Photographer’s Note
St Paul's Cathedral was a 16th-century cathedral in Macau. Today, its ruins are arguably the Macau Region's most famous tourist site.
Built from 1582 to 1602 by the Jesuit priesthood, the Cathedral was the largest Christian church in Asia at the time, and the royalty of Europe vied with each other to bestow upon the Cathedral the best gifts. With the decline in importance of Macau, which was overtaken as the main port for the Pearl River Delta by Hong Kong, the Cathedral's fortune's similarly ebbed, and it was destroyed by a fire during a typhoon in 1835.
The ruins now consist of the southern stone façade - intricately carved by Japanese monks - and the crypts of the Jesuits who established and maintained the Cathedral. The façade sits on a small hill, with 66 stone steps leading to the façade. The carvings include Jesuit images with Oriental themes, including one of a woman stepping on a seven-headed hydra, described by Chinese characters as 'the Holy Mother tramples the heads of the dragon'. Other engravings include those of the founders of the Jesuit Order, the conquest of Death by Jesus, and others, all topped by a dove with wings outstretched.
Resisting calls for the dangerously leaning structure to be demolished; from 1990 to 1995 the ruins were excavated under the auspices of the Instituto Cultural de Macau, to study its historic past. The crypt and the foundations were uncovered revealing the architectural plan of the building. Numerous religious artifacts were also found together with the relics of the Japanese Christian martyrs and the monastic clergy, including the founder of the Jesuit college in Macau, Father Alessandro Valignano. The ruins were restored by the Macanese government into a museum, and the facade is now buttressed with concrete and steel in a way which preserves the aesthetic integrity of the facade. A steel stairway allows tourists to climb up to the top of the facade from the rear. It is customary to throw coins into the top window of the ruins from the stairs, for luck
from Wikipedia
*scanned image*
chaitee has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
chaitee
(136) 2005-03-08 4:32
I like the perspective that you are taking this picture from. It's really a good perspective and it adds on to the picture. If it was at the same level it would not be this nice. Taking a picture looking up never fails.
joseelias
(367) 2005-04-06 7:01
This is an unusual view from this monument and I like it. Still I find it a bit tight in the left part as it crops the building. Also the bluish cast could be corrected using a software. Your note is also quite good, but I must say that I regret not seeing the name of the Portuguese mentioned there once (for better or for worse). In fact Macau was offered by a Chinese emperor several centuries ago to the Portuguese and only in 2000 it became part of China again… It looks like that Wikipedia has suffered some kind of revisionism in order to erase a part of the past not confortable to China…
MLINES
(10824) 2006-02-05 4:15
Paolo, Good capture of this historical place. I like your POV getting a long upward look. Your note makes it interesting too. We don't hear too much about Macau except for the casinos there. You have done your bit to enlarge that view. Well done.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Paolo Motta (Paolo)
(40633) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2000-08-00
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Nikon N80
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Theme(s): Summer 2000 - Round the World [view contributor(s)]
- Date Submitted: 2005-03-03 3:52








