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The Jesuit Mission

From Xavier to Ferreira, the rise and fracture of the Society of Jesus in Japan.

8 articles

1

Francis Xavier and the Jesuit Mission in Japan

Arriving in Kagoshima in 1549, the Navarrese co-founder of the Society of Jesus launched one of the most ambitious evangelization campaigns in history. His two years in Japan set the course for decades of religious and cultural transformation.

2

The Man Who Stayed: Cosme de Torres and the Long Decade of the Japanese Mission

Successor to Francis Xavier and Superior of the Japan mission for nineteen years, the Valencian priest Cosme de Torres ran the entire Jesuit operation through the chaos of the Sengoku period. Less famous than his predecessors and successors, he laid the foundations on which Japanese Christianity's apogee would be built.

3

The Man Who Walked into Kyoto: Gaspar Vilela and the Mission to the Imperial Capital

A half-blind lute player, a shaved-headed Portuguese priest, and the most audacious gamble in the history of the Jesuit mission in Japan, the story of how one man planted Christianity in the imperial capital and changed the course of Japanese history.

4

The Soldier Who Would Not Bend: Francisco Cabral and the Battle for Japan’s Soul

A Portuguese soldier turned Jesuit priest was given command of the most culturally complex mission in Christendom. He responded by trying to make Japan more like Portugal. The results were catastrophic.

5

Gaspar Coelho: The Priest Who Thought He Was a Prince

Alessandro Valignano chose him because he seemed docile. For nine years, as Vice-Provincial of Japan, Gaspar Coelho proved he was nothing of the kind, a would-be daimyō who stockpiled weapons, paraded his private warship, and brought the 1587 expulsion edict down upon the Church he was meant to shepherd.

6

João Rodrigues Tçuzzu: The Interpreter Who Spoke for an Empire

A peasant boy from rural Portugal mastered Japanese so completely that two successive rulers made him their confidant, and spent thirty-three years as the indispensable man between two civilizations.

7

The Visitor: Alessandro Valignano and the Remaking of the Japan Mission

A Neapolitan aristocrat who slashed a woman’s face in his twenties became the most consequential European in sixteenth-century Asia, reshaping the Jesuit enterprise across three decades, three continents, and three visits to a country he could barely comprehend.

8

Cristóvão Ferreira: The Fallen Jesuit of Japan

The highest-ranking Jesuit in Japan broke under torture in 1633, renounced his faith, and spent the rest of his life helping the shogunate destroy the Church he had served for three decades. His apostasy is the darkest chapter of the Christian Century.

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