
Contents
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Early Accounts Early Accounts
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Faria e Souza’s Account Faria e Souza’s Account
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The Tooth Relic as a Demonic Force The Tooth Relic as a Demonic Force
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Addendum: Paths Taken and Not Taken Addendum: Paths Taken and Not Taken
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Cite
Abstract
Chapter Four examines accounts of the Council that was called by the Portuguese viceroy Dom Constantino da Bragança in Goa in order to decide what to do with the captured relic. Essentially there were two sides in the debate that ensued: aristocrats and military men who wanted to hold the tooth for ransom and sell it to the highest bidder; and the Catholic clergy, headed by the archbishop of Goa and the inquisitors, who wished to destroy it. The chapter examines the arguments of both sides and the reasons why the Church’s view was victorious. Interestingly, no mention is made in this debate of the different identities proposed for the relic—that it was a tooth of a monkey or of Hanuman or of the Buddha. Instead, it is presented from a Christian point of view and demonized as a “tooth of the Devil,” and, as such, it was argued, it had to be destroyed.
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