300:
231:
257:, to whom she preached. Although she did not name the places she had visited, the priests in Spain thought it sounded like New Mexico. As it happened, several groups of Jumanos Indians had shown up at the New Mexico missions, saying they had been visited by a young woman in blue and that she had told them to ask for friars to be sent to them from the missions. The friars immediately connected the two, and investigations began to verify the miracle.
319:
years, except for the brief period from 1626 to 1629, he was the dominant figure in the religious life of the province. ...His long years of service and his paramount influence give him a pre-eminent position in New
Mexican history, a position greater than that of Benavides. Perea, more than any other friar, deserves the honor of being called the Father of the New Mexican Church."
163:
379:. According to Lummis, Fray Juan Ramirez refused an escort and travelled to Ácoma from Santa Fe alone and on foot, with no other weapon than a crucifix. On arrival he was attacked by savage Indians, but when he performed what seemed to be a miracle he was accepted by them and over time converted them into the gentlest Indians in New Mexico.
195:
The Church assumed that the main objective in New Mexico was to convert the
Indians, and the civil power existed only in order to provide protection and to support this goal. As chief judge and head of the army, the governor had equal powers but different objectives, so clashes were inevitable. On 12
361:
reported "Iron tools for cultivating and ploughing the land are especially needed ... but no iron has been sent since the year 1628. Consequently we are perishing, without a pound of iron or a plough." The
Indians acquired iron and the skills of blacksmithing. When the Spanish returned to New Mexico
281:
Perea painted conditions during Silva's governorship in a poor light. He recorded that the local whites and half-castes were superstitious and influenced by Indian customs. Men were unfaithful to their wives, and the wives used Indian love-potions and spells in attempts to win back their affections.
212:
In 1620 Perea reported missionary progress to Mexico City, and based on this six friars were dispatched to New Mexico with the annual supply caravan of 1621. Perea left office that year, but remained in New Mexico. Tensions between church and state rose to such a level that in 1622 the
Franciscans
204:
and had him chained and imprisoned in the mission at Sandía. His jailer was Fray Estéban de Perea, who disapproved but obeyed. The
Custodia de la Conversión de San Pablo del Nuevo México, a religious province, was set up by Franciscan friars around 1616 or 1617. Perea was elected first custodian,
264:
with thirty soldiers, ten wagons, four hundred cavalry horses and a group of priests. Perhaps due to the size of the force, they were well received by the local people of Zuni. The soldiers made a show of great respect to the friars, going down on their knees and kissing their feet, and told the
217:
was appointed custodian and also commissary of the Holy Office of the
Inquisition for the province, giving him power second only to that of the temporal governor (and at times greater). Perea temporarily left New Mexico. Benavides visited all the pueblos, found that the friars were succeeding in
331:
Verdadera relacion, de la grandiosa conversion qve ha avido en el Nuevo Mexico: Embiada por el padre fray
Estevan de Perea, custodio de las provincias del Nuevo Mexico, al muy reverendo P. Fr. Francisco de Apodaca, comissario general de toda la Nueva España, de la orden de S. Francisco, dandole
318:
Opposed to forced conversion, as were most missionaries, he said: "With suavity and mildness an obstinate spirit can better be reclaimed than with violence and rigor." According to France V. Scholes, "Perea was one of the great figures in the history of the Church in New Mexico. For some thirty
246:, and also custodian. He replaced Benavides. Governor Silva was more friendly to the friars than his predecessors had been, and helped them in their work. By the end of 1629 New Mexico had about thirty-five missions served by forty-six friars for a population of around 35,000 converted Indians.
