On All Saints Day 1755, tremors
from an earthquake measuring approximately 9.0 or higher on the moment
magnitude scale swept furiously toward Lisbon…
This
Gulf of Fire: The Great Lisbon Earthquake, or Apocalypse in the Age of Science
and Reason, by Mark Molesky
Almost instantly, much of the city was in ruins; within 30
minutes, a tsunami barreled up the Tagus River and carried thousands of bodies
out to sea – dead and alive; shortly thereafter a fire engulfed whatever would
burn. Lisbon, one of Europe’s wealthiest
cities, was virtually no more.
The disaster is significant on its own, but my interest is
in the impact on the culture and religion.
Portugal was as Catholic a kingdom that one could find; the earthquake
did not just shake physical foundations.
Six years after the earthquake, in September 1761, Father
Gabriel Malagrida was headed toward execution.
The seventy-two-year-old Jesuit priest was a former favorite of the
king. This would not save him on this
day. Eleven years before, he entered
Lisbon in triumph – hailed as a “living saint”; this was before the earthquake.
The earthquake was the largest ever recorded in the Atlantic
Ocean, and the largest to strike Europe.
Equivalent to 32,000 Hiroshima bombs, three times the power of Krakatoa,
and a thousand times more powerful than the earthquake that struck Haiti in
2010.
It arrived at 9:45 AM, during morning mass with the churches
full of worshipers on All Saints Day.
Thousands were buried in place – in church, at home, on the
streets. Survivors fled to the riverbank,
only to be swept out to sea by the tsunami.
The worst was still to come – an uncontrollable and unquenchable fire,
burning out of control for weeks.
“I believe,” wrote one dazed
survivor, that “so compleat a Destruction has hardly befallen any Place on
Earth since the Overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah.”
Six years later – as Malagrida was being led to his end, the
city still remained in ruins. The
rebuilding project had barely begun.
Thieves and dogs ruled the city.
The survivors of this pitiable scene strained to see Malagrida taking
his last steps. This, a result of the
Portuguese Inquisition, proving that Malagrida was a heretic.
The royal family was absent.
In their stead was Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of
Pombal, 1st Count of Oeiras. Let’s call
him Pombal to make everyone’s lives easier.
He had been the earthquake’s greatest beneficiary, taking action when no
one else would or could act, when the king remained in his prolonged daze. At the time of the earthquake, he was
secretary of state for foreign affairs.
Shortly after, he would become virtually Portugal’s dictator.
Several months after the earthquake, a sermon by Malagrida
was published:
“Know, oh Lisbon,” he thundered,
“that the destroyers of so many houses and palaces, the devastators of so many
churches and monasteries, the killer of so many people…are not comets, stars,
vapors, exhalations, phenomena, accidents, or natural causes – but only our
intolerable sins.”
He offered: The Good Lord had decided to smash Lisbon to the
ground. It was not the message that
Pombal wanted delivered – he saw the earthquake as a random occurrence – or at
least this is how he wanted it explained.
Pombal implored the cardinal
patriarch to forbid priests from delivering sermons that “increased the anxiety
of the people” and caused them to cease working and “flee to deserted places.”
But Malagrida would not be silenced. As he sent his 31-page pamphlet to many of
the most prominent figures in the kingdom – including Pombal – his actions
would not go unnoticed. He was
implicated (and almost certainly framed, according to Molesky) in an attempt by
the Duke of Aveiro and members of the Távora family to assassinate José
I, the king.
Perhaps an important note: before Pombal came to power –
before, even, he came into any notoriety at all – he naively attempted to woo a
daughter of the noble and wealthy Távora family. He was unceremoniously sent on his way. This might suggest something about the
motivation for Pombal behind the charge.
Malagrida languished in prison for two years, until his
trial and sentence. The verdict and
sentence were assured, as Pombal appointed his brother as Inquisitor
General. This was just of a type for
Pombal, as he went after the two institutions that stood in between him and
absolute power: The Church and the nobility.
For in Pombal’s newly conceived
absolutist state, the twin demons of modernity – political violence and an
abiding contempt for tradition – would be fully realized.
Malagrida – the once-beloved holy man – stood silently for
two hours while the charges were read against him.
… “a monster of the greatest
iniquity,” who had acted as if he were a “saint” and a “true prophet.” …he had
faked “miracles, revelations, visions, locutions, and other favores celestiaes” (heavenly favors) …
This in addition to admitting to having conversed regularly
with many saints. This ability once
brought him reverence. Now it brought
him a garrote. No blood – as a gesture
of respect.
Members of the Távora family were not so fortunate. Two years before, as Pombal’s assault on the
aristocracy intensified, several male and female members of the family…
…had been ritually torn apart in a
publicly staged bloodbath of such concentrated cruelty that the future French
revolutionary executioner, Charles-Henri Sanson, might have recoiled in horror.
Once dead, Malagrida’s corpse was covered in wood and set
ablaze; the ashes were thrown into the Tagus.
Nothing left to be gathered up by his admirers – no memory of him or his
remains.
Conclusion
Voltaire, Kant and Rousseau would all weigh in the Great
Lisbon Earthquake Debate: Europe was in between believing God was in control
and science had conquered all.
The earthquake would prove to be one of the defining events
of the Enlightenment.
Note that once again, the State wraps itself in the cloak of the Church to provide cover for the silencing of those who threatened it or the elimination of easy scapegoats. We see here that with the passage of the Lisbon earthquake and the progress of the Enlightenment, the State was learning that it increasingly didn't need to Church to provide a justification for doing what it wanted. It certainly didn't have to fear the Church from preventing it from doing what it wanted. A true innovation, indeed.
ReplyDeleteAh, it's a pity we don't have this book in English:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.fnac.pt/Perfil-do-Marques-do-Pombal-Camilo-Castelo-Branco/a847170
Perhaps you may want to practice your Portuguese?
It's a scathing Pombal profile by one of the most famous XIX century Portuguese novelists ("Amor de Perdição", "O Crime do Padre Amaro", etc.), written in the 100th anniversary of Pombal's death (the freemason and "enlightened" Portuguese liberals of the XIX all raved about Pombal; he is still "admired" as a great "statesman") and your post reminded me of this lines:
"[i]n 1770 he passed great sentences to those who possessed and did not surrender to a bonfire the Bayle Analysis, the Philosophical Dictionary of Voltaire, or Nouveau Dictionair historique portatif, the Lettres turques, the Oeuvres Philosophiques de la Mettrie, etc. What a disgraceful impostor! He read all these, and endeavored to keep the people in darkness, fearing a reaction from philosophy. What a civilizer, oh centennists [the ones celebrating his 100th anniv.]!"
He was also "famous" for expelling the Jesuits (you know, our beloved scholars from Salamanca-Coimbra, the ones who protected the native brazilianas [re: The Mission] and the ones responsible for educating lower-class Portuguese children - who, for nearly 200 years, until Salazar that is, would be kept in pure analfabetism), creating the oldest wine demarcated region (Douro), whereby he sentenced hundreds of small wine growers to poverty and enriching his english trader friends on the way (you know, fixing prices below market prices and all the rage), crushing entire fishermen villages that wanted to avoid conscription for a silly micro-war with Spain, etc.
Then there are those who prefer to think both positions may or should coexist: the event was a random natural process and perhaps a "divine" punishment for the sins of slavery and immorality in general. The present being devoid of certainty and confusion reigning on all sides, may find some solace in this dichotomy.
ReplyDelete