UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
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Location | Goa, India |
Criteria | Cultural: (ii), (iv), (vi) |
Reference | 234 |
Inscription | 1986 (10th Session) |
Coordinates | 15°30′8″N 73°54′42″E / 15.50222°N 73.91167°E |
Churches and Convents of Goa is the name given by UNESCO to a set of religious monuments located in Goa Velha (or Old Goa), in the state of Goa, India, which were declared a World Heritage Site[1] in 1986.
Goa was the capital of Portuguese India and Asia and an evangelization center from the 16th century. The justifications[1] for the inclusion of religious monuments in Goa in the World Heritage List are: 1) the influence of the monuments in the dissemination of Western art forms—the Manueline styles, Mannerist and Baroque—throughout Asia where Catholic missions were established; 2) the value of the set of monuments of Goa as an exceptional example that illustrates the work of evangelization and 3) the specific value of presence in the Basilica of Bom Jesus of the tomb of Francisco Xavier, which illustrates a major world event: the influence of the Catholic religion in Asia in the modern era.