I understand Jaggery is sometimes used to line tandoors.
2. Quote: " The Inspector of Public Works Department, Major Engineer Martins 
was asked to draw up a plan for a Gothic Church, which he did." 
Who asked Martins? Was it the Governor (a top-down request)  or a bottom-up 
(the people)?
3. Quote: "The Comunidade of Saligao is to pay all expenses of the building."
Pardon my ignorance, but I doubt the communidade was a representative body in 
1866 (not that it is now!). How did that order come to pass? Again, was it 
top-down or bottom-up? Are there any documented discussions that might have 
occurred in Communicade available?
4. The speed at which the project was sanctioned is breath-taking: 10th april 
Major Martins makes request, 20th June Governor agrees. That's really really 
quick. Similarly, the additional budget was passed in a matter of a few weeks. 
Was this just super-efficient administration or was there a need for speed?  
I suspect there was a political policy rapidly to  promote the building of 
churches throughout portugese Goa, and that's why applications (and budgets) 
were passed at such a pace. Was such a policy in existence at that time?

I realise its easy to ask questions and hard to find answers, but its possible 
someone in the group might know.


[email protected]



From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [SALIGAONET] What did it cost to build the Saligao Church? [Saligao 
Serenade]
Date: Fri, 26 Nov 2010 17:47:57 +0530








[Posted by Val Souza]

 

New essay on Saligao Serenade:

 

=========================================
What Did it Cost to Build the Saligao Church?  

 
by Fr. Nascimento Mascarenhas
 
As people from all over the world, with roots in Goa’s northern village of 
Saligao, celebrate the 137th anniversary of the inauguration of the Mae de Deus 
Church, it’s interesting to look back and establish how much money was set 
aside for the construction of our beloved church all those years ago. We begin 
with the set-up of things prior to the laying of the foundation stone of the 
church. The year is 1866... [Click here to read the entire essay] 
http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2010/11/26/what-did-it-cost-to-build-the-saligao-church/
=========================================

 
Other essays featured this week:
 
A Red-Letter Day for Saligao
 
A great joy, a feeling of exaltation, a festive aura seemed to permeate and 
spur the village of Saligao. The day had an electrifying effect that charged 
everyone with nonpareil happiness. The village seemed to have woken up on the 
morning of November 26, 1873, as one unique and compact mass to celebrate the 
great day in its history, and to render the greatest possible homage to Our 
Lady Mae de Deus under whose mantle protection and maternal care all of the 
village would be placed from this day. [Click here to read the entire essay] 
http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2008/09/08/a-red-letter-day-for-saligao/
 
==========================================
 

First Mass in Saligao Church
 
In the new Saligao Church, on 27 November 1873, there was a solemn High Mass 
with a choir and music in honour of the Patroness of the Church. After the 
Gospel reading, the well-known preacher and one of the greatest luminaries of 
the Goan clergy... [Click here to read the entire essay] 
http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2010/03/11/first-mass-in-saligao-church/
 
==========================================
 

The Man Behind the Saligao Church
 
If one were called upon to single out a specific individual as the greatest 
benefactor of the village of Saligao, that individual would undoubtedly be 
Francisco Salvador Zeferino Pinto, fondly known as Salu Pinto. [Click here to 
read the entire essay] 
http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2008/08/06/the-man-behind-the-saligao-church/

 
==========================================                                      
  




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