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Church da Ordem Terceira de São Francisco (Salvador)

The Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis (Portuguese: Igreja da Ordem Terceira de São Francisco, also Igreja da Ordem Terceira de São Francisco da Penitência) is an 18th-century Roman Catholic church in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil and seat of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Brazil. The church is one of the main elements of the Historic Center of Salvador and lies within the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the city. It was listed as a historic structure by National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage (IPHAN) in 1941. The church was constructed as an annex to the São Francisco Church and Convent. It is noted for its distinctive Plateresque-style façade, an example unique in Brazil. The writer Jorge Amado called the façade of the Third Order church "magnificent."[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis
Igreja da Ordem Terceira de São Francisco
Façade of the Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis
Religion
AffiliationCatholic
RiteRoman
Location
MunicipalitySalvador
StateBahia
CountryBrazil
Location of the Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Brazil
Geographic coordinates12°58′28″S 38°30′32″W / 12.974421°S 38.508821°W / -12.974421; -38.508821
Architecture
Architect(s)Gabriel Ribeiro
TypeChurch
StylePlat

History edit

The Order of the Third Order of San Francisco arrived in Bahia in 1635. The order erected its first church in 1644 and was demolished and replaced by the present structure. A competition was held for its design, and on December 18, 1701 the Fathers of the Third Order chose Gabriel Ribeiro (late 16th century-1719), a native of Porto, Portugal. The cornerstone of the church was laid on January 1, 1702 and the structure was completed on June 22, 1703. The façade was completed in 1705, but its elaborate construction probably continued well into the 18th century.[7][1]

The church was closed to the public and renovated in the late 1820s. The primitive interior of the church was replaced with Neoclassical elements. New altars were created between 1827 and 1828 by the master wood carver José de Cerqueira Torres. Torres was commissioned to complete 77 pieces, including candlesticks, crosses, bouquets and jars. Franco Velasco completed in the gilding in 1830. The ornate Plateresque façade was covered with a simple Neoclassical facade. The church is also noted for its azulejo tiles and jacaranda furniture, both from the 18th century.[1][2][8]

Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis reopened to the public on July 5, 1935. Damião Barbosa de Araújo (1778-1856) composed a work for full orchestra for the dedication mass. Its score is now stored in the archive of the church.[8]

Electricians carrying out renovations on the church in the 1932 discovered the original Baroque exterior of the church. The Neoclassical façade was removed and the granite Baroque exterior renovated in its present form in 1939. The church is also noted for its collection of roca saints, which are housed in a room completed in 1844.[1][2][4]

Structure edit

 
Detail of Plateresque-style façade
 
View of nave and chancel

Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis sits behind a small churchyard on Igreja da Ordem Terceira slightly removed from the Terreiro do Jesus. The churchyard features an iron fence and masonry pillars. The church consists of a complex featuring a nave with two side corridors surmounted by tribunes; a Room of Saints (Casa dos Santos) a large patio with galleys, a large sacristy behind the high altar. The entrance hall has a collection of paintings depicting the life of Saint Francis by Bento José Rufino Capinam (1791-1874). The Sala da Mesa, a large meeting room for the Brotherhood, is richly decorated with paintings and azulejos. Polychromatic lioz limestone was imported at great expense from Portugal and is utilized in the decorative flooring of the nave, chancel, and sacristy. The rear of the church leads to an ossuary at a lower level.[7][1][2][5][3]

All parts of the church complex are decorated with azulejos, paintings, marble, and sculpture. The tribunes of the left wing are linked by galleries. The rich paintings on the ceiling of the nave were completed in 1831 by Franco Velasco (1780-1833). The sacristy is noted for its well-preserved azulejo tiles and marble lavabo. A sitting room is noted for its carved wooden altar.[7][1][2][5][3]

