The Name of Macau is derived from the name of
a Chinese goddess, popular with seafarers and
fishermen, known as A-Ma or Ling Ma. The village
where Macau now stands was previously known to
the Chinese as Hou Kong or Hoi Keang.
According to legend, a junk sailing across the
South China Sea one clear day found itself in
a sudden storm. Everybody on board was about to
give up all hope of surviving this nanlral calamity,
when an attractive young woman, who had boarded
the ship at the very last minute, stood up and
ordered the elements to calm down. Miraculously,
the gale winds stopped blowing and the sea became
calm. Without further incident, the junk arrived
safely at the port of Hoi Keang.
The young woman stepped ashore and walked to the
crest of the nearby Barra Hill where, in a glowing
halo of light and perfume, she ascended into heaven.
On the particular spot where she set foot on land,
a temple was built in homage to her.
Centuries later, when Portuguese sailors landed
and asked the name of the place, the natives replied
A-Ma-Gao (Bay of A-Ma).
And so the peninsula was renamed. In modern usage,
Amagao was shortened to Macau.
Macau was home to Cantonese farmers and Fujian
fishing folk when Portuguese merchants arrived
in the 1550s. It was the great era of exploration
initiated by Prince Henry the Navigator. Vasco
da Gama had made his historic voyage to India,
Albuquerque had settled in Malacca and the Iberian
explorers were seeking a gateway to China.
In 1513 Jorge Alvares became the first Portuguese
to set foot in the land Marco Polo called Cathay.
Others followed and began trading with the Chinese.
They established various temporary outposts before
coming to an arrangement with the mandarins of
Canton to settle on a tiny peninsula at the mouth
of the Pearl River estuary that they named Macau.
It rapidly became fabulously rich as the sole
entrepot for China's seaborne trade with Japan
and Europe.
Macau also served as a vital base for the introduction
of Christianity to China and Japan, an activity
which provided the city with some of the most
glorious - and tempestuous - moments in its history.
Because of the prosperity it was enjoying and
its privileged location, other European nations
began casting covetous looks at Macau and plotted
to seize it from Portugal. The Dutch actually
tried to invade the city in 1622 but were repulsed.
As tinle passed and other trading nations from
the west sent missions to China, Macau became
the summer residence for the taipans (great traders)
who retreated from their "factories"
in Guangzhou (better known perhaps as Canton)
to await the opening of the trading season.
In 1841 the British settled on the island of Hong
Kong, 40 miles east-northeast of Macau, with a
deep-water, sheltered harbour that became the
major port and commercial hub of the region. The
foreign merchants moved to the new colony and
Macau's economic importance declined, Now it became
a holiday retreat for Hong Kong residents, who
came to gamble at the legalised casinos and enjoy
a taste of old-world Europe in a classical Chinese
setting.
In the latter part of this century Macau has developed
into an important manufacturing centre and travel
destination, as well as a commercial gateway to
the Pearl River Delta. It continues to be a unique
crossroad of East and West, preserving a heritage
that over four and a half centuries has been nurtured
by the coexisting cultures and interchanging traditions
of China and Portugal.
Although it has witnessed many changes during
its 440 years of existence, Macau has always been
a stronghold of Portuguese presence and culture
in the Far East. Macau has proudly flown Portugal's
flag continuously even when the Motherland's throne
was occupied by a foreign king, in the 17th century.
When Portuguese rule was re-established, 60 years
later, the city of Macau was granted the official
name of:
Cidade do Nome de Deus de Macau, nao ha outra
mais Leal. (City of the name of God, Macau, there
is None More Loyal). Macau has been under the
Portuguese administration until the establishment
of the Special Adnlinistrative Region of the People's
Republic of China, in December 20, 1999.
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