Giuseppe Chiara: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Tags: Reverted Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
the article does not support the categories stating that he was a buddhist convert, only that he was a Jesuit (Catholic) priest. Unsourced
Line 24: Line 24:
[[Category:Jesuit missionaries in Japan]]
[[Category:Jesuit missionaries in Japan]]
[[Category:Foreign samurai in Japan]]
[[Category:Foreign samurai in Japan]]
[[Category:Italian Buddhists]]
[[Category:Converts to Buddhism]]
[[Category:Kingdom of Sicily people]]
[[Category:Kingdom of Sicily people]]
[[Category:Converts to Buddhism from Roman Catholicism]]

Revision as of 18:45, 15 July 2023

Giuseppe di Chiara (1602 – 24 August 1685) was an Italian Jesuit missionary active in 17th century Japan.[1]

Chiara was born in Palermo, Kingdom of Sicily. He entered Japan at a time when Christianity was strictly forbidden, in an attempt to locate fellow priest Cristóvão Ferreira who had apostatized his Christian faith due to torture by Japanese authorities in 1633.

After the Shimabara Rebellion in 1638, Chiara arrived on the island of Oshima, but was arrested in June 1643 and then incarcerated at a prison named Kirishitan Yashiki (Japanese: 吉利支丹屋敷, Christian Residence) in Edo.[2] He also was tortured and eventually became an apostate as well. He later married a Japanese woman, taking the name and samurai status of her late husband, Okamoto San'emon (Japanese: 岡本三右衛門), and lived in Japan until his death on 24 August 1685 in Edo, at the age of 83. His remains were cremated.[2]

In popular culture

Chiara was the historical basis for the lead character of Sebastião Rodrigues in the novel Silence by Shūsaku Endō.[1] He was portrayed by David Lampson in the 1971 film version and by Andrew Garfield in the 2016 film version.

References