Sítio Morrinhos
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Sítio Morrinhos ("Morrinhos Farm") or Chácara de São Bento ("São Bento Farm") is an architectural complex, which consists of a main house built during the 18th century and a few annexed buildings from the 19th and 20th centuries. It is part of the collection of Historic Houses, under the responsibility of the Museum of the City of
São Paulo São Paulo (, ; Portuguese for 'Saint Paul') is the most populous city in Brazil, and is the capital of the state of São Paulo, the most populous and wealthiest Brazilian state, located in the country's Southeast Region. Listed by the Ga ...
, in
Brazil Brazil ( pt, Brasil; ), officially the Federative Republic of Brazil (Portuguese: ), is the largest country in both South America and Latin America. At and with over 217 million people, Brazil is the world's fifth-largest country by area ...
. It was previously managed by the Department of Historic Heritage ( DPH) of the Municipal Secretariat of Culture of São Paulo. The site also houses the São Paulo Museum and
Archeology Archaeology or archeology is the scientific study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. The archaeological record consists of artifacts, architecture, biofacts or ecofacts, sites, and cultural landscape ...
Center, whose collection and administration are still under DPH's responsibility. Coordinated by Paula Nishida, the site is dedicated to excavations and scientific research by the Department of the Municipal Secretariat of Culture. The museum's collection contains around 1 million pieces.


History

The Department of Historic Heritage (DPH) did extensive and intensive research in 1983 into the history of the complex. Soon it contributed to archeological and architectural investigations. The historian Márua Roseni Pacce was the leader in this process and worked together with archaeologists, restoration specialists, and other professionals. Dr. Paulo Zanettini, owner of the company Zanettini Arqueologia, and coordinator of the archeological projects carried out at the site, tells about the process in the following words:
"I began my learning at the Morrinhos site in the 1980s, returning recently to carry out new investigations. It is a very rewarding job because the site is of great relevance to the history of the North Zone and São Paulo as a whole."
According to the survey, the main house was built in 1702. It is worth knowing that this date is written on the wood of the main entrance door of the house and that the first owners were Antônio Mendes de Almeida, Captain José de Góes e Moraes, Colonel Luiz Antônio Neves de Carvalho, and Francisco Antônio Baruel,
Count Count (feminine: countess) is a historical title of nobility in certain European countries, varying in relative status, generally of middling rank in the hierarchy of nobility. Pine, L. G. ''Titles: How the King Became His Majesty''. New Yor ...
of Milleville. The construction of the headquarters is attributed to José de Góis Morais, a wealthy Paulistan connected to mining. In addition, it was discovered that the property was used as a resting farm, and also as a farmhouse where many rural activities were developed, such as pottery making, crop cultivation, cattle, and animal breeding. The labor used by the owners was essentially
slave labor Slavery and enslavement are both the state and the condition of being a slave—someone forbidden to quit one's service for an enslaver, and who is treated by the enslaver as property. Slavery typically involves slaves being made to perf ...
. In 1902, exactly two hundred years after its construction, the complex was put up for auction because the Count could not pay his creditors. At the time, it was bought by the Paulistan Pedagogical Association, which represented the São Bento Monastery. Because of this, the old site began to have a new function, serving as a country house for the monastery members to rest on the weekends. Until the end of the 1940s, the property remained in the hands of the monastery. After this, there was a negotiation, in which the
Camargo Correia Camargo may refer to: Places Bolivia: * Camargo, Chuquisaca Brazil: * Camargo, Rio Grande do Sul Mexico: * Camargo, Chihuahua * Camargo, Tamaulipas Spain: * Camargo, Cantabria United States of America: * Camargo, Illinois * Camargo, Kentuck ...
S/A company became the new owner. In 1948, this allowed the subdivision of the area around the site that was eventually named Jardim São Bento. This name is a tribute to the São Bento Monastery. However, the area was donated to the City of São Paulo by Sebastião Ferraz de Camargo, one of Camargo Correa's partners. After these events, the two parts of the division had very different fates. While the new neighborhood, Jardim São Bento, prospered, with wide, tree-lined streets and high-standard housing, the historic site, in turn, suffered strong deterioration over the years. Built with the
rammed earth Rammed earth is a technique for constructing foundations, floors, and walls using compacted natural raw materials such as earth, chalk, lime, or gravel. It is an ancient method that has been revived recently as a sustainable building method ...
technique, Sítio Morrinhos survived without restoration for decades. As it has never been open to the public since its donation, it has been mostly forgotten. However, the course of the site changed when it underwent a structural intervention in the 1980s, a period when abandonment was at its peak. After emergency work in 1984, Sítio Morrinhos would not be given a complete restoration until almost 20 years later, in 2000. A thorough restoration process was carried out, after exhaustive historical research and archaeological prospection work. A few years later, already fully restored, the site was opened to visitors, offering a collection of archaeological pieces.


Relevance

Rodolfo Bueno, one of the residents of the Jardim São Bento neighborhood recounts with nostalgia the visits to the property during his childhood "Sítio Morrinhos is very significant because it reminds me of sweet memories of my childhood. When I was a boy, I used to go there with my parents. At that time there was a caretaker. I can't remember his name, but I remember well his simple and helpful manner. He kept, by his own account, a small farm, and from there he made his living by selling chickens, eggs, chicks, and pigs. I loved going to that place, I used to watch those trees out front, and they are still there, just the way I knew them."


