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The public square of a community in Goa (especially in Salcette) is the church square and its immediate surroundings. This space is usually at the evolutionary center of the community and occupies an important place in its spatial hierarchy. These squares originated in the sixteenth century AD with the Portuguese conquest of Goa, which brought new planning concepts and substantially changed the meaning of the existing space. These squares have evolved over the years into a type of their own.
Wherever churches exist in a Goan community—whether urban or rural—that has a predominantly Roman Catholic population, the commercial, residential, and administrative functions revolve around the church square, making the space around the church the principal public square. These squares have evolved as a fusion of the traditional systems of pre-Portuguese Goa and the design of squares developed in post–medieval Europe prior to the colonization of Goa.
Until the advent of the Portuguese in AD 1510, public spaces in Goa consisted of market squares and sometimes temple squares. The Portuguese brought the well-defined concept of urban spaces. They did not alter the basic structure of Goan public spaces, but instead brought new planning concepts and substantially changed the meaning of the existing space.
In pre-Portuguese Goa, the temple was often somewhat separated from the village, and since Hinduism requires private prayer, there was usually no open space in front or near the temple. The governing body for the village (the gavkari), of which temple priests were members, met at the temple, or next to it, often under a tree. The only public space in a village was the market, usually located away from the temple, as there fish and other "unholy" things were sold.
In Portugal, however, a church was always an enclosed structure that opened frontally into an open church square surrounded by residences (one motivation for this was that no one could be arrested on church grounds), and governmental buildings, because of the church's connection to the politics of the day. Commercial activity also took place in the church square.
In both places the public square was a place of education. In Portugal most teaching was carried out by the clergy. In Goa the Brahmin priests were the educated class, and they schooled children in the temple premises.
Goan public squares are centrally located, at the intersection of roads coming from various parts of the village.
The development of a public square typically progressed according to the following order:
These spaces have evolved over the past 400 years into a unique style of their own, slowly becoming the most important public space for a community. It is the space that belongs to and is used by the entire community.
Communities increased in scale and size, and, in the twentieth century, the administrative functions were displaced (as in the case of Margão).
In the region of Salcette, the ratio of length to breadth of the church square varies from 2:3 in villages, to 2:5 in cities. The height to width ratio of 1:4 is a very pleasing scale, giving a sense of spatial enclosure. When the ratio gets larger, as in Curtorim (1:7), this sense of spatial enclosure is felt only at the edges of the square.
Somewhat narrower squares, with length to breadth ratio of around 1:4, encourage public activity more readily than do than the wider squares. Linear spaces become circulation spaces: the closer the visual contact the greater the social contact.
Various types of openings and projections give a square character and variety. Doors, windows, and balconies opening into the square give it character while making it more accessible, thus encouraging its use for recreation. The squares therefore are vibrant places with a wide variety of colours.
The church squares consist of compound walls, roads, piazza crosses, crosses, bandstands, and landscapes which all combine to define the space. The majority of church squares in Goa have not undergone a significant change in social meaning since the end of Portuguese rule. The principal commercial area is continuing to expand. Due to the increase in vehicle traffic, elements such as compound walls have appeared, segregating the church square from the remaining functions.
Old Goa is a historical city situated on the southern banks of the Mandovi River in the Ilhas sub-district of North Goa in the Indian state of Goa.
The history of Goa dates back to prehistoric times, though the present-day state of Goa was only established as recently as 1987. In spite of being India's smallest state by area, Goa's history is both long and diverse. It shares a lot of similarities with Indian history, especially with regard to colonial influences and a multi-cultural aesthetic.
Salcete is a sub-division of South Goa district, Goa state, situated along the south-west coast of India. The Sal river and its backwaters dominate the landscape of Salcete. Historically, the sixty-six villages south of the Zuari river formed the original Salcette territory. Salcete forms a part of the bigger Konkan coastal region thats stretches north–south through most of India's western shoreline.
North Goa district is one of the two districts that constitutes the state of Goa, India. The district has an area of 1,736 square kilometres, and is bounded by Kolhapur and Sindhudurg districts of Maharashtra state to the north and by Belgavi district of Karnataka to the east, by South Goa district to the south, and by the Arabian Sea to the west.
The Goa Inquisition was an extension of the Portuguese Inquisition in Portuguese India. Its objective was to enforce Catholic Orthodoxy and allegiance to the Apostolic See of Rome (Pontifex). The inquisition primarily countered the New Christians accused of secretly practicing their former religions, and Old Christians accused of involvement in the Protestant Revolution of the 16th century. It was established in 1560, briefly suppressed from 1774 to 1778, continued thereafter until finally abolished in 1812. Predominantly, those targeted were accused of crypto-Hinduism. Those accused were imprisoned and depending on the criminal charge, could even be sentenced to death if convicted. The Inquisitors also seized and burnt any books written in Sanskrit, Dutch, English, or Konkani, on the suspicions that they contain deviationist or Protestant material.