The church has over 27,000 azulejos, noted for some of the only depictions of Lisbon prior to the earthquake of 1755. Azulejos in the church complex also depict the marriage of Prince José, later Joseph I of Portugal, and Mariana Victoria of Spain in 1729.[3]

Façade edit

The richly decorated Plateresque-style façade is carved from limestone with sandstone elements. The nave is accessed via a richly decorated central portal with two side doors. A statue of Saint Francis of Assisi is in a niche at the upper center of the complex façade; it is likely of limestone imported from Portugal used in numerous churches in the same period. The uppermost section of the facade has the symbol of the skull, a symbol associated with Saint Francis, which represents death and the fragility of the human life to members of the Franciscan Order. Four figures are located at the level of the niche of Saint Francis. The outer figures are Caryatids, and those closest to the niche, with a naked chest and wings next to the head, are representation of Hermes. Two half figures are located above the niche; they have the upper part of the female body with acanthus leaves below. The female forms, which resemble mermaids, hold a crown with a cartela below inscribed in Latin, Agite panitant ("do penitence"), a reference to Matthew 3:2 or Matthew 4:17 (Poenitentiam agite).[2][5][3][6]

Chancel edit

The chancel of the Third Order church has a vaulted ceiling with sash windows; unlike other chancels in Salvador, its ceiling is painted a simple blue with small decorative stars. The pavement of the chancel is richly decorated with lioz imported from Portugal; unlike other churches that feature pavements in strict geometric forms, it has curved tracing and irregular lines. The chancel arch is richly decorated in gilded woodcarving and has the Franciscan coat of arms at top.[9]

Cloister edit

The cloister of the Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis is located to the south of the structure. It is smaller and simpler than the cloister of the adjacent São Francisco Church and Convent. It bounds the nave on one side and the São Francisco Church and Convent on the opposite side; the cloister of the corridor has a small entrance to the adjacent building. Its corridors are richly lined in azulejos, similarly to the cloister of the São Francisco Church; its columns are of local Bahian sandstone.[9]

Casa dos Santos edit

The right (north) lateral corridor leads to a room to house the roça saints, called the Casa dos Santos, or room of saints. The room contains twenty-three niches, constructed in 1844, to house wood sculptures of saints. The processional saints, revered by the Franciscan order, and niches are the work of the master woodcarver Joaquim Francisco de Mattos.[7][3][8]

Sacristy edit

The sacristy contains a large sacristy cabinet, lavabo, and richly lined with azulejo tiles. The lavabo is of marble and lioz limestone imported from Portugal; its design is of polychromatic inlay in white, red, light pink, and yellow lioz and black marble from Mem Martins. The center of the lavabo has an inlay coat of arms of the Franciscan Order with stylized birds to the left and right. The lavabo was imported from Macao in 1720; its design shows Portuguese, Arab, and Japanese influence.[3][9][10]

Protected status edit

Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis was listed as a historic structure by the National Historic and Artistic Heritage Institute in 1938. The structures were registered under the Book of Historical Works, Inscription no. 89.[4]

