José de Anchieta, considered one of the…
1577 CE
José de Anchieta, considered one of the founders of the national literature of Brazil and credited with converting more than a million Natives, becomes a provincial of the Jesuit order in 1577.
Anchieta's most famous literary work is the Latin mystic poem De beata virgine dei matre Maria (“The Blessed Virgin Mary”).
He also has written and staged several religious plays in the Brazilian wilderness, many of which have been lost.
In addition, he has written the first grammar of the Indian language Tupí and many letters describing the Natives' way of life, customs, folklore, and diseases, as well as the flora and fauna of Brazil.
His other accomplishments include playing a role in the founding of Brazil's two largest cities, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, and the founding of three colleges (at Pernambuco, Bahia, and Rio de Janeiro).
Acclaimed as a poet, dramatist, and scholar, Achiete comes from a prominent Portuguese family and is even thought to be related to the founder of the Jesuit order, St. Ignatius Loyola.
Educated in Portugal and entering the Society of Jesus in 1551, he had first arrived in Brazil on July 13, 1553, in what is now the province of Bahia.
He had gone in 1554 to São Paulo, a new Jesuit settlement in the interior, where he had played a major role in Jesuit efforts to convert the Indians.
He will be influential for the rest of his life in converting and helping the Indians, especially in trying to protect them from the institution of slavery, which has been developing rapidly in the growing plantation economy of the Portuguese colony.