Establishment of the episcopal hierarchy and the assertion of crown control , first secular cleric to be
archbishop of Mexico and first cleric to serve as viceroy. The Catholic Church is organized by territorial districts or dioceses, each with a
bishop. The main church of a diocese is the
cathedral. The diocese of Mexico was established in Mexico City in 1530. Initially, Mexico was not an episcopal jurisdiction in its own right; until 1547 it was under the authority of the Archbishop of
Seville (Spain). The first bishop of Mexico was Franciscan friar Don
Juan de Zumárraga. The church that became the first cathedral was begun in 1524 on the main square
Zócalo and consecrated in 1532. In general, a member of a mendicant order was not appointed to a high position in the episcopal hierarchy, so Zumárraga and his successor Dominican
Alonso de Montúfar (r. 1551–1572) as bishops of Mexico should be seen as atypical figures. In 1572
Pedro Moya de Contreras became the first bishop of Mexico who was a secular cleric.
Bishops as interim viceroys The crown established the
viceroyalty of New Spain, appointing high-born Spaniards loyal to the crown as the top civil official. On occasion in all three centuries of Spanish rule, the crown appointed archbishops or bishops as
viceroy of New Spain, usually on an interim basis, until a new viceroy was sent from Spain.
Pedro Moya de Contreras was the first secular cleric to be appointed archbishop of Mexico and he was also the first cleric to serve as viceroy, September 25, 1584 – October 17, 1585. The seventeenth century saw the largest number of clerics as viceroys. The Dominican
García Guerra served from June 19, 1611 – February 22, 1612. Blessed Don
Juan de Palafox y Mendoza also served briefly as viceroy, June 10, 1642 – November 23, 1642.
Marcos de Torres y Rueda, bishop of Yucatán, served from May 15, 1648 – April 22, 1649.
Diego Osorio de Escobar y Llamas, bishop of Puebla, served from June 29, 1664 – October 15, 1664. Archbishop of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mexico Payo Enríquez de Rivera Manrique,
O.S.A., served an unusually long term as viceroy, from December 13, 1673, to November 7, 1680. Another unusual cleric-viceroy was
Juan Ortega y Montañés, archbishop of Mexico City archdiocese, who served twice as interim viceroy, February 27, 1696, to December 18, 1696, and again from November 4, 1701, to November 27, 1702. Once the Spanish Bourbon monarchy was established, just three clerics served as viceroy. Archbishop of Mexico City
Juan Antonio de Vizarrón y Eguiarreta, served six years as viceroy, March 17, 1734, to August 17, 1740. The last two cleric-viceroys followed the more usual pattern of being interim.
Alonso Núñez de Haro y Peralta, archbishop of Mexico City, served from May 8, 1787, to August 16, 1787, and
Francisco Javier de Lizana y Beaumont, archbishop of Mexico City, served from July 19, 1809, to May 8, 1810.
Structure of the episcopal hierarchy The ecclesiastical structure was ruled by a bishop, who had considerable power encompassing legislative, executive, and judicial matters. A bishop ruled over a geographical district, a diocese, subdivided into parishes, each with a parish priest. The seat of the diocese was its cathedral, which had its own administration, the
cabildo eclesiástico whose senior official was the dean of the cathedral. New Spain became the seat of an archbishopric in 1530, with the archbishop overseeing multiple dioceses. The diocese of Michoacan (now Morelía) became an archdiocese in the sixteenth century as well. The creation of further dioceses in Mexico is marked by the construction of cathedrals in the main cities: the cathedral in Antequera (now Oaxaca City) (1535), the
Guadalajara Cathedral (1541), the
Puebla Cathedral 1557, the
Zacatecas Cathedral (1568), the
Mérida Cathedral (1598), and the Saltillo Cathedral (1762).
Ecclesiastical privileges . The ordained clergy (but not religious sisters) had ecclesiastical privileges (
fueros), which meant that they were exempt from civil courts, no matter what the offense, but were tried in canonical courts. This separation of jurisdictions for different groups meant that the Church had considerable independent power. In the late eighteenth century, one of the
Bourbon Reforms was the removal of this
fuero, making the clergy subject to civil courts.
Secular or diocesan clergy's income Members of the upper levels of the hierarchy, parish priests, and priests who functioned in religious institutions such as hospitals, received a salaried income, a benefice. However, not all ordained priests had a secure income from such benefices and had to find a way to make a living. Since secular priests did not take a vow of poverty, they often pursued economic functions like any other member of Hispanic society. An example of a secular cleric piecing together an income from multiple posts is Don
Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora, one of New Spain's most distinguished intellectuals, who had no benefice.