Access edit

The church is open to the public and may be visited.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Freire, Luiz Alberto Ribeiro (2008). O "Clássico e Singelo" José De Cerqueira Torres (PDF). 17° Encontro Nacional da Associação Nacional de Pesquisadores em Artes Plásticas Panorama da Pesquisa em Artes Visuais (in Portuguese). Santa Maria, RS, Brazil: Associação Nacional de Pesquisadores em Artes Plásticas.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lins, Eugénio Ávila (2012). "Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis". Heritage of Portuguese Influence/Património de Influência Portuguesa. Retrieved 2017-02-19.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Vilaron, André (2007). Igrejas históricas de Salvador = Historical churches in Salvador. Brasília, Brazil: Ministério das Relações Exteriores, Governo Federal. pp. 95–112. ISBN 9788560123001.
  4. ^ a b c Carrazzoni, Maria Elisa, ed. (1980). Guia dos bens tombados. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Expressão e Cultura Pedidos pelo reembolso postal, EXPED-Expansão Editorial. p. 62. ISBN 9788520800577.
  5. ^ a b c d . Brasilia, Brazil: IPHAN. 2017. Archived from the original on 2015-05-20. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
  6. ^ a b Palheiros, Renata da Silva (2017). O uso da fachada-retábulo no Brasil colonial: a Ordem Terceira de São Francisco da Penitência de Salvador (PDF). Rio de Janeiro: Faculdade de São Bento do Rio de Janeiro. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  7. ^ a b c d Bazin, Germain (1956). L'architecture religieuse baroque au Brésil (in French). Vol. 2. Sao Paulo: Museu de Arte. pp. 33–34.
  8. ^ a b c Igreja da Ordem 3a. de S. Francisco. Pequeno guia das igrejas da Bahia, 2. Salvador, Bahia: Diretoria do Arquivo, Divulgação e Estatística da Prefeitura do Salvador. 1949.
  9. ^ a b c Silva, Zenaide C. Gonçalves (2008). O lioz português : de lastro de navio a arte na Bahia (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro, Brasil Porto, Portugal: Versal Editores Edições Afrontamento. pp. 104–113. ISBN 9788589309172.
  10. ^ Silva, Zenaide C. G. (2017). "Lioz—a Royal Stone in Portugal and a Monumental Stone in Colonial Brazil". Geoheritage. 11 (1): 165–175. doi:10.1007/s12371-017-0267-7. ISSN 1867-2477.

Bibliography edit

  • Ana Palmira Bittencourt Santos Casimiro (1996), Mentalidade e estética na Bahia colonial: a venerável Ordem Terceira de São Francisco de Assis da Bahia e o frontispício da sua igreja (in Portuguese), Salvador: Secretaria da Cultura e Turismo do Estado da Bahia, Wikidata Q106367896