273:
A house was bought for the friars, serving as the first church in the province. Silva helped the
Franciscans to set up other missions near Zuni. One was established at Hawwikku, about 15 miles (24 km) down the Zuni valley, and another farther west at the Hopi village of Awatobi. Perea and
269:
plaza. The next day the
Spanish conducted Mass and baptized many of the Zuni leaders. Although things seemed to be going very well, Perea noted that the Indians "are very observant of superstitious idolatry. ...They have their gods in the mountains, in the rivers, in the harvests, and in their
315:, where he wrote that the governor was letting colonists encroach on the jointly owned fields of the Indians and of the mission. He remained with the Franciscans until his death in New Mexico in 1638 or 1639. He was buried in the mission that he had founded at Sandía.
278:. The peace with the people of Zuni did not last. The Franciscan missionary father Juan Letrado was killed in February 1632 one week after he arrived in Zuni. In March 1632 a party of soldiers was sent to Zuni to avenge the missionary's death.
188:. The viceroy received a complaint about the mission at Sandía from the municipality of Santa Fe, which said that the mission had taken so much of the limited supply of iron that there was not enough left for civilian needs. After visiting the
286:
was being illegally trafficked in New Mexico. Perea recorded in 1631 that "Ana Cadimo ... says that it was about a year ago that the
Indians ... were telling her that she was bewitched, and that she should take
154:
conducted a thorough inquiry into Perea's "purity of blood". Two witnesses testified that his mother's family was "tainted with new Christian blood", but the Franciscans chose to ignore this evidence.
209:
from 1618 to 1626. In 1620 the Viceroy of New Spain heard complaints from the Indians of abuses of power, and sent orders regulating the treatment of Indians to both Perea and Juan de Eulate.
238:
In 1629, Perea returned to New Mexico with about thirty friars and several lay brothers to undertake missionary work, possibly traveling with the new governor of New Mexico, Captain Don
291:
and that with it she would see the person who had bewitched her and done her evil." The fathers had to use harsh measures, asserting their authority to stamp out evil practices.
230:
146:, with its large populations of Muslims and Jews, had been completed in 1492. Those who refused to convert to Christianity had been deported from Spain. However, the
265:
Indians they should do the same. Perea took the welcome to mean that "God hath already disposed this vineyard." A cross and a great platform were built in the
311:
Perea remained custodian until 1631. In 1632 he published an account of the missionary activity in New Mexico. In 1633, Perea was serving as a missionary at
304:
126:, between 1610 and 1638. At times he was in conflict with the governors of the province. He has been called the "Father of the New Mexican Church".
1259:
299:
249:
Perea brought with him a letter of inquiry from the archbishop in Mexico City, following up on a letter from the confessor of the Spanish nun
1213:
1186:
1159:
1132:
1105:
1078:
1051:
1004:
977:
950:
884:
857:
830:
785:
142:, Spain, near the Portuguese border. Both his parents were Portuguese and came from a region that was home to many Jews. The conquest of the
242:. He was sent to New Mexico by the Franciscan Province of the Holy Gospel, based in Mexico City. He was special inspector, the agent of the
1264:
901:
1021:
366:
of 1680-1692, they found that the local people had set up and were operating a fully functioning blacksmith shop in Sandía Pueblo.
1244:
239:
192:, Perea wrote enthusiastically about the industrious and moral people, with well-built houses, in a land that resembled Spain.
920:
849:
The Pueblo Indian Revolt of 1696 and the Franciscan Missions in New Mexico: Letters of the Missionaries and Related Documents
1254:
1239:
222:, who valued the land mainly because of the number of souls to be saved, ordered the dispatch of thirty more friars.
