Malankara Church - Arrival of The Portuguese

Arrival of The Portuguese

See also: Portuguese India
Part of a series on
Eastern Christianity
  • Eastern Christianity portal
History
  • Eastern Orthodox Church history
  • Byzantine Empire
  • Ecumenical council
  • Christianization of Bulgaria
  • Christianization of Kievan Rus'
  • East-West Schism
History Specific regions
  • Canada
  • Coptic Egypt
  • Russia
  • Ukraine
Traditions
  • Eastern Orthodox Church
  • Georgian Church
  • Oriental Orthodoxy
  • Armenian Church
  • Orthodox Tewahedo churches
  • Coptic Orthodox Church
  • Church of the East
  • Eastern Catholic churches
  • Syriac Christianity
Liturgy and worship
  • Sign of the cross
  • Divine Liturgy
  • Iconography
  • Asceticism
  • Omophorion
Theology
  • Hesychasm
  • Icon
  • Apophaticism
  • Filioque clause
  • Miaphysitism
  • Dyophysitism
  • Nestorianism
  • Theosis
  • Theoria
  • Phronema
  • Philokalia
  • Praxis
  • Theotokos
  • Hypostasis
  • Ousia
  • Essence vs. Energies
  • Metousiosis

At the time the Portuguese arrived in India in 1498, the Saint Thomas Christians were in a difficult position. Though prosperous owing to their large stake in the spice trade and protected by a formidable militia, the tumultuous political climate of the time had placed the small community under pressure from the forces of the powerful rajas of Calicut, Cochin, and the various smaller kingdoms in the area. When the Portuguese under Vasco da Gama arrived on the South Indian coast, the leaders of the Saint Thomas community greeted them and proffered a formal alliance to their fellow Christians. The Portuguese, who had keen interest in implanting themselves in the spice trade and in expanding the domain of their bellicose form of Christianity, jumped at this opportunity.

The Portuguese brought to India a particularly militant brand of Christianity, the product of several centuries of struggle during the Reconquista, which they hoped to spread across the world. Facilitating this objective was the Padroado Real, a series of treaties and decrees in which the Pope conferred upon the Portuguese government certain authority in ecclesiastical matters in the foreign territories they conquered. Upon reaching India the Portuguese quickly ensconced themselves in Goa and established a church hierarchy; soon they set themselves to bringing the native Christians under their dominion. Towards this goal, the colonial establishment felt it necessary to conduct the Saint Thomas Christians fully into the Latin Rite, both in bringing them into conformity with Latin church customs and in subjecting them to the authority of the Archbishop of Goa.

Following the death of Metropolitan Mar Jacob in 1552, the Portuguese became more aggressive in their efforts to subjugate the Saint Thomas Christians. Protests on the part of the natives were frustrated by events back in the Church of the East's Mesopotamian heartland, which left them devoid of consistent leadership. In 1552, the year of Jacob's death, a schism in the Church of the East resulted in there being two rival patriarchates, one of which entered into communion with the Catholic Church, and the other of which remained independent. At different times both patriarchs sent bishops to India, but the Portuguese were consistently able to outmaneuver the newcomers or else convert them to Latin Rite Catholicism outright. In 1575 the Padroado declared that neither patriarch could appoint prelates to the community without Portuguese consent, thereby cutting the Thomas Christians off from their hierarchy.

By 1599 the last Metropolitan, Abraham, had died, and the Archbishop of Goa, Aleixo de Menezes, had secured the submission of the young Archdeacon George, the highest remaining representative of the native church hierarchy. That year Menezes convened the Synod of Diamper, which instituted a number of structural and liturgical reforms to the Indian church. At the synod, the parishes were brought directly under the Archbishop's authority, certain "superstitious" customs were anathematized, and the indigenous liturgy, the Malabar Rite, was purged of elements unacceptable by the Latin standards. Though the Saint Thomas Christians were now formally part of the Catholic Church, the conduct of the Portuguese over the next decades fueled resentment in parts of the community, ultimately leading to open resistance.

Read more about this topic:  Malankara Church

Famous quotes containing the words arrival of and/or arrival:

    National literature does not mean much these days; now is the age of world literature, and every one must contribute to hasten the arrival of that age.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)

    National literature does not mean much these days; now is the age of world literature, and every one must contribute to hasten the arrival of that age.
    Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749–1832)