Diogo de Carvalho, SJ (1578 â 22 February 1624) was a Portuguese Jesuit missionary martyred in Edo period Japan.
Carvalho was born in Coimbra, Portugal, in 1578. After entering the Society of Jesus in his hometown in 1594, late in 1600 he arrived, after a long voyage with sixteen other Jesuits, in Goa, India. The following year he set out for Macau, where he was ordained as priest in 1608. In 1609, he arrived in Japan, where, learning Japanese, he was a missionary in the Amakusa Islands, before relocating to Kyà Âto around 1612.
After the edict of proscription of 1614, in November that year, with seventy-two other Jesuits on three Chinese junks, Carvalho was deported to Macau. Establishing a mission in ÃÂàng Trong (called Cochinchina by Europeans at the time), he remained in Vietnam for a year, before secretly returning to Japan in 1616. He spent two years in the à Âmura Domain in the area of Nagasaki, before joining Jerome de Angelis in Tà Âhoku, with the alias Nagasaki Goroemon as his cover. Basing himself in the fief of , he twice travelled to the Matsumae Domain in Ezo, while Matsumae Kinhiro was daimyà Â, first in 1620, then again in 1622.
Early in 1624, Carvalho was martyred in a pit filled with the icy waters of the in Sendai. A long letter by Carvalho detailing his encounters in Tà Âhoku and Hokkaidà  survives.
Carvalho's sainthood cause was opened after his death. He was later beatified.