213:
considered abandoning New Mexico altogether, and only decided to remain due to Perea's frantic pleas. In 1626 Fray
253:. She had been falling into trances in which she reported that she had been transported to some people called
261:
135:
44:
250:
1249:
197:
185:
214:
151:
205:
becoming the head of the Church in New Mexico. Perea had many disputes with the temporal governor
219:
143:
176:
Fray Estéban de Perea arrived in New Mexico in 1610, and soon after established the mission of
1209:
1182:
1155:
1128:
1101:
1095:
1074:
1068:
1047:
1025:
1000:
994:
973:
946:
940:
880:
874:
853:
826:
820:
802:
781:
775:
1203:
1176:
1149:
1122:
1041:
967:
905:
847:
201:
166:
150:
was suspicious that some converts remained true to Jewish beliefs in private. In 1629 the
147:
489:
487:
485:
218:
their efforts to convert the local people, and in 1626 asked for more missionaries. King
206:
1233:
363:
181:
170:
924:
375:
The historian Charles Fletcher Lummis gives a more romantic account in his 1931
243:
189:
139:
17:
119:
115:
123:
493:
162:
357:
There was a constant shortage of iron in the colony. In 1639 the Santa Fe
275:
822:
Gardens of New Spain: How Mediterranean Plants and Foods Changed America
1124:
Canyon Gardens: The Ancient Pueblo Landscapes of the American Southwest
266:
312:
283:
254:
969:
Kiva, Cross & Crown: The Pecos Indians and New Mexico, 1540-1840
942:
To The End Of The Earth: A History Of The Crypto-jews Of New Mexico
1070:
Tradiciones Nuevomexicanas: Hispano Arts and Culture of New Mexico
298:
229:
161:
274:
Governor Silva gave Fray Juan Ramírez an escort further west to
234:
Cover of Perea's 1632 account of the conversions in New Mexico
1024:. New Mexico State Record Center and Archives. Archived from
904:. New Mexico State Record Center and Archives. Archived from
440:
260:
On 23 June 1629 Perea accompanied Silva on an expedition to
605:
603:
554:
552:
550:
1205:
The Spanish Frontier in North America: The Brief Edition
1097:
Cities of Gold: A Journey Across the American Southwest
645:
643:
641:
639:
637:
635:
633:
412:
410:
397:
395:
620:
618:
88:
80:
72:
64:
52:
39:
32:
972:. Western National Parks Association. p. 93.
923:. Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup. Archived from
801:Bancroft, Hubert Howe; Oak, Henry Lebbeus (1889).
921:"History of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup"
377:The Spanish pioneers and the California missions
1181:. University of California Press. p. 316.
900:Flint, Richard; Flint, Shirley Cushing (2012).
494:History of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup
1121:Price, V. B.; Morrow, Baker H. (2008-04-30).
8:
804:History of Arizona and New Mexico, 1530-1888
745:
733:
661:
29:
876:New Mexico: A Guide to the Colorful State
697:
305:Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument
649:
609:
594:
570:
558:
200:and his followers arrested the governor
709:
685:
517:
505:
476:
464:
428:
391:
350:
196:August 1613 the Franciscan leader Fray
118:friar who undertook missionary work in
582:
529:
416:
401:
1208:. Yale University Press. p. 82.
996:The Missions of New Mexico Since 1776
757:
721:
673:
624:
541:
452:
7:
1022:"Nieto, Francisco Manuel de Silva"
846:Espinosa, J. Manuel (1991-09-01).
819:Dunmire, William W. (2004-10-01).
25:
1178:Sanctuaries of Spanish New Mexico
873:Federal Writers' Project (1940).
1154:. University of Oklahoma Press.
852:. University of Oklahoma Press.
1067:Montaño, Mary Caroline (2001).
993:Kessell, John L. (2012-05-15).
966:Kessell, John L. (1995-01-31).
240:Francisco Manuel de Silva Nieto
1260:People from Llanos de Olivenza
1202:Weber, David J. (2009-03-17).
780:. Where We Come From,collect.
1:
945:. Columbia University Press.
825:. University of Texas Press.
441:Federal Writers' Project 1940
178:Nuestra Señora de los Dolores
134:Estéban de Perea was born in
95:Rodrigo Alonzo Perea (father)
1094:Preston, Douglas J. (1999).
334:. Impresso por L. Estupiñan.
1265:17th-century Spanish people
1148:Stewart, Omer Call (1987).
939:Hordes, Stanley M. (2005).
902:"Agreda, Maria de Jesus de"
1281:
1175:Treib, Marc (1993-09-30).
