Fray Juan de Torquemada

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Fray Juan de Torquemada, from Lucas Aleman's Historia de la Republica Mexicana (1860)
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Fray Juan de Torquemada, from Lucas Aleman's Historia de la Republica Mexicana (1860)

For the inquisitor and cardinal see Juan de Torquemada (Cardinal); for others with similar names, see Torquemada (disambiguation)

Fray (or Brother) Juan de Torquemada (ca. 1562, Torquemada, Old Castile, Spain - 1624, Mexico City) was a Franciscan friar, missionary and historian in Spanish colonial Mexico. He is most famous for his 1615 monumental history of the Indigenous entitled Los veinte y un libros rituales y Monarchia Indiana, commonly known as simply Monarchia Indiana ("Indian Monarchies"). This work, which has never been published in English, was reprinted in Spanish in 1969 as volumes 41 - 43 of the Biblioteca Porrua.

Contents

[edit] Life

Juan de Torquemada was born between 1557 and 1565 and arrived in New Spain as a child. He studied philosophy and Nahuatl at the convent Grande de San Francisco in Mexico City, where he was ordained in 1579. In 1582 he moved to the convent of Santiago Tlatelolco, and he was made guardian of that convent in 1600. He also took over the administration of the Colegio de la Santa Cruz.

Beginning in 1604 he traveled continually on the business of his order. He was guardian of the convents of Zacatlán (in the mountains of Puebla) and Tlaxcala. In 1607, during the terrible flood of Mexico City, he was asked by Viceroy Juan de Mendoza y Luna, marqués de Montesclaros to reconstruct the calzadas (carriageways) of Chapultepec, Misterios to Tepeyac and San Cristóbal and the dams of Zumpango and Citlaltépetl, although he was not an engineer.

In 1609 he was named chronologist of the Franciscan Order.

In 1610 Torquemada oversaw construction of the monastery and church of Santiago Tlatelolco. Its interior featured a grandiose altarpiece decorated with paintings by Baltasar de Echave Orio surrounding a hand-carved relief of Santiago,[1] but this was destroyed soon afterwards.

In 1614 Torquemada was elected provincial superior of the Order of St. Francis in Mexico.[2] He held this position until 1617.

He died suddenly in the church of Santiago Tlatelolco in 1624, while singing matins.

[edit] Works

The cover of Monarchia indiana, by Fray Juan de Torquemada
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The cover of Monarchia indiana, by Fray Juan de Torquemada

He wrote Vida de fray Sebastián de Aparicio (Tlatelolco, 1600 and Madrid, 1605), Opúscalos (written 1622 and published as an appendix in Códice Mendieta by Joaquín García Icazbalceta in 1892), various comedies in Nahuatl, and one comedy in Spanish, Latin and Nahuatl, which, unfortunately, has been lost.

His main work is Los veintiún libros rituales i monarchia indiana con el origen y guerras de las Indias Occidentales, de sus poblaciones, descubrimientos, conquistas, comercio y otras cosas maravillosas de la misma tierra (The Twenty-one Ritual Books and Indian Monarchy With the Origin and Wars of the West Indies, of Their Populations, Discoveries, Conquests, Commerce and Other Marvelous Things of the Same Land, usually known as Monarchia Indiana) (3 vols., Seville, 1615). The first edition is rare, but the work was reprinted in Madrid in 1723 and again in a facsimile edition by Salvador Chávez Hayhoe in 1943-44.

This was the only New Spain chronicle of its time known to contemporaries. Works of Toribio de Benavente Motolinia, Bernardino de Sahagún, Jerónimo Mendieta, Diego Muñoz Camargo and others were not available for centuries.

The book is tedious to read because of its theological digressions, contradictions and anachronisms. Nevertheless, it gathers together a large quantity of information taken from Indigenous pictographs and manuscripts and from Franciscan and other Catholic scholars. Torquemada interviewed old Indigenous people about their ancestors and recorded their oral traditions. The Monarchia Indiana is the best work on what was known of the Indigenous past at the beginning of the seventeenth century. It is considered an especially important source on the Totonaca, Pipil and Nicoya cultures.

Torquemada describes the 1576 epidemic in New Spain in the following terms:

In the year 1576 a great mortality and pestilence that lasted for more than a year overcame the Indians. It was so big that it ruined and destroyed almost the entire land. The place we know as New Spain was left almost empty.

He reported that 2 million, mostly Indigenous, people died, according to a survey conducted by Viceroy Martín Enríquez de Almanza.[3]

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Cloister of the Monastery of Santiago Tlatelolco. Retrieved June 27, 2006.
  2. ^ Inspirational Figures from Early Church History in the Southwest and Mexico: Juan de Torquemada. Retrieved June 27, 2006.
  3. ^ Quoted in Rodolfo Acuna-Soto, et al., "Large Epidemics of Hemorrhagic Fevers in Mexico 1545-1815"

[edit] References

  • "Torquemada, Juan de," Enciclopedia de México, v. 13. Mexico City, 1988. (Spanish)
  • Boban, Eugène (1891). Documents pour servir à l'histoire du Mexique, 2 vols. Paris. 1891. (French)
  • García Icazbalceta, Joaquín (1853–56). "Torquemada, Juan de", in Diccionario universal de historia y geografía. (Spanish)
  • Moreno Toscano, Alejandra (1961). "Vindicación de Torquemada", in Historia mexicana. (Spanish)

[edit] External links

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