crucified on the cross, by Pedro de Castañeda, 1553 He was born
Gonzalo Jiménez de Cisneros in
Torrelaguna in
Castile in 1436, the son of
hidalgos Alfonso Jiménez de Cisneros and wife María de la Torre, from the villa of Cisneros,
Palencia. He studied in the
Studium generale at
Alcalá de Henares and also in the
University of Salamanca, where in 1456 he obtained a bachelor's degree in law. In 1459 he traveled to Rome to work as a
consistorial advocate, where he attracted the notice of
Pope Pius II. He returned to Spain in 1465 carrying an "executive" letter from the
Pope giving him possession of the first vacant
benefice. That turned out to be
Uceda. However,
Alfonso Carrillo de Acuña, the
Archbishop of Toledo and
Primate of Spain, refused to accept the letter, wishing instead to bestow the benefice upon one of his own followers. When Cisneros insisted, he was thrown in prison, first at Uceda and afterwards in the fortress of
Santorcaz. For six years, Cisneros held out for his claim, free to leave at any time if he would give it up, but at length in 1480 Carrillo relented at Cisneros' strength of conviction and gave him a benefice. Fearing further reprisals, Cisneros traded it almost at once for a
chaplaincy at
Sigüenza, under Cardinal
Pedro González de Mendoza, the
bishop of Sigüenza, who shortly after appointed him
vicar general of his
diocese. At Sigüenza, Cisneros won praise for his work and he seemed to be on the sure road to success among the secular clergy, when in 1484 at the late age of forty-eight he abruptly decided to become a
Franciscan friar. Giving up all his worldly belongings, and changing his baptismal name, Gonzalo, for that of Francisco, he entered the Franciscan friary of
San Juan de los Reyes, Cisneros' severe sanctity soon won him considerable influence over Isabella, and in 1494 he was appointed
Minister Provincial of the order for Spain. Cardinal Mendoza died in 1495, and Isabella had secretly procured a
papal bull nominating Cisneros to Mendoza's
Archdiocese of Toledo, the richest and most powerful in Spain. With this office was also given the office of chancellor of
Castile. Isabella tried to surprise him by presenting the bull as a gift in person, but Cisneros did not react as she had hoped. Instead, he fled her presence, and ran away, only to be overtaken by Isabella's messengers several miles outside of Madrid and convinced to return to court for further discussion. Cisneros resisted the appointment for six months and reluctantly agreed only after a second papal bull ordered him to accept. Despite his lavish new position, Cisneros personally still maintained a simple life; although a message from Rome required him to live in a style befitting his rank, the outward pomp only concealed his private asceticism. ==Reform, revolt, and crusade==