João dos Santos
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João dos Santos (b. at Evora, Portugal; d. at Goa in 1622) was a Portuguese Dominican missionary in India and Africa.
[edit] Life
On 13 August, 1586, four months after leaving Lisbon, dos Santos arrived in Mozambique. He was at once sent to Sofala, where he remained four years with Father João Madeira. Between them they baptized some 1694 natives and had built three chapels when they were ordered back to Mozambique.
After a journey of hardships they were forced to remain on the Zambesi River, dos Santos staying at Tete for eight months. From registers found there he discovered that the Dominicans had baptized about 20,000 natives before the year 1591 at Tete alone.
From Mozambique he was sent to the small island of Querimba, where he remained for two years. The registers here gave the information that 16,000 natives had been baptized before the year 1593. Next he was appointed commissary of the Bulla da Cruzada at Sofala, where he stayed more than a year.
His labors in Africa ended on 22 August, 1597, when he left Mozambique for India. With the exception of eleven years spent in Europe (1606-17) he lived the rest of his life in India.
[edit] Works
His book Ethiopia Oriental is a description of the Portuguese occupation of Africa at the end of the sixteenth century. He gives an account of the manners and customs of the Bantu tribes at that date; he was a keen observer, and generally a sober narrator of things that he saw.
[edit] References
- Ethiopia Oriental (Lisbon, 1891)
- Theal, The Portuguese in South Africa (Cape Town, 1896)
This article incorporates text from the entry Joao dos Santos in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.