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The Books of Don Fray Juan De Zumárraga

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

Alberto María Carreño*
Affiliation:
Mexico, D. F.

Extract

The Subject of this Study lends itself to a threefold interpretation: it can refer to the books which Zumárraga himself wrote, or to the books which he edited and published, or to those which made up his library, in all probability the first library that existed in New Spain. However it be taken, a study of “The Books of Zumárraga” will give us a glimpse of one of the objects of the invincible zeal that inspired him in his broad vision of his duties as bishop and missionary, as the guide of souls and the father of his flock, occupied with all the necessities of the natives that dwelt within the immense territories comprised in his diocese.

In fact, the constitutive elements of his diocese were two: the conquerors and the conquered. The former, as was to be expected, had their full share of the spiritual defects which the lower nature of any army on active service seems all too prone to exhibit. These faults became even worse among the conquistadores of Mexico when their active service was done and they began to lead a soft, idle life that in many cases incited all their concupiscences.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1949

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References

* This study is based on a lecture delivered in the Church of San Fernando, Mexico City, on June 3, 1948, to commemorate the fourth centenary of Zumárraga’s death. (Ed.)

1 Icazbalceta, Joaquin Garcia, Don Fray Juan de Zumárraga primer Obispo y Arzobispo de México (Mexico, 1881), 241.Google Scholar

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11 Ibid., 57, 65.

12 Ibid., 66,69.

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15 “No hay por qué prohibir el libro del Arzobispo… “, quoted by José Toribio Medina (who saw the document in the Archivo de Simancas, Ramo de Inquisición, libro 760–4, folio 279), La Imprenta en México (Santiago de Chile, 1912), I, 41.

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17 “La sangre derramada [de Jesucristo] fue recogida por la potencia divinal; a lo menos la que era necesaria para el cuerpo y fue unida a la divinidad.” This text can be seen in the facsimile edition of the Doctrina breve published by the United States Catholic Historical Society (New York, 1928), folio a (reverse side).

18 Fernández del Castillo, op. cit., 245–246.

19 Garate, Román Zulaica, Los Franciscanos y la imprenta en México en el siglo XVI (Mexico, 1939), 2325.Google Scholar

20 Doctrina Cristiana para instrucción y información de los indios, por manera de historia, por Fray Fedro de Córdoba. Edición facsimil en su IV Centenario (Ciudad Trujillo, R. D., 1945), xviii Google Scholar, note 21.

21 Icazbalceta, Garcia, Zumárraga, 266.Google Scholar

22 Cited in Medina, op. cit., I, 38–39.

23 Cited in Medina, op. cit., I, 39.

24 Ibid., 39.

25 From the Prologue of this Doctrina, as given in Icazbalceta, García, Zumárraga, 269270.Google Scholar

26 Icazbalceta, García, Zumárraga, 292.Google Scholar