The Jesuits arrived in the city in the 1549 and planned a Jesuit college under Father
Manuel da Nóbrega (1517-1570). The
Diocese of São Salvador da Bahia de Todos os Santos, the first in the Portuguese
colony of Brazil, was created in 1551, only two years after the founding of Salvador by the Portuguese nobleman
Tomé de Sousa. The first bishop,
Pero Fernandes Sardinha, arrived in 1552, and a Jesuit college was established in 1564. The
Colégio de Jesus (School of Jesus) was completed in 1585 through the financial support of the first governor-general of Bahia,
Mem de Sá. Separately, a cathedral was built in the centre of Salvador around this time. Three Jesuit church buildings were erected on the site of the present-day cathedral, the final being destroyed during the
Dutch occupation of Brazil.
Dutch occupation The Dutch, upon their entry into Salvador in 1624, stripped the interior of the Jesuit college of its silverwork and a relic reportedly used by St. Francis Xavier. The Dutch used the Jesuit chapel as a warehouse to store barrels of wine confiscated from the city. Salvador was reoccupied by the Portuguese in 1625, but the church and most buildings of the city were heavily damaged and remained under siege by the Dutch until 1654.
Reconstruction of Jesuit complex The Jesuits gathered to build a fourth church, the present structure, in 1654. The cornerstone of the present structure was laid in 1657 at a grand ceremony and mass attended by Governor-General Jerónimo de Ataíde, the
Conde de Atouguia (1610-1665) and numerous government and military figures. The mass was celebrated by Father
Simão de Vasconcelos. The structure was completed in 1672. Its frontispiece dates to 1679 and its steeples were completed in 1694. The images of
Saint Ignatius,
Saint Francis Xavier, and
Saint Francis of Borja were placed on the frontispiece in 1746. Housing for three religious communities, the father, the Escolásticas, and the Brotherhood; a smaller chapel; a refectory and kitchen; a novitiate; and a small school were completed soon after the opening of the church. The religious community numbered approximately 150, as evidenced by the seating of the domestic chapel. The novitiate was moved to the lower city in 1728 to the present-day
Casa Pia and College of the Orphans of Saint Joachim.
Expulsion of the Jesuits The
Jesuit Order was
expelled from Brazil by a Royal Letter dated August 28, 1759. The college was besieged by soldiers and all its inhabitants, including priests, students, and brothers, were detained on December 26, 1759. It was one of the final acts of governor
Marcos de Noronha before the arrival of the new governor from Portugal,
Antônio de Almeida Soares. Soares moved the entire community of Jesuits on January 7, 1760 into the domestic chapel of the college and sealed the doors and windows. The members of the community, now prisoners, were taken by armed soldiers to Novitiate of Jiquitaia in the lower city; other troops guarded the route to ward off observers. The community was held until April 18, 1760, when they boarded two boats. The Jesuits were taken to either dungeons in Lisbon or dispersed to pontifical territories in Italy. Their church was transferred to the Archbishopric in 1765 under
Manuel de Santa Inês.
20th century The remains of the school of the Jesuits, north of the current structure, burned in 1905. The church became the only remnant of the Jesuit complex. The Jesuit school was replaced by the
Medical School of Bahia, and a corridor was built to connect the school to the church. The
Old Cathedral of Salvador, built in the late 16th century, was demolished in 1933 under Archbishop
Augusto Álvaro da Silva (1876-1968) in order to construct a tram route in Salvador. The former Jesuit church became the cathedral of the city. ==Location==