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Cristóvão Ferreira

Cristóvão Ferreira
Born c. 1580
Torres Vedras, Portugal
Died 1650 (aged c. 70)
Nagasaki, Japan
Nationality Portuguese
Occupation Catholic priest and Jesuit missionary

Cristóvão Ferreira (c. 1580–1650) was a Portuguese Catholic priest and Jesuit missionary who infamously committed apostasy after being tortured in the anti-Christian purges of Japan.

Born around 1580, in Torres Vedras, Portugal, Ferreira was sent to Asia, where he was a missionary in Japan from 1609 to 1633, which was then ruled by the Tokugawa shogunate.

In 1633, Ferreira was captured and renounced Christianity after being tortured for five hours. He became the most famous of the "fallen priests" and changed his name to Sawano Chūan (Japanese: 沢野忠庵). He registered at a Buddhist temple in accordance with Japanese law, and called himself "a member of the Zen sect", but his own publications attest that he adopted a philosophy of natural law:

After his apostasy he married a Japanese woman and wrote several books, including treatises on Western astronomy and medicine, which became widely distributed in the Edo period. He also is alleged to have privately written a book on religion entitled 「顕偽録」 (The Deception Revealed) in 1636, but it was not published for 300 years and there is some controversy concerning who wrote it. He participated in government trials of other captured Jesuits. He was often present during the use of fumi-e, whereby suspected Christians were ordered to trample on an image of Jesus Christ.

He died in Nagasaki in 1650. Some reports claim that, just before his death he recanted, was tortured and died as a martyr, while other reports merely note that he died.

Shusaku Endo's novel Silence is set in the aftermath of Ferreira's apostasy. Ferreira is played by Tetsurō Tamba in the 1971 film version and by Liam Neeson in the 2016 film version. In the 1996 Portuguese drama film Os Olhos da Ásia, João Perry plays Ferreira.


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