Francisco de Ayeta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Francisco de Ayeta (dates unknown) was a Spanish Franciscan missionary of the seventeenth century, in New Spain and Mexico.

Contents

[edit] Life

He became successively Visitor of the Province of the Holy Evangel of New Mexico, and its Procurator at Madrid; also Commissary of the Inquisition in New Spain.

Ayeta investigated in person remote missions, especially those of New Mexico, and he was the first to warn the Spanish authorities of the incipient Pueblo revolt. His report, from 1678, induced the authorities of New Spain to reinforce the garrison at Santa Fe, but it was too late. The Pueblos broke out on 10 August, 1680, and for 14 years New Mexico was lost to Spain. Ayeta hurried to El Paso, and when 2000 fugitives from the North reached that post,Ayeta was the first to offer them the needed relief in food and clothing.

[edit] Works

Three books are known to have been published by him, all without date and place; an "Apología del orden de San Francisco en América", which is supposed to have appeared about 1690; "Defensa de la provincia del Santa Evangelio de México sobre la retención de los curatos y doctrinas"; and "Ultimo recurso de la provincia de San José de Yucatan sobre despojo de parroquias". He defended the regular orders in Mexico, whom the secular authorities wanted to deprive of their missions; Ayeta became one of the most fervent defenders of the Franciscans, and he wielded a very aggressive pen.

[edit] References

  • Vetancurt, Cronica de la provincia del Santa Evangelio de Mexico (2d ed., Mexico, 1871);
  • Beristain de Souza, Biblioteca Hispano-americana setentrional (Mexico, 1816), I;
  • Sarinana Y Cuenca, Oracion funebre ... en las exequieas de veinte y uno religiosos de la observancia & ca. Que murieron a manos de los Indios apostatas del Nuevo Mexico (Mexico, 1681). This sermon is manifestly based upon the data furnished by Ayeta in a yet unpublished report on the priests who were murdered in 1680.
  • Bandelier, Histoire de la colonisation et des missions du Sonora, Chihuahua, Nouveau Mexique, et Arizona, jusq'a l'an 1700 (MSS. at the Vatican, 1888).

See also

  • Documentos para la historia de Mexico (third series, very rare);
  • Bandelier, Documentary History of the Zuni Tribe, in Journal Am. Arch., No. 1.

[edit] External link

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.