Photo Gallery
St. Paul's Cathedral Ruins (1602)
The most dramatic symbol of Macau is the towering facade of the Jesuit church of the Mother of God (Madre de Deus), commonly known as St. Paul's (Sao Paulo). This was the church of the adjoining St. Paul's college, the first western college in east Asia--where the noted Jesuits Matteo Ricci and Adam Schall and other studied. Designed by an Italian and built by Japanese craftsmen beginning in 1602, its stunning Spanish-style retable-facade with four colonnaded tiers, made it the grandest Christian edifice in Asia. A fire that started in the kitchen of the college in 1835, however, destroyed both the college and the church, so that all that remains today is the facade with its marvelous statues and reliefs
Bibliography:
All images copyright 2000 Professor Robert D. Fiala of Concordia University, Nebraska, USA

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I just found this when trying to figure out what these slides were that my mom took in Dec 1981. Only two pictures of the cathedral and the market area around the cathedral in their collection of pictures.