Tourism
of Goa
Places
of Worship in Goa ::
Churches
in Goa
Ruins
of Church of St. Augustine
One
of the most spectacular of all monuments in Goa, reproduced on innumerable
travel brochures and advertisments is the St Augustine tower in Old Goa.
This highly visible landmark, a 46m-high tower served as a belfry and formed
part of the facade of a magnificent Church.
Out of the more than
twenty fabulous churches which once existed in the old city of Velha Goa,
only ten remain today. And of these four are actually chapels. The churches
were located on and between seven hills around the Velha Goa region.
The
Monte Santo (Holy Hill) at Velha Goa was the site for the the monastery of
the Augustinian order, attached to which was the enormous church of Nossa
Senhora da Graca (Our Lady of Grace). The Tower and Church were built in
1602 by the Augustinian friars who arrived in Goa in 1587.
The
tower is one of the four towers of St. Augustine Church that once stood at
the site. Initially built of laterite and colossal in size, almost forty-six
metres high, it had four storeys. The Tower was meant to serve as a belfry
and the Church had eight richly adorned chapels and four altars and a
convent with numerous cells attached to it.
The construction of the
building began more than 400 years ago and was finished between the years
1597 to 1602. The name of the designer of this magnificent piece of
construction is not known, but he is thought to have been Italian.
Incidentally,
the construction was begun in the same year as the arrival in Goa of Julio
Simao (1565-1641) who was himself influenced by the great Spanish architect
Juan de Herrera (1530-1597). Simao was the chief architect of the Indian
colonies of Portugal having been appointed by Philip II, ruler of Spain and
Portugal between 1580-1598.
When it was completed in the 16th
century, the grand Nossa Senhora da Graca Church was recognised as one of
the three great Augustinian churches in the Iberian world, the other two
being the Basilica of the Escorial in Spain, St. Vincente de Fora in Lisbon.
On
entering the church, the visitor would have a glimpse of the grand retable
of the high altar, with its large gilt tabernacle sheltered within an arch,
through a screen of arched piers. Vestiges of most of these piers were
visible until recently; they supported a spacious choir which could have
accommodated a large number of Augustinian monks.
The nave of the
Church now lies open to the sky, under whose broken arches locals sometimes
gather and talk. Covering the vast nave was a barrel vault, whose enormous
weight unfortunately hastened its collapse.
The church was
abandoned in 1835 due to the repressive policies of the Portuguese
government, which resulted in the eviction of many religious orders from
Goa.
The church fell into neglect and the vault collapsed in 1842.
The church's demise began with the collapse of this vault. The body of the
church was soon destroyed, but the facade remained intact.
The
tower's huge bell was moved in 1871 to the Church of our Lady of the
Immaculate Conception in Panjim, where it remains and can be seen and heard
today. In 1931, the facade and half the tower fell down, followed by more
sections in 1938 leaving only half the tower that is seen and visited by
thousands of tourists today.
This remnant, the renowned St.
Augustine's tower is all that remains of what was once one of the largest
buildings in Goa -- The Augustinian Monastery.