Church of Santa Catarina (Calheta)

Church of Santa Catarina (Igreja de Santa Catarina)
Church of Saint Catherine of Alexandria
Church (Igreja)
Partial view of the Church of Santa Catarina
Official name: Igreja Paroquial da Calheta/Igreja de Santa Catarina
Named for: Catherine of Alexandria
Country Portugal
Autonomous Region Azores
Group Central
Island São Jorge
Municipality Calheta
Location Calheta
 - elevation 16 m (52 ft)
 - coordinates 38°36′2.91″N 28°0′47.46″W / 38.6008083°N 28.0131833°W / 38.6008083; -28.0131833Coordinates: 38°36′2.91″N 28°0′47.46″W / 38.6008083°N 28.0131833°W / 38.6008083; -28.0131833
Length 38.25 m (125 ft), West-East
Width 21.75 m (71 ft), North-South
Architects unknown
Style Baroque
Material Basalt
Origin 16th century
 - Initiated 8 January 1639
 - Completion c. 1763
Owner Portuguese Republic
For public Private
Management Direção Regional de Cultura
Operator Roman Catholic Diocese of Angra
Status Unclassified
Wikimedia Commons: Church of Santa Catarina (Calheta)

The Church of Santa Catarina (Portuguese: Igreja de Santa Catarina) is a church in the civil parish of Calheta, municipality of Calheta, on the Portuguese island of São Jorge, archipelago of the Azores.

History

The facade of the parish church constructed in 1639
The interior of the single-nave church showing the multiple arched pillars

On 3 June 1534, the municipality of Calheta was separated from that of the neighbouring administration of Velas, and the village of Calheta was elevated to the status of town by King John III of Portugal.[1] Construction began on 8 January 1639 after the original 16th century building was destroyed by fire. The chronicler Friar Agostinho de Monte Alverne wrote of the incident, noting that all was destroyed except the main body and the sacramental bread.[1][2] To mark the occasion, the municipal council of Calheta decided to commemorate the event with a procession, ritual mass and sermon in 1664.[1] These commemorative rituals were later provided for in the testaments of Captain-Major Bartolomeu Pereira and his grandson, Father José Soares de Sousa.[1]

The new church was built away from the sea on the site of a small chapel dedicated to Saint Catherine (Portuguese: Santa Catarina) which was destroyed during a volcanic eruption.[1] It is believed that the construction of the current Church of Santa Catarina was begun in the 17th century.[1] Building lasted for a considerable period and was only completed around 1763 as a result of the Mandado de Deus earthquake, which hit the island on 9 July 1757.[1][2] The church did not have a baptismal font until 1664 when it was provided by visiting parish priest António Pires de Serpa.[1]

On 4 October 1945, the church was damaged by an ocean swell (some say tsunami).[1] Major damage also occurred on 1 January 1980 as a result of the Azores earthquake which affected many of the islands of the Central Group, destroying much of Angra do Heroísmo.[1] Plans for remodelling were prepared in the late 1980s and the church was reopened in 1991.[1]

Architecture

The church is located in the centre of the built-up area of the village of Calheta.[1] On a platform located to the rear of the church the local community constructed an império, a religious building used in the Festivals of the Holy Spirit.[1] The single-nave church is in the form of a cross, with a lateral transept, and has a belltower with a four-faceted clock. Inside, there is an apse in gilded wood with images of Saint Catherine (one from the small 16th century building, the other from the 17th century), and a valuable candelabra.

The lateral doorway in sculpted basalt 
The central nave of the church 
The wood vaulted ceiling in the apse 

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Nóe, Paula (2010), SIPA, ed., Igreja Paroquial de São Mateus da Calheta/Igreja de São Mateus (n.PT071902010003) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA –Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, archived from the original on 5 March 2016, retrieved 28 May 2012
  2. 1 2 "Introduzindo a Ilha de São Jorge", O Açoriano (PDF) (in Portuguese) (7), 31 May 2006, p. 7, retrieved 28 May 2012
Sources
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