Paintings of Mughal celebrations, 1610
The event included a tight-rope walker and the burning of a figure of
Judas
Jesuit missionaries were the
first group of Europeans to visit the Mughal court. They initially arrived at
the Portuguese colony of Goa in 1542.
Xavier’s regular reports back to the Provincial in Goa include
details of extravagent cultural activities, all aimed at winning converts. In a
letter written from Agra on 6 September 1604 (BL Add MS 9854, currently on
exhibit in ‘Mughal India’) he writes about affairs in Lahore (see Maclagan, p.
96):
"The feasts of Christmas and Easter are kept at Lahor with
great solemnity, and the church being so large and beautiful, everything can be
well carried out."
Although the Jesuits were
unsuccessful in their primary aim to convert Akbar and his son Jahangir to
Catholicism, they did achieve some success when, on September 5, 1610, three of
Akbar’s grandsons, Tahmuras, Baysunghar and Hushang were baptised (though they
reverted to Islam a few years later when relations with the Portuguese
deteriorated).
On Easter Sunday 1611 they attended Mass, ate Easter eggs with
relish and watched entertainments arranged by the Jesuit Fathers.
These
apparently included the performance of a tight-rope walker and the burning of a
figure of Judas, stuffed with fireworks, on the roof of the chapel (see
Maclagan, The Jesuits and the Great Mogul,
pp. 72-73; 94).
This article first appeared on the British
Library's Asian
and African Studies blog.
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