Fort Naroa Explained

Naroa Fort
Partof:Goa
Location:Ilha de Piedade, India
Map Type:India Goa#India
Map Size:200
Coordinates:15.538°N 73.9224°W
Built:1500s
Builder:unknown
Materials:Laterite stones and mud
Height:10 m
Demolished:Yes
Condition:Ruins
Ownership:Government of Goa
Open To Public:Yes
Controlledby:
Garrison:n/a
Current Commander:Diogo da Silveira (1710)
Occupants:none
Battles:unknown
Events:Abandoned in 1834

Fort Naroa was situated on the eastern tip of the Island of Divar, on the Ilhas de Goa (Goan islands) near the old capital of Goa, in the Velhas Conquistas. It was originally built as a military camp by the Deccan sultanates in the 1500s. After its capture by the Portuguese, it was rebuilt and reinforced to protect the eastern border against the Bijapur Sultanate.[1] After the incorporation of the Novas Conquistas regions, the fort lost its sole and primary purpose and it was subsequently abandoned by1834 to now be in ruins.

Today, the Fort exists only as a wall of about 10–12 meters in length and about 6 meters high. A unique feature that can be seen on this wall is a semi-circular protrusion, facing a window of the church across the road, which may once have been a small balcony, – enough for a single person to stand.

Chapel

The Holy Spirit church is all that remains from the fort. A Captain of the Fort, Diogo da Silveira is said to have constructed the church in 1710. Though this church is today popularly known as the Holy Spirit Church of Naroa, Divar, the icon of the St Thomas the Apostle adorns the central part of the main altar.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fort Naroa.
  2. Web site: Ruined forts of Goa - Naroa. 26 April 2019.