1151:Peyote Religion: A History
1100:. UNM Press. p. 311.
1073:. UNM Press. p. 142.
774:Archuleta, Roy A. (2006).
329:Perea, Estevan de (1632).
169:from a point close to the
1127:. UNM Press. p. 83.
1040:Minge, Ward Alan (1991).
879:. US History Publishers.
303:Quarai Mission Church in
180:(Our Lady of Sorrows) at
1043:Ácoma: Pueblo in the Sky
1020:Meredith, Grace (2012).
226:Second term as custodian
27:Spanish Franciscan friar
1245:Spanish Christian monks
746:Bancroft & Oak 1889
734:Price & Morrow 2008
662:Flint & Flint 2012
308:
235:
173:
302:
233:
165:
136:Villanueva del Fresno
45:Villanueva del Fresno
47:, Extremadura, Spain
1255:Colonial New Mexico
1240:Spanish Franciscans
215:Alonso de Benavides
152:Mexican Inquisition
98:Inez Nunez (mother)
84:Missionary activity
999:. Sunstone Press.
777:Where We Come From
309:
236:
220:Philip IV of Spain
184:, to the south of
174:
144:Emirate of Granada
1215:978-0-300-14068-2
1188:978-0-520-06420-1
1161:978-0-8061-2457-5
1134:978-0-8263-3860-0
1107:978-0-8263-2086-5
1080:978-0-8263-2137-4
1053:978-0-8263-1301-0
1006:978-0-86534-870-7
979:978-1-877856-56-3
952:978-0-231-12936-7
886:978-1-60354-030-8
859:978-0-8061-2365-3
832:978-0-292-70564-7
807:. History Company
787:978-1-4243-0472-1
105:
104:
16:(Redirected from
1272:
1225:
1223:
1222:
1198:
1196:
1195:
1171:
1169:
1168:
1144:
1142:
1141:
1117:
1115:
1114:
1090:
1088:
1087:
1063:
1061:
1060:
1036:
1034:
1033:
1016:
1014:
1013:
989:
987:
986:
962:
960:
959:
935:
933:
932:
916:
914:
913:
896:
894:
893:
869:
867:
866:
842:
840:
839:
815:
813:
812:
797:
795:
794:
761:
755:
749:
743:
737:
731:
725:
719:
713:
707:
701:
695:
689:
683:
677:
671:
665:
659:
653:
647:
628:
622:
613:
607:
598:
592:
586:
580:
574:
568:
562:
556:
545:
539:
533:
527:
521:
515:
509:
503:
497:
491:
480:
474:
468:
462:
456:
450:
444:
438:
432:
426:
420:
414:
405:
399:
380:
373:
367:
355:
335:
202:Pedro de Peralta
167:Sandia Mountains
122:, a province of
114:) was a Spanish
112:Estévan de Peréa
108:Estéban de Perea
34:Estéban de Perea
30:
21:
18:Estevan de Perea
1280:
1279:
1275:
1274:
1273:
1271:
1270:
1269:
1230:
1229:
1228:
1220:
1218:
1216:
1201:
1193:
1191:
1189:
1174:
1166:
1164:
1162:
1147:
1139:
1137:
1135:
1120:
1112:
1110:
1108:
1093:
1085:
1083:
1081:
1066:
1058:
1056:
1054:
1039:
1031:
1029:
1019:
1011:
1009:
1007:
992:
984:
982:
980:
965:
957:
955:
953:
938:
930:
928:
919:
911:
909:
899:
891:
889:
887:
872:
864:
862:
860:
845:
837:
835:
833:
818:
810:
808:
800:
792:
790:
788:
773:
764:
756:
752:
744:
740:
732:
728:
720:
716:
708:
704:
696:
692:
684:
680:
672:
668:
660:
656:
648:
631:
623:
616:
608:
601:
593:
589:
581:
577:
569:
565:
557:
548:
540:
536:
528:
524:
516:
512:
504:
500:
492:
483:
475:
471:
463:
459:
451:
447:
439:
435:
427:
423:
415:
408:
400:
393:
384:
383:
374:
370:
356:
352:
342:
328:
325:
297:
251:María de Ágreda
228:
160:
132:
101:
60:
57:
48:
35:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
1278:
1276:
1268:
1267:
1262:
1257:
1252:
1247:
1242:
1232:
1231:
1227:
1226:
1214:
1199:
1187:
1172:
1160:
1145:
1133:
1118:
1106:
1091:
1079:
1064:
1052:
1037:
1017:
1005:
990:
978:
963:
951:
936:
917:
897:
885:
870:
858:
843:
831:
816:
798:
786:
770:
763:
762:
750:
748:, p. 172.
