Vol. VII, No. 2.] List of Portuguese Jesuit Missionaries. 36 
[N.S.] 
of the plague at Hugli in 1626. One ‘‘ Gaspar Ferreira, Lus.’’ 
came to India in 1614; one ‘‘ Andrew Gomes, Lus.’’ in 1603. 
(Franco). 
Joseph de Castro wrote on Nov. 20, 1631, from ‘‘ the 
Kingdom of Bengala,’’ that he had been in Bengal during the 
last two years, as Chaplain to a Governor of several provinces, 
Mirza Zu-1 Qarnin, an Armenian Catholic. The place was 
more than 250 miles from Agra and more than 300 from Hugli. 
On August 8, 1632, he mentions Father Francis Morando as his 
companion. . J.A.S.B., 1910, p. 529. ‘ Joseph de Castro, 
Ius.,’’ had come out in 1602; ‘‘ P. Francis Morando, Lus.,’’ 
in 1629. Cf. Franco and pA Camara MANOEL, 
Two Jesuits were among the casualties on the Hugli 
River after the capture of Hugli: Father Ignatius Fiatho, cut 
down with a scimitar (+ 26 Sept. 1632), and Bro. John Rodri- 
guez, shot dead with arrows. 
Three others—Manoel Coelho, Manoel Secco, and Lows 
Orlandini—died shortly after (before the end of 1632) of the 
pestilence which decimated the Portuguese fugitives entrenched 
in the island of Saugor. Two of the name of Emmanuel 
Coelho, both Portuguese, and neither a priest, left Lisbon, one 
in 1609, the other in 1623. 
Between 1678 and 1681, a movement of conversion among 
pp. 319, 320; also J.A.S.B., 1910, pp. 449-451, where a number 
of letters, now in the Brit. Mus., and dated 1678-84, are pointed 
out, Father Santucci had come to India in 1668, already a 
priest ; one ‘‘ Emmanuel Saraiva, a Portuguese, not yet a 
priest,”? came in 1672; one ‘‘ Ignatius Gomes, ditto,’” in 
1670. (Franco). I believe that Saraiva must be identified 
with Manoel Saray (read : Sarayva), Provincial at Goa in 1711. 
Cf. Lettres Edif., 1781, X, 99. 
For Bis Francis Laynez’ visit to Bengal, the first 
episcopal visitation on record (17 12-1715) see Fr. Cl. Barbier's 
letters in Bengal ; Past and Present, 1910, Vol. II, pp. 200-227. 
ALON LON LL at 
