"The Historic Center of Macao" includes the oldest Western architectural
heritage on Chinese soil today. Together with Macao's traditional Chinese
architecture, it stands witness to successful East-West cultural pluralism and
architectural traditions.
"The Historic Center of Macao" is solid testimony of the city's missionary
role in the Far East while also reflecting the dissemination of Chinese folk
beliefs to the Western world.
"The Historic Center of Macao" is the product of East-West cultural
exchanges, constituting the most unique blend of cultural heritage existing in
China's historic cities.
"The Historic Center of Macao" presents a complete social infrastructure that
has encompassed and sustained the living traditions of different cultures.
History
Macao, a lucrative port of strategic importance in the development of
international trade, was under Portuguese administration from the mid-16th
century until 1999 when it came under Chinese sovereignty.
The emergence of Macao with its dual function as a gateway into China, and as
Ming China's window onto the world, reflected a relaxation of certain
restrictions combined with a degree of open-mindedness that offered a creative
way to supplement China's vassal-state trading system and marked a turning point
in the history of both China and Europe.
The settlement of Macao by Portuguese navigators in the mid-16th century laid
the basis for nearly five centuries of uninterrupted contact between East and
West. The origins of Macao's development into an international trading port make
it the single most consistent example of cultural interchange between Europe and
Asia.
For almost three centuries, until the colonization of Hong Kong in 1842,
Macao's strategic location at the mouth of the Pearl River meant that it
retained a unique position in the South China Sea, serving as the hub in a
complex network of maritime trade that brought tremendous wealth and a constant
flow of people into the enclave.
Cultural Pluralism
Macao, as the West's first established gateway into China, was remarkable in
setting off a succession of connections and contacts that progressively enriched
both civilizations across a huge range of human endeavor, both tangible and
intangible.
People of different nationalities came, bringing their own cultural
traditions and professions, permeating the life of the city as can been seen in
both intangible and tangible influences. This is evident in the introduction of
foreign building typologies such as western-style fortresses and architecture.