738:
726:
714:
702:
700:, p. 166.
698:Archuleta 2006
690:
688:, p. 311.
678:
676:, p. 316.
666:
654:
629:
614:
599:
587:
585:, p. 145.
575:
563:
546:
534:
532:, p. 137.
522:
510:
498:
481:
479:, p. 142.
469:
467:, p. 178.
457:
445:
443:, p. 247.
433:
431:, p. 138.
421:
419:, p. 143.
406:
404:, p. 142.
390:
382:
381:
368:
349:
348:
341:
338:
337:
336:
324:
321:
296:
293:
227:
224:
207:Juan de Eulate
198:Isidro Ordóñez
159:
156:
131:
128:
103:
102:
100:
99:
96:
92:
90:
86:
85:
82:
81:Known for
78:
77:
74:
70:
69:
66:
62:
61:
58:
54:
50:
49:
43:
41:
37:
36:
33:
26:
24:
14:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
1277:
1266:
1263:
1261:
1258:
1256:
1253:
1251:
1248:
1246:
1243:
1241:
1238:
1237:
1235:
1217:
1211:
1207:
1206:
1200:
1190:
1184:
1180:
1179:
1173:
1163:
1157:
1153:
1152:
1146:
1136:
1130:
1126:
1125:
1119:
1109:
1103:
1099:
1098:
1092:
1082:
1076:
1072:
1071:
1065:
1055:
1049:
1046:. UNM Press.
1045:
1044:
1038:
1028:on 2013-04-15
1027:
1023:
1018:
1008:
1002:
998:
997:
991:
981:
975:
971:
970:
964:
954:
948:
944:
943:
937:
927:on 2012-06-24
926:
922:
918:
908:on 2011-02-27
907:
903:
898:
888:
882:
878:
877:
871:
861:
855:
851:
850:
844:
834:
828:
824:
823:
817:
806:
805:
799:
789:
783:
779:
778:
772:
771:
769:
768:
760:, p. 82.
759:
754:
751:
747:
742:
739:
736:, p. 83.
735:
730:
727:
723:
718:
715:
712:, p. 24.
711:
706:
703:
699:
694:
691:
687:
682:
679:
675:
670:
667:
663:
658:
655:
651:
650:Meredith 2012
646:
644:
642:
640:
638:
636:
634:
630:
627:, p. 20.
626:
621:
619:
615:
612:, p. 20.
611:
610:Espinosa 1991
606:
604:
600:
597:, p. 15.
596:
595:Espinosa 1991
591:
588:
584:
579:
576:
573:, p. 18.
572:
571:Espinosa 1991
567:
564:
561:, p. 19.
560:
559:Espinosa 1991
555:
553:
551:
547:
544:, p. 17.
543:
538:
535:
531:
526:
523:
520:, p. 97.
519:
514:
511:
508:, p. 94.
507:
502:
499:
495:
490:
488:
486:
482:
478:
473:
470:
466:
461:
458:
455:, p. 56.
