As we walk through the streets of a city like Campinas, we are faced with the varied layers of time that cover them. Different stories and memories are present in the configurations assumed by the urban space over time. Marks of the presence of a diversity of subjects, worldviews, ways of living, feeling and thinking about the city are inscribed, often silently, in its streets, avenues, squares, buildings.
One of these memory spaces in Campinas is the Church of Our Lady of Rosary. From the small chapel of the beginning of the 19th century, through the work of black groups, the presence of Claretian priests and the great reform of the beginning of the 20th century, reaching its demolition and reconstruction, we reflected on losses, erasures and forgetfulness. In two parts, in this narrative the Church of the Rosary will be seen as connected to the city space. As a rosary that, for Christians, is a sacramental that leads the faithful to reflect on religious mysteries, we present a set of accounts of this rich history, always understanding it in the tensions and contradictions that were present in the transformations suffered by the urban space in Campinas.
The Rosary Chapel and its Brotherhood
The construction of the chapel started with the Ituano lieutenant Pedro Gonçalves Meira (1743-1813) who, due to conflicts with the local vicar on account of the chosen land, ended up moving from Campinas. The construction of a new temple, close to the land targeted by clashes, started in 1817. The work was carried out, first by Father Antônio Joaquim Teixeira de Camargo and, with his death, by Father Manoel José Fernandes Pinto, who also died before its completion. The care and completion of the chapel, in turn, were handed over to the Brotherhood of Nossa Senhora do Rosário, which has existed since about 1810 and was formed by blacks, mainly slaves, and later mulattos. According to documentation, the lay religious association was still active in 1935, but the year of its extinction is unknown.
The chapel was built with both the support of the fellowship and benefactors. In 1870, due to the population increase, the Parish was divided into two: the new Parish of Santa Cruz, with headquarters in Matriz Velha, and the Parish of Nossa Senhora da Conceição, with provisional headquarters in Capela do Rosário, due to the works da Matriz Nova (current Metropolitan Cathedral of Nossa Senhora da Conceição), inaugurated in 1883. Around 1870, the church received the complementation of its facade and the erection of two side towers that in 1887, were demolished for presenting risks to the population.
Buying Water at Largo do Rosário (1885) by Kowalsky & HenslerCentro de Memória-Unicamp
An important space was the square in front of the Chapel of the Rosary. It concentrated religious acts, such as processions and field masses, in addition to parties based on the religious syncretism of black Africans. Gradually, the square was separated from the church, being present in several improvement plans, such as afforestation (1871), installation of fountains (1874) and pavement (1909). In 1887, the street was renamed Praça Visconde de Indaiatuba and, on November 15, 1895, it became a large garden with sidewalks, benches, a new fountain and gas lighting. During the 20th century it received new changes.
Rosário Square (1900) by P.D.Centro de Memória-Unicamp
Rosário Square (1925) by E. EncarnaçãoCentro de Memória-Unicamp
In 1909, the floor was changed and the grassy sidewalks were replaced by Portuguese sidewalks, expressing an aesthetic and formal concern with the visual identity of the urban environment.
Rosário Square under renovation (1933-08-31) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
In 1933, the trees on the square were cut, which led to general population discontent and a new reform of the square in 1934.
Rosário Square under renovation (1933-08-31) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
Visconde de Indaiatuba Square (1943/1956) by Studio EurydesCentro de Memória-Unicamp
On August 8, 1934, a monument to Manuel Ferraz de Campos Salles (1841-1913), the fourth president of the Brazilian Republic (1898-1902), was inaugurated in Rosario Square (officialy Visconde de Indaiatuba Square), work of the sculptor Yolando Malozzi.
The Claretian Missionaries
The Congregation of Missionaries Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, known as Claretian missionaries, was founded on July 16, 1849, when Antônio Maria Claret gathered in Vic, Spain, a group of priests whose mission was to evangelize the people. Within this pastoral proposal, they started to found new provinces, and in 1895 the first house was installed in Brazil, in the city of São Paulo, formed by a group of 10 missionaries.
Group of religious and seminarians (1900/1930) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
In 1897, Father Manoel Ribas D'Avila, the new parish priest of the matrix and also a judge of the Irmandade do Rosário, offered the Chapel of the Rosary to two Claretian priests who were passing through Campinas. Besides the caring for the temple, the idea was to be able of constituting a starting point in the city for missions in the interior of the state due to it’s location at important railway junctions, which would facilitate the movement to other regions of São Paulo.
Provincial Chapter (1928-08) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
After ecclesiastical authorizations, the Claretian missionaries installed their second Brazilian house in Campinas in September 1889, occupying not only the chapel, but also an annex building. The Claretian priests helped to strengthen the feeling of belonging of the Campinas community towards the temple, above all due to the great amount of religious activities developed, although still as a chapel belonging to the Parish of Nossa Senhora do Carmo (former Parish of Santa Cruz).
Night worship of Church of Our Lady of Rosary (1918-09-17) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
Corpus Christi (1919) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
The great reform
The Claretians had the desire to renovate the Chapel of the Rosary. Still during the reconstruction works of their new accommodations, around 1907 they started to undertake a modern church, now in brick masonry. Although the exterior part was completed around 1910, the work was only opened in November 1913 under the direction of Father Baldomiro Ciriza, CFM. The new Rosário temple has recovered its side towers, with the one on the left side being tapered in its final part. In 1915, the main altar and the six side altars in Carrara marble arrived from Italy.
Francisco Glicério Street (1920) by UnidentifiedCentro de Memória-Unicamp
Years later, the church underwent a major decorative project, developed by the Austrian artist Thomaz Scheuchl (1867-1947). His artistic-religious language was immersed in the canons of the Beuron Art School, organized in the Benedictine monastery of Beuron in Germany in the 1870s, crossing formal and chromatic elements of the Egyptian, Byzantine and Romanesque arts. His imagery proposal also extended to the facade, which gained neorromic features with reliefs in the Beuron style. The towers became quadrangular, the left being larger than the right.
Interior view of Church of Our Lady of Rosary (1943/1956) by Studio EurydesCentro de Memória-Unicamp
In addition to Scheuchl's paintings, stood out in the temple the stained glass sets and sacred images in gilt and polychrome wood of Spanish origin, measuring between 1.8 and 2 meters in height.
Main altar of Church of Our Lady of Rosary (1943/1956) by Studio EurydesCentro de Memória-Unicamp
At the main altar, the three sculptures represent Our Lady of Rosary (at the center), Saint Dominic of Guzmán (on the left) and Saint Catherine of Siena (on the right).
In the altar's pediment there was an image of the Crucified Christ, between two worshippers angels.
Continue your visit in:
Part 2: A Rosary of Memories: 1929-1989
Director
André Luiz Paulilo
Associate Director
Edivaldo Góis Júnior
Curatorial Project
Ana Cláudia Cermaria
João Paulo Berto
Maria Sílvia Duarte Hadler
Marileide Rayane de Macedo da Silva
Gabrielle Caroline dos Santos Garcia
Acknowledgments
Padre Fernando Garavaglia, CMF
Caio Felipe Gomes Violin
Execution
Centro de Memória-UNICAMP
June, 2020