Around 1322, the first
Christian mission to arrive in northern Borneo was by the Italian
Odoric of Pordenone (also mentioned variously as Odorio, Odoric or Odorico Mattiussi). Further, in 1567, North Borneo received another two
Jesuit missionaries from the
Kingdom of Portugal but was interrupted by the Dutch in 1600, and in 1587, another two
Franciscan missionaries from the
Spanish East Indies. In 1687, a
Theatine missionary named was commissioned by
Pope Innocent XI to preach Christianity in Borneo, he further lived on the eastern coast of northern Borneo for five years, marking the further chapter of Christian missions within northern Borneo despite earlier struggles to reach the local indigenous natives. The Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples decreed on 27 August 1855 the erection of the northern part of the island of Borneo into an independent
prefecture of North Borneo and Labuan and entrusted it to
Carlos Cuarteroni, a Spaniard. Cuarteron was originally a sea-captain and had vowed, after escaping great peril, to devote himself to the evangelisation of Borneo. He landed at Labuan in 1857, in company with several missionaries who deserted him in 1860. Although alone in the island of Labuan, Cuarteroni continued his labours. At length, seeing that isolation made him powerless, he went to Rome in 1879 to request that the Propaganda place the mission in charge of an institute. From Rome, Cuarteroni went to Spain, where he soon died. The island of Labuan has an area of and contains 6,800 inhabitants; it is an important shipping station between Singapore and Hong Kong. The prefect Apostolic lives at Labuan. The stations served are Labuan and
Kuching (
Sarawak), the two most important towns. Outside of these two places where the missionaries live ten stations are visited:
Sibu,
Kanowit,
Igan,
Oya,
Mukah,
Baram,
Papar,
Jesselton,
Putatan, and
Sandakan. According to the "Missions-Atlas" of P. Streit, the statistics of the Catholic mission in the early 20th century were: 19 regular priests, 2 lay brothers, 15 sisters; 8 churches; 20 chapels; 16 catechists; 14 schools with 740 pupils; 2,600 baptisms; about 1,000 catechumens. == British power ==