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Centuries of Macau after Failing China Missions -- The St. Augustine's Church
Following the footsteps of the first Catholic missionaries, the Jesuits, the Augustinians also made their way to Macau in the 1580s. Other Catholic missionaries that came around the same time were the Dominicans and the Franciscans. Unlike the first Jesuits that arrived in Macau with the specific goal of ministering the Portuguese population there, the first Augustinian priests in Macau were of Spanish origin. They were the fathers from Manila in the Philippines, who were looking to do missions in China.
Before the rise of Hong Kong as a British colony in the 1840s, Macau was deemed the doorway to China. But even then, Macau as the entry point to the establishment of Catholic Augustinian missions in China was considered a last resort to the Spanish Augustinians. Like the Portuguese, the naval power of the Spanish fleets overwhelmed that of some of the more difficult pirates. It was with the defeat of Chinese pirate Ly Ma Hon in 1574 at Luzon that the Spaniards thought presented the opportunity for them to extend their ecclesiastical reach into China. However, they failed miserably in approaching the official authorities for the approval to set up their missionary bases in China. When the Chinese resolutely refused their requests, the Spanish Augustinians returned to Manila. They handed over the administration of their mission in Macau to the Portuguese Augustinians.
The very first St. Augustine’s Church was established by the Spanish Augustinians in 1591. At the time, the church building was very modest. Its roof being reinforced with Chinese fan-palm, it often wavered in the wind like the whiskers of a dragon, as such the Chinese people called it “Temple of the Long-Whiskered Dragon (long song miu).” The current Augustine’s Church is a structure of 1814. At the time, the Portuguese Augustinians had long taken over the Spanish Augustinians in the administration of the mission in Macau.
In terms of its appearance, the St. Augustine’s Church features neoclassical elements of architecture, with just a tiled and gabled roof, no dome, and one tower. Overall, its style reflects the spirit of the Renaissance. Its façade features prominently two pairs of Doric granite columns with a triangular pediment at the top. Its interior is designed in the basilica style. The beauty of the St. Augustine’s Church is in the simplicity itself, its chief significance being of historic, cultural and ecclesiastical in nature.
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Helen Yu (Chestnut Journal)
Other visitors' reviews of St. Augustine's Church
Show More ReviewsTravel Notes of St. Augustine's Church in Macau St. Augustine's Church in Macau is a historic Catholic church. It was built in 1591 by Spanish Augustinian monks. We also came to this church during our Macau historic tour. The original architecture of St. Augustine's Church was very simple. The monks at that time covered the roof with palm leaves to protect it from wind and rain. Whenever a strong wind blew, the flying palm leaves stood up like dragon whiskers, so the Chinese called it "Dragon's Beard Temple". Now the church has been built into a regular Western-style building, but we can still imagine the original simple scene. Walking into the interior of the church, the magnificent altar forms a sharp contrast with the ancient walls. The church still retains 16th-century stone carvings and tombstones of early monks. Those Latin inscriptions record the most original history of this church. Standing in the former "Dragon's Beard Temple", my thoughts can't help but drift to the time and space hundreds of years ago. At that time, the Augustinian monks, with firm faith, spread the gospel on this land of Macau. Today, this church has become a witness to this religious history.