- Cathedral of Salvador
The Cathedral of Salvador ("Catedral Basílica de Salvador") is the seat of the
archbishopric of the city of Salvador, in the State of Bahia, inBrazil .The
Diocese of São Salvador da Bahia de Todos os Santos , the first in the Portuguese colony of Brazil, was created in 1551, only two years after the foundation of Salvador by noblemanTomé de Sousa . The first bishop, "Pero Fernandes Sardinha", arrived in 1552. A cathedral was built in the centre of Salvador around this time.In 1676 the city became the seat of a archdiocese. After 1758, when the
Jesuit Order was expelled from Brazil, the former Jesuit church of Salvador became thecathedral of the city. The building of the former cathedral was demolished in 1933. A scheme of its foundations can be seen on the pavement of the "Praça da Sé" (Cathedral Square) in Salvador.Art and architecture
In its origins the present cathedral building was the church of the
Jesuit Order of Salvador. The Jesuits arrived in the city still in the 16th century and built a first church and college. In the second half of the 17th century the Jesuits built a new church - the one that exists today - in the Mannerist style then fashionable in Portugal. The façade is very similar to contemporary Portuguese churches like the Jesuit Church of Coimbra.The façade is made in light "Lioz" stone brought from Portugal and is flanked by two short bell towers. It has three portals with statues of Jesuit saints,
Ignatius of Loyola ,Francis Xavier andFrancis Borgia . Thegable on the upper storey of the façade is flanked by typical Mannerist volutes.Inside, the cathedral is a one-
aisle d church of rectangular shape, withouttransept and with a very shallow mainchapel . The side walls of the church have a series of lateral chapels decorated with altarpieces. Thisfloorplan scheme is based on the Church of São Roque in Lisbon, the Jesuit church of the Portuguese capital, built a century earlier.The chapels of the cathedral offer an interesting showcase of
altarpiece art from the late 16th through the mid-18th centuries, all decorated with sculptures and paintings. Very rare are two 16th centuryRenaissance altarpieces that belonged to the previous Jesuit church and were reused in the new building. The altarpiece of the main chapel is a fine example of 17th century Mannerist art. Other chapels haveBaroque altarpieces from the mid-18th century. The barrelvault covering thenave of the church is decorated with wooden panels dating from the 18th century and displays the Jesuit emblem "IHS ".The
sacristy of the church is richly decorated with Baroque furniture, 17th century Portuguese tiles (azulejo s) and ceiling wooden panels painted with Mannerist motifs and portraits of important Jesuits.The façade and floorplan of the Jesuit church of Salvador influenced several other colonial churches in
Northeast Brazil , including the São Francisco Church of Salvador.References
* da Silva Telles, Augusto Carlos: "Atlas dos Monumentos Históricos e Artísticos do Brasil". MEC/SEAC/FENAME, 1980.
* [http://www.iphan.gov.br/ans.net/tema_consulta.asp?Linha=tc_belas.gif&Cod=1100 The Cathedral of Salvador on the IPHAN site]External links
* [http://www.arquidiocesesalvador.org.br/index.php Official site of the Salvador Archdiocese]
* [http://www.emtursa.ba.gov.br/Template.asp?IdEntidade=309&Nivel=0002000500020012&IdModelo=0 The Cathedral in the official touristic site of Salvador]
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