454:
449:
446:
442:
437:
434:
430:
425:
422:
418:
413:
411:
407:
403:
398:
396:
392:
389:
388:
378:
372:
369:
365:
364:Pueblo Revolt
360:
354:
351:
347:
346:
339:
333:
327:
326:
322:
320:
316:
314:
306:
301:
294:
292:
290:
285:
279:
277:
271:
268:
263:
258:
256:
252:
247:
245:
241:
232:
225:
223:
221:
216:
210:
208:
203:
199:
193:
191:
187:
183:
182:Sandia Pueblo
179:
172:
171:Sandia Pueblo
168:
164:
157:
155:
153:
149:
145:
141:
137:
129:
127:
125:
121:
117:
113:
109:
97:
94:
93:
91:
87:
83:
79:
75:
71:
67:
63:
55:
51:
46:
42:
38:
31:
19:
1219:. Retrieved
1204:
1192:. Retrieved
1177:
1165:. Retrieved
1150:
1138:. Retrieved
1123:
1111:. Retrieved
1096:
1084:. Retrieved
1069:
1057:. Retrieved
1042:
1030:. Retrieved
1026:the original
1010:. Retrieved
995:
983:. Retrieved
968:
956:. Retrieved
941:
929:. Retrieved
925:the original
910:. Retrieved
906:the original
890:. Retrieved
875:
863:. Retrieved
848:
836:. Retrieved
821:
809:. Retrieved
803:
791:. Retrieved
776:
766:
765:
753:
741:
729:
717:
710:Stewart 1987
705:
693:
686:Preston 1999
681:
669:
657:
590:
578:
566:
537:
525:
518:Kessell 1995
513:
506:Kessell 1995
501:
477:Montaño 2001
472:
465:Dunmire 2004
460:
448:
436:
429:Kessell 2012
424:
386:
385:
376:
371:
358:
353:
344:
343:
330:
323:Bibliography
317:
310:
307:, New Mexico
288:
280:
272:
259:
248:
237:
211:
194:
177:
175:
158:Early career
133:
111:
107:
106:
56:1638 or 1639
1250:1639 deaths
583:Hordes 2005
530:Hordes 2005
417:Hordes 2005
402:Hordes 2005
295:Later years
244:Inquisition
190:Hopi people
140:Extremadura
65:Nationality
1234:Categories
1221:2012-08-27
1194:2012-08-27
1167:2012-08-27
1140:2012-08-27
1113:2012-08-27
1086:2012-08-28
1059:2012-08-27
1032:2012-08-27
1012:2012-08-29
985:2012-08-28
958:2012-08-27
931:2012-08-27
912:2012-08-27
892:2012-08-27
865:2012-08-27
838:2012-08-28
811:2012-08-27
793:2012-08-27
758:Weber 2009
722:Perea 1632
674:Treib 1993
625:Minge 1991
542:Minge 1991
453:Treib 1993
362:after the
340:References
120:New Mexico
116:Franciscan
73:Occupation
59:New Mexico
387:Citations
270:houses."
124:New Spain
186:Santa Fe
767:Sources
359:cabildo
267:Hawikuh
255:Jumanos
130:Origins
89:Parents
68:Spanish
1212:
1185:
1158:
1131:
1104:
1077:
1050:
1003:
976:
949:
883:
856:
829:
784:
313:Quarai
289:peiote
284:Peyote
148:Church
345:Notes
276:Ácoma
138:, in
76:Friar
1210:ISBN
1183:ISBN
1156:ISBN
1129:ISBN
1102:ISBN
1075:ISBN
1048:ISBN
1001:ISBN
974:ISBN
947:ISBN
881:ISBN
854:ISBN
827:ISBN
782:ISBN
262:Zuni
110:(or
53:Died
40:Born
1236::
632:^
617:^
602:^
549:^
484:^
409:^
394:^
332:..
1224:.
1197:.
1170:.
1143:.
1116:.
1089:.
1062:.
1035:.
1015:.
988:.
961:.
934:.
915:.
895:.
868:.
841:.
814:.
796:.
724:.
664:.
652:.
496:.
20:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.