Structure

Sítio Morrinhos was constructed with rammed earth, a technique that compresses and punches the earth into wooden molds and layers it until it reaches the desired thickness. The adjoining buildings are of brick masonry and were erected later, in the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The structure of the site harkens back to the period when the ''
bandeirantes The ''Bandeirantes'' (), literally "flag-carriers", were slavers, explorers, adventurers, and fortune hunters in early Colonial Brazil. They are largely responsible for Brazil's great expansion westward, far beyond the Tordesillas Line of 1494 ...
'' explored parts toward the city in search of riches and settled in nearby villages. The structure of the main house contains on the first floor five rooms and a porch, and on the second floor, there is one small bedroom ("''camarinha"''). The attached buildings, that served as ''senzalas''Large dwellings that were used to house slaves in the mills and plantations of Colonial Brazil and the Empire of Brazil between the 16th and 19th centuries. in the old days, are built of brick masonry.


Complex

The space is often visited by schools. However, it does not receive the number of visitors expected of a museum and archaeological site of this size. The number of visitors per month averages 570. Among them, students of architecture are the majority. The complex consists of a main house, a typical ''bandeirista'' style house from the colonial period, and annexed buildings. Among them are an activities area, and a library specialized in archeology, where it is possible to consult and photograph records on archeological history. At the site, besides the archeology center and the exhibition space, there is an auditorium that contains audio and image equipment geared toward lectures. Currently, a total preservation area of 20,000 square meters is estimated.


São Paulo Archeology Center

The Sitio Morrinhos Museum is also home to the São Paulo Archeology Center since 2009. The center's main focus is São Paulo archeology and its scientific discoveries. The documents and artifacts are from the 18th to 20th centuries, coming from the excavations and archeological research carried out by the Department of Historical Heritage (DPH) throughout the capital of São Paulo. In total, the collection has 100 thousand objects. The items on display are from up to 8 thousand years ago and tell stories from
prehistory Prehistory, also known as pre-literary history, is the period of human history between the use of the first stone tools by hominins 3.3 million years ago and the beginning of recorded history with the invention of writing systems. The use ...
to the present day. Most of these are stored in boxes, away from public view. The financing of the center was done through judicial compensation. In 2006, the Morumbi Lithic Site (one of the main archeological sites in
São Paulo São Paulo (, ; Portuguese for 'Saint Paul') is the most populous city in Brazil, and is the capital of the state of São Paulo, the most populous and wealthiest Brazilian state, located in the country's Southeast Region. Listed by the Ga ...
) was held by three real estate companies that damaged it during a construction project. The companies were sued by the Federal Public Ministry and were obliged to pay for the maintenance of the conservation works of Sitio Morrinhos and the implementation of the center. The center is coordinated by archaeologist Paula Noshida since 2010. In a report, Paula tells about the work of professionals in her area: "We archaeologists work with a context, a sum of factors and data that can tell us about the populations, societies or groups that produced these pieces. That said, I consider all the pieces interesting, especially the set of artifacts that represent the Morumbi Lithic Site because it brings us the history of the populations that inhabited the city of São Paulo between 5,000 and 6,000 years ago and that is not known to most people."


Location

The site is located at the top of the hill at 102 Santo Anselmo Street, Jardim São Bento, in the northern part of São Paulo. It is surrounded by many leafy trees. Thus, even though it has a tourist attraction sign, it goes unnoticed by people passing by Avenue Braz Leme, approximately 290 meters away. There are well-known landmarks around the site, such as
Campo de Marte Campo de Marte Airport is the first airport built in São Paulo, Brazil, opened in 1929. It is named after Champ de Mars, in Paris, which in turn got its name from Campus Martius, in Rome. During a transitional period, the airport is jointly ...
,
Marginal Tietê Marginal Tietê (officially SP-015) is a section of this highway that runs through the city of São Paulo, Brazil. The name of this section comes from the fact that each way of the expressway runs near a different waterfront of the Tietê River. ...
, and downtown buildings. From inside the site, among the trees, one can see them.


Gallery

{{Gallery, File:Sítio_Morrinhos_08.jpg, Garden., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_09.jpg, Garden with the trees around the complex., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_07.jpg, Façade., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_02.jpg, Funeral urn used to bury bodies before coffins were invented., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_06.jpg, Banner explaining the museum at the entrance., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_11.jpg, Entrance to the Sítio Morrinhos complex., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_10.jpg, Representation of the original excavation of the Morumbi Museum., File:Sítio_Morrinhos_04.jpg, Door with ornament details., title=, align=center, footer=, style=, state=, height=, width=, captionstyle=, alt1=, alt2=, alt3=, alt4=, alt5=


See also

*
Sertanista House The Sertanista House or Caxingui House is a residence built in the middle of the 17th century in the neighborhood of Caxingui, in São Paulo. The construction, a piece from the Brazilian colonial period, shows several typical characteristics o ...
*
Butantã's House The Butantã's House, or Bandeirante's House, is a ''Bandeirista''-style building from the Colonial Brazil, Brazilian colonial period located in Butantã (district of São Paulo), Butantã, a neighborhood of the city of São Paulo; representing ...
* Casa do Sítio Tatuapé *
Solar da Marquesa de Santos The Solar da Marquesa de Santos is a manor house located in Historic Center of São Paulo, central São Paulo, Brazil, that hosts several cultural exhibitions and is currently the headquarters of the Cidade de São Paulo museum. The residence, ...
*
Colonial architecture of Brazil The colonial architecture of Brazil is defined as the architecture carried out in the current Brazilian territory from 1500, the year of the Portuguese arrival, until its Independence, in 1822. During the colonial period, the colonizers importe ...


Notes


References

Buildings and structures in São Paulo National heritage sites of São Paulo (state)