Padrão in Macau

 Supplement to my book

I found another padrão in Macau.

According to historical accounts, Jorge Álvares is believed to have erected the first Portuguese padrão in China at Tamão, a trading post located in what is now Tuen Mun, Hong Kong.  

Fig. 1 Jorge Álvares, 1951 stamps, Macau

Jorge Álvares (c. late 15th century – 8 July 1521) was a Portuguese explorer credited as the first European to reach China by sea during the Age of Discovery. He landed in southern China in 1513, under the commission of the Portuguese Captain of Malacca, Jorge de Albuquerque. His arrival marked the beginning of direct maritime contact between Europe and Ming Dynasty China.

Álvares is believed to have established the first Portuguese “feitoria” (trading post) at Tamão, an island in the Pearl River Delta historically identified with modern-day Lantau Island or the Tuen Mun area in Hong Kong. It was here, in 1514, that he reportedly erected a padrão (fig. 1) and buried his son, making the site both a territorial marker and a personal memorial.

His pioneering voyage paved the way for subsequent Portuguese traders and explorers, leading to the eventual establishment of a permanent Portuguese settlement in Macau several decades later. Álvares died at Tamão on 8 July 1521, possibly during a period of heightened tensions between the Portuguese and Chinese authorities.

The Monument to Jorge Álvares in Macau[1]

 

The statue of Jorge Álvares in Macau (fig. 2,3), inaugurated on 16 September 1954, commemorates the first European navigator to reach China by sea, an event traditionally dated to 1513, when Álvares landed on Lintin Island at the mouth of the Pearl River. The monument remains one of the most significant sculptural testimonies to the early phase of Sino-Portuguese contacts.

The story of the monument begins in 1952, during an official visit to Macau by the Minister of Overseas Territories, Sarmento Rodrigues. On that occasion, the Chinese community offered the minister a car as a gift. Declining the personal benefit, Rodrigues ordered that the vehicle be auctioned, with the proceeds allocated to the erection of a monument in honour of Jorge Álvares the navigator, recognised as the first European to reach China.

Fig. 2 The Monument to Jorge Álvares in Macau

 

According to contemporary accounts, the auction yielded more funds than were strictly necessary. The surplus, later supplemented by a monetary subsidy from the Government of Macau, was used to support the construction of a second monument in Portugal, this time honouring Jorge Álvares the chronicler. This symbolic linkage between the two statues was later recalled by Governor Joaquim Marques Esparteiro at the inauguration ceremony.

The statue was constructed in Portugal and shipped to Macau aboard the Portuguese liner Índia, arriving in mid-1954. Its inauguration took place on a bright, sunny day and was attended by a broad spectrum of colonial, religious, military, and civil authorities, alongside representatives of the Chinese community, the foreign consular corps, and the general public.

Before its final placement was decided, a commission evaluated several possible locations. The historian Jack Braga proposed that the statue be erected at the Miradouro of Estrada D. Maria II, facing the sea and aligned toward Lintin Island, where Álvares first set foot on Chinese soil.

Although historically compelling, this proposal was rejected due to concerns about exposure to the elements and the site’s distance from the city centre.

Other locations, including the Jardim de São Francisco, were also considered but ultimately dismissed for aesthetic and practical reasons. The final decision was to place the monument opposite the Palace of Public Departments, on Praia Grande, then regarded as one of the most prestigious and representative urban spaces in Macau—a setting described at the time as the city’s “reception room.”

The inscription on the monument (fig. 3):

PRIMERO NAVEGADOR

QUE APORTOU A CHINA

- ILHA DE LINTIN

EM 1513

[FIRST NAVIGATOR WHO REACHED CHINA – LIN TIN ISLAND IN 1513]

Fig. 3 The Monument to Jorge Álvares, the inscription



[1] https://macauantigo.blogspot.com/

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