Francisco de Ávila
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Francisco de Avila (born in Peru as a foundling (quorum parentes ignorantur he says himself); date of demise unknown) was a South American priest and early student of native customs.
Curate or vicar in the province of Huarochiri of Peru, later curate at Huánaco, finally Canon of the Church of La Plata (now Sucre), in Bolivia. He was one of the most active investigators of Indian rites and customs of his time.
[edit] Works
In 1608 he wrote a treatise of the "Errors, False Gods, and Other Superstitions of the Indians of the Provinces of Huarochiri, Mama, and Chaclla", of which only the first six chapters are known to exist and have been translated into English. It is a contribution to the knowledge of the Peruvian Indians and their lore.
In 1611 Avila wrote a report on the Indians of Huánaco in eastern Peru, of which the unpublished manuscript is extant. These works contain apologetics on the destruction of fetishes and other objects of worship, for example by Pablo José Arriaga.
This article incorporates text from the entry Francisco de Avila in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.