church, ordem, terceira, são, francisco, salvador, church, third, order, saint, francis, portuguese, igreja, ordem, terceira, são, francisco, also, igreja, ordem, terceira, são, francisco, penitência, 18th, century, roman, catholic, church, salvador, bahia, br. The Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis Portuguese Igreja da Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco also Igreja da Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco da Penitencia is an 18th century Roman Catholic church in Salvador Bahia Brazil and seat of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Brazil The church is one of the main elements of the Historic Center of Salvador and lies within the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the city It was listed as a historic structure by National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage IPHAN in 1941 The church was constructed as an annex to the Sao Francisco Church and Convent It is noted for its distinctive Plateresque style facade an example unique in Brazil The writer Jorge Amado called the facade of the Third Order church magnificent 1 2 3 4 5 6 Church of the Third Order of Saint FrancisIgreja da Ordem Terceira de Sao FranciscoFacade of the Church of the Third Order of Saint FrancisReligionAffiliationCatholicRiteRomanLocationMunicipalitySalvadorStateBahiaCountryBrazilLocation of the Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis in BrazilGeographic coordinates12 58 28 S 38 30 32 W 12 974421 S 38 508821 W 12 974421 38 508821ArchitectureArchitect s Gabriel RibeiroTypeChurchStylePlat Contents 1 History 2 Structure 2 1 Facade 2 2 Chancel 2 3 Cloister 2 4 Casa dos Santos 2 5 Sacristy 3 Protected status 4 Access 5 References 6 BibliographyHistory editThe Order of the Third Order of San Francisco arrived in Bahia in 1635 The order erected its first church in 1644 and was demolished and replaced by the present structure A competition was held for its design and on December 18 1701 the Fathers of the Third Order chose Gabriel Ribeiro late 16th century 1719 a native of Porto Portugal The cornerstone of the church was laid on January 1 1702 and the structure was completed on June 22 1703 The facade was completed in 1705 but its elaborate construction probably continued well into the 18th century 7 1 The church was closed to the public and renovated in the late 1820s The primitive interior of the church was replaced with Neoclassical elements New altars were created between 1827 and 1828 by the master wood carver Jose de Cerqueira Torres Torres was commissioned to complete 77 pieces including candlesticks crosses bouquets and jars Franco Velasco completed in the gilding in 1830 The ornate Plateresque facade was covered with a simple Neoclassical facade The church is also noted for its azulejo tiles and jacaranda furniture both from the 18th century 1 2 8 Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis reopened to the public on July 5 1935 Damiao Barbosa de Araujo 1778 1856 composed a work for full orchestra for the dedication mass Its score is now stored in the archive of the church 8 Electricians carrying out renovations on the church in the 1932 discovered the original Baroque exterior of the church The Neoclassical facade was removed and the granite Baroque exterior renovated in its present form in 1939 The church is also noted for its collection of roca saints which are housed in a room completed in 1844 1 2 4 Structure edit nbsp Detail of Plateresque style facade nbsp View of nave and chancel Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis sits behind a small churchyard on Igreja da Ordem Terceira slightly removed from the Terreiro do Jesus The churchyard features an iron fence and masonry pillars The church consists of a complex featuring a nave with two side corridors surmounted by tribunes a Room of Saints Casa dos Santos a large patio with galleys a large sacristy behind the high altar The entrance hall has a collection of paintings depicting the life of Saint Francis by Bento Jose Rufino Capinam 1791 1874 The Sala da Mesa a large meeting room for the Brotherhood is richly decorated with paintings and azulejos Polychromatic lioz limestone was imported at great expense from Portugal and is utilized in the decorative flooring of the nave chancel and sacristy The rear of the church leads to an ossuary at a lower level 7 1 2 5 3 All parts of the church complex are decorated with azulejos paintings marble and sculpture The tribunes of the left wing are linked by galleries The rich paintings on the ceiling of the nave were completed in 1831 by Franco Velasco 1780 1833 The sacristy is noted for its well preserved azulejo tiles and marble lavabo A sitting room is noted for its carved wooden altar 7 1 2 5 3 The church has over 27 000 azulejos noted for some of the only depictions of Lisbon prior to the earthquake of 1755 Azulejos in the church complex also depict the marriage of Prince Jose later Joseph I of Portugal and Mariana Victoria of Spain in 1729 3 Facade edit The richly decorated Plateresque style facade is carved from limestone with sandstone elements The nave is accessed via a richly decorated central portal with two side doors A statue of Saint Francis of Assisi is in a niche at the upper center of the complex facade it is likely of limestone imported from Portugal used in numerous churches in the same period The uppermost section of the facade has the symbol of the skull a symbol associated with Saint Francis