Mapusa (म्हापशें) is a town in North Goa, India. It is situated 13 km north of the capital Panaji. The town is the headquarters of Bardez Taluka. It is located on the main highway NH-17, linking Mumbai to Kochi.
Conspiracy of the Pintos, also known as the Pinto Revolt or the Pinto Conspiracy, and in Portuguese as A Conjuração dos Pintos, was a rebellion against Portuguese rule in Goa in 1787. The leaders of the plot were three prominent priests from the village of Candolim in the concelho of Bardez, Goa. They belonged to the Pinto clan, hence the name of the rebellion.
The Konkani people are an Indo-Aryan ethno-linguistic community who inhabit or originate from the Konkan region of the Indian subcontinent, and speak various dialects of the Konkani language. They are the native majority in the Indian state of Goa, and a significant minority resides in Canara subregion of Carnataca. Other minorities are present in Malabar region (Kerala), the Damaon, Diu and Silvassa territory, Maharashtra and Gujarat states.
Candolim is a census town in North Goa and is located in the Bardez taluka in the state of Goa, India. It is situated just south of Calangute Beach and North of Sinquerim.
Goan Catholics are an ethno-religious community of Indian Christians following the Roman Rite of worship, from the Goa state in the Konkan region along India's west coast. They are mostly Konkani people and speak the Konkani language.
Loutolim or LoutulimLottli pronounced:[lɔːʈlĩː], Portuguese: Loutulim) is a large village of South Goa district in the state of Goa, India. It is an important settlement in the Salcete sub-district.
Goans is the demonym used to describe the people native to Goa, India, who form an ethno-linguistic group resulting from the assimilation of Indo-Aryan, Dravidian, Indo-Portuguese, and Austro-Asiatic ethnic and/or linguistic ancestries. They speak different dialects of Konkani natively. Goanese is an incorrect usage for Goans.
Tiswadi is a tehsil (sub-district) of the North Goa district of Goa state, in the Konkan region of India, on which the state capital Panjim is situated. It largely consists of the Goa island, it has the historical sites of the pre-Portuguese Govapuri, and Velha Goa the capital of the Portuguese East Indies, and later it was the site of territorial capital of both Goa and Damaon.
The Cuncolim Massacre or Cuncolim revolt was an incident that involved the massacre and mutilation of Christian priests and civilians by Hindu Kshatriyas in the Portuguese Goa village of Cuncolim on Monday, 15 July 1583.
Raia (Rai) is a scenic village on the outskirts of Margao in Salcete Taluk in South Goa District of Goa State, India. It is located six kilometres east from the district headquarters of Margao and 35 kilometres from the State capital Panaji.
The indigenous population of the erstwhile Portuguese colony of Goa, Damaon& Diu underwent Christianisation following the Portuguese conquest of Goa in 1510. The converts in the Velhas Conquistas to Roman Catholicism were then granted full Portuguese citizenship. Almost all present-day Goan Catholics are descendants of these native converts. They constitute the largest Christian community in Goa and account for 25 per cent of the total Catholic population in India.
The Christian population is almost entirely Goan Catholics, whose ancestors converted to Christianity during Portuguese rule. The Hindu population is mostly descended from immigrants from other states of India, who have been arriving in Goa since the last century There is a higher proportion of Christians in Velhas Conquistas than in Novas Conquistas.
Luís de Menezes Bragança, alternatively spelled as Luís de Menezes Braganza, was a prominent Indian journalist, writer, politician and anti-colonial activist from Goa. He was one of the few Goan aristocrats who actively opposed the Portuguese colonisation of Goa. During his lifetime, Menezes Bragança was widely hailed around the Lusosphere as "O Maior de todos" and in the Indian mainland as "The Tilak of Goa".
Goa is a state on the southwestern coast of India within the Konkan region, geographically separated from the Deccan highlands by the Western Ghats. It is surrounded by the Indian states of Maharashtra to the north and Karnataka to the east and south, with the Arabian Sea forming its western coast. It is India's smallest state by area and its fourth-smallest by population. Goa has the highest GDP per capita among all Indian states, two and a half times as high as the GDP per capita of the country as a whole. The Eleventh Finance Commission of India named Goa the best-placed state because of its infrastructure, and India’s National Commission on Population rated it as having the best quality of life in India. It is the third-highest ranking among Indian states in human development index.
Churches and Convents of Goa is the name given by UNESCO to a set of religious monuments located in Goa Velha, in the state of Goa, India, which were declared a World Heritage Site in 1986.
Priyanka Carvalho, Principal Public Squares in a Settlement, Final Year B. Arch. thesis, Goa College Of Architecture, 2004.