[N, 



List of Jesuit Missionaries in "Mogor." 541 



Fr. Vega de (Viega), Christophor us , Castellanus, 1583. 



Xavier, Francis. Three Portuguese Jesuits of this name, 

 none of them in Priest's Orders, appear in Franco under 

 the years 1712, 1717 and 1723. 



Fr. Xavier, Jerome, Navarr., 1581. 



Fr. Zuzarte. Peter. Lus.. 1645. 



Fr. A. Huonder, S.J., states in Deutsche Jesuitenmissiondre 



des 17 und 18 J ahrhunderts (Freiburg, 1899, p. 179) that 



Fr. Francis Wendel entered the Novitiate at Florence at 



the age of 21 years (1751), and was in the College of Diu in 

 1656. 



Barros de, Thomas, entered at Goa in 1610; Boudier, 

 Claude, came to India about 1718; Gabral, Francis, entered at 



Goa in 1554. (Cf. C. Sommervogel, S.J., BibL de la C. 



de J.) 



Gabelsperger, Anthony, left for India in 1736; Strobl, 

 Andrew, in 1736, Both, Henry, in 1650. (Cf. A. Huonder, 

 op. cit.); Tieff entailer , Joseph, arrived in India in 1743. (Cf. 

 S. Noti, S.J., Joseph Tieff entailer , Bombay, 1906, p. 4.) 



Finally Orville d\ Albert, and Grueber, John, arrived in 

 China in 1659. (Cf. Catal. Patrum ac Fralrum S.J. qui . . in 

 Sinis adlaboraverunt , Chang-Hai, 1892), and W. Irvine, Storia 

 do Mogor, IV. Index, sub Dorville and Grueber.) 



In Jesuit Missionaries in North India (1907), we gave 

 copious directions towards the bibliography of the Mogor Mis- 

 sions, and notes on the biography of many of the Missionaries. 

 (Cf. ibid., p. 42). Since then has appeared the 10th volume of 

 Fr. C. Sommervogel's Bibliotheque de la Compagnie de Jesus, a 

 volume of Indices, which will be found very bandy for the biblio- 

 graphy of the subject. See, in particular, under ' ■ Histoire de la 

 C. de J., and Missions de V Inde." Valuable information is to 

 be found in the Marsden MSS. of the British Museum. On 

 these, we have published a special memorandum (Cf . J.A.S.B. , 

 1910, No. 8, pp. 437-461.) 



Finally, besides Fr. Anthony Monserrat's Latin Account of 

 the First Jesuit Mission to Akbar, the original of which was dis- 

 covered in Calcutta by the Rev. W. K. Firminger in 1907, we 

 have before us a short list of unknown original letters preserved 

 in our Archives in Europe. This list was drawn up by Fr. Van 

 Meurs up to 1642 only ; but, if wfc add to it what the Hon'ble 

 E. D. Maclagan, I.C.S., has published for the years 1580— 

 1605 (cf. J.A.S.B., 1896, pp. 38-113), and consider that, from 

 1642 up to the suppression of the Society, we are equally well 

 supplied with unpublished documents, it will be seen what 

 wealth of hidden lore awaits the scholar and historian of the 

 future. 



Letters of Fr. Jerome Xavier. 



A letter of 1595 (Sept.), missing; another of Sept. 8, 1596; 



