Relation of the Auto-da-fé that was celebrated in the city of Mexico in the Major Plaza on the second sunday of advent / Mexico City, December 8, 1596.[3]
Those to be Relax in Person
Doña Francisca de Carvajal, a widow, wife of the decesed Francisco Rodriguez de Matos, native of Benavente, kingdoms of Castile, who was burned in statue, and whose bones were burned, of the caste and generation of the New Christians whose descendants were Jews for having continued to guard the Law of Moses, and beloved in the rites, and ceremonies and for relapsing into them. She remained an impenitent and was condemned to appear in the auto-da-fé with a candle, a coroza, and sanbenito with insignias of fire, and to be relaxed in person to the justices and secular arm of government, and to suffer the confiscation of her goods.
Fuentes
↑ Galbis Díez Ma. del Carmen, Archivo General de Indias (Sevilla). 1986. Catálogo de Pasajeros a Indias durante los siglos XVI XVII y XVIII Vol. VI 1578-1585. Madrid: Ministerio de Cultura.
↑ Chuchiak, John F., ed. The Inquisition in New Spain, 1536-1820: A Documentary History. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012. pp 165,175.
↑ Archivo General de la Nacion, Ramo de Inquisicíon, vol.1510, exp.2, folios 7-12, Lote Riva Palacios, vol. 3, no. 2.
Ver también:
Garza, Valentina. Luis de Carvajal, poderoso judío novohispano fundador del Nuevo Reino de León
Temkin, Samuel. 2011. Luis de Carvajal: the origins of Nuevo Reino de León. Santa Fe (N.M.): Sunstone Press.
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