which represents death and the fragility of the human life to members of the Franciscan Order Four figures are located at the level of the niche of Saint Francis The outer figures are Caryatids and those closest to the niche with a naked chest and wings next to the head are representation of Hermes Two half figures are located above the niche they have the upper part of the female body with acanthus leaves below The female forms which resemble mermaids hold a crown with a cartela below inscribed in Latin Agite panitant do penitence a reference to Matthew 3 2 or Matthew 4 17 Poenitentiam agite 2 5 3 6 Chancel edit The chancel of the Third Order church has a vaulted ceiling with sash windows unlike other chancels in Salvador its ceiling is painted a simple blue with small decorative stars The pavement of the chancel is richly decorated with lioz imported from Portugal unlike other churches that feature pavements in strict geometric forms it has curved tracing and irregular lines The chancel arch is richly decorated in gilded woodcarving and has the Franciscan coat of arms at top 9 Cloister edit The cloister of the Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis is located to the south of the structure It is smaller and simpler than the cloister of the adjacent Sao Francisco Church and Convent It bounds the nave on one side and the Sao Francisco Church and Convent on the opposite side the cloister of the corridor has a small entrance to the adjacent building Its corridors are richly lined in azulejos similarly to the cloister of the Sao Francisco Church its columns are of local Bahian sandstone 9 Casa dos Santos edit The right north lateral corridor leads to a room to house the roca saints called the Casa dos Santos or room of saints The room contains twenty three niches constructed in 1844 to house wood sculptures of saints The processional saints revered by the Franciscan order and niches are the work of the master woodcarver Joaquim Francisco de Mattos 7 3 8 Sacristy edit The sacristy contains a large sacristy cabinet lavabo and richly lined with azulejo tiles The lavabo is of marble and lioz limestone imported from Portugal its design is of polychromatic inlay in white red light pink and yellow lioz and black marble from Mem Martins The center of the lavabo has an inlay coat of arms of the Franciscan Order with stylized birds to the left and right The lavabo was imported from Macao in 1720 its design shows Portuguese Arab and Japanese influence 3 9 10 Protected status editChurch of the Third Order of Saint Francis was listed as a historic structure by the National Historic and Artistic Heritage Institute in 1938 The structures were registered under the Book of Historical Works Inscription no 89 4 Access editThe church is open to the public and may be visited References edit a b c d e f Freire Luiz Alberto Ribeiro 2008 O Classico e Singelo Jose De Cerqueira Torres PDF 17 Encontro Nacional da Associacao Nacional de Pesquisadores em Artes Plasticas Panorama da Pesquisa em Artes Visuais in Portuguese Santa Maria RS Brazil Associacao Nacional de Pesquisadores em Artes Plasticas a b c d e f Lins Eugenio Avila 2012 Church of the Third Order of Saint Francis Heritage of Portuguese Influence Patrimonio de Influencia Portuguesa Retrieved 2017 02 19 a b c d e f g Vilaron Andre 2007 Igrejas historicas de Salvador Historical churches in Salvador Brasilia Brazil Ministerio das Relacoes Exteriores Governo Federal pp 95 112 ISBN 9788560123001 a b c Carrazzoni Maria Elisa ed 1980 Guia dos bens tombados Rio de Janeiro RJ Expressao e Cultura Pedidos pelo reembolso postal EXPED Expansao Editorial p 62 ISBN 9788520800577 a b c d Igreja da Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco Salvador BA Brasilia Brazil IPHAN 2017 Archived from the original on 2015 05 20 Retrieved 2017 11 17 a b Palheiros Renata da Silva 2017 O uso da fachada retabulo no Brasil colonial a Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco da Penitencia de Salvador PDF Rio de Janeiro Faculdade de Sao Bento do Rio de Janeiro Retrieved 2020 02 25 a b c d Bazin Germain 1956 L architecture religieuse baroque au Bresil in French Vol 2 Sao Paulo Museu de Arte pp 33 34 a b c Igreja da Ordem 3a de S Francisco Pequeno guia das igrejas da Bahia 2 Salvador Bahia Diretoria do Arquivo Divulgacao e Estatistica da Prefeitura do Salvador 1949 a b c Silva Zenaide C Goncalves 2008 O lioz portugues de lastro de navio a arte na Bahia in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro Brasil Porto Portugal Versal Editores Edicoes Afrontamento pp 104 113 ISBN 9788589309172 Silva Zenaide C G 2017 Lioz a Royal Stone in Portugal and a Monumental Stone in Colonial Brazil Geoheritage 11 1 165 175 doi 10 1007 s12371 017 0267 7 ISSN 1867 2477 Bibliography editAna Palmira Bittencourt Santos Casimiro 1996 Mentalidade e estetica na Bahia colonial a veneravel Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco de Assis da Bahia e o frontispicio da sua igreja in Portuguese Salvador Secretaria da Cultura e Turismo do Estado da Bahia Wikidata Q106367896 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Igreja da Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco Salvador Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp Brazil Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Church da Ordem Terceira de Sao Francisco Salvador amp oldid 1188956284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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