Reduction of mendicants' role In the sixteenth century, the establishment of the episcopal hierarchy was part of a larger Crown policy that in the early period increasingly aimed at diminishing the role of the mendicant orders as parish priests in central areas of the colony and strengthening the role of the diocesan (secular) clergy. The
Ordenanza del Patronazgo was the key act of the crown asserting control over the clergy, both mendicant and secular. It was promulgated by the crown in 1574, codifying this policy, which simultaneously strengthened the crown's role, since it had the power of royal patronage over the diocesan clergy, the
Patronato Real, but not the mendicant orders. , priest, scientist, and creole patriot. The
Ordenanza guaranteed parish priests an income and a permanent position. Priests competed for desirable parishes through a system of competitive examinations called
oposiones, with the aim of having the most qualified candidates receiving benefices. With these competitions, the winners became holders of benefices (
beneficiados) and priests who did not come out on top were curates who served on an interim basis by appointment by the bishop; those who failed entirely did not even hold a temporary assignment. The importance of the
Ordenanza is in the ascendancy of the diocesan clergy over the mendicants, but also indicates the growth in the Spanish population in New Spain and the necessity not only to minister to it but also to provide ecclesiastical posts for the best American-born Spaniards (creoles).
Pious endowments One type of institution that produced income for priests without a parish or other benefice was to say Masses for the souls of men and women who had set up chantries (
capellanías). Wealthy members of society would set aside funds, often by a lien on real property, to ensure Masses would be said for their souls in perpetuity. Families with an ordained priest as a member often designated him as the
capellán, thus ensuring the economic well-being of one of its own. Although the endowment was for a religious purpose, the Church itself did not control the funds. It was a way that pious elite families could direct their wealth.
Tithes The crown had significant power in the economic realm regarding the Church, since it was granted the use of tithes (a ten percent tax of agriculture) and the responsibility of collecting them. In general the crown gave these revenues for the support of the Church, and where revenues fell short, the crown supplemented them from the royal treasury.
Society of Jesus in Mexico, 1572–1767 At the same time that the episcopal hierarchy was established, the
Society of Jesus or Jesuits, a new religious order founded on new principles, came to Mexico in 1572. The Jesuits distinguished themselves in several ways. They had high standards for acceptance to the order and many years of training. They were adept at attracting the patronage of elite families whose sons they educated in rigorous, newly founded Jesuit
colegios ("colleges"), including
Colegio de San Pedro y San Pablo,
Colegio de San Ildefonso, and the
Colegio de San Francisco Javier, Tepozotlan. Those same elite families hoped that a son with a vocation to the priesthood would be accepted as a Jesuit. Jesuits were also zealous in evangelization of the indigenous, particularly on the northern frontiers.
Jesuit haciendas To support their colleges and members of the Society of Jesus, the Jesuits acquired landed estates that were run with the best-practices for generating income in that era. A number of these haciendas were donated by wealthy elites. The donation of an hacienda to the Jesuits was the spark igniting a conflict between seventeenth-century bishop of Puebla
Don Juan de Palafox and the Jesuit
colegio in that city. Since the Jesuits resisted paying the tithe on their estates, this donation effectively took revenue out of the church hierarchy's pockets by removing it from the tithe rolls. Many Jesuit haciendas were huge, with Palafox asserting that just two colleges owned 300,000 head of sheep, whose wool was transformed locally in Puebla to cloth; six sugar plantations worth a million pesos and generating an income of 100,000 pesos. The Jesuits operated their properties as an integrated unit with the larger Jesuit order; thus revenues from haciendas funded
colegios. Jesuits did significantly expand missions to the indigenous in the frontier area and a number were martyred, but the crown supported those missions. In the mid-seventeenth century, bishop of Puebla Don
Juan de Palafox took on the Jesuits over this matter and was so soundly defeated that he was recalled to Spain, where he became the bishop of the minor diocese of
Osma. The mendicant orders were envious of the Jesuits’ economic power and influence and the fact that fewer good candidates for their orders chose them as opposed to the Jesuits.
Expulsion of the Jesuits 1767 In 1767, the Spanish crown ordered the expulsion of the Jesuits from Spain and its overseas territories. Their properties passed into the hands of elites who had the wherewithal to buy them. The mendicants did not protest their expulsion. The Jesuits had established missions in
Baja California prior to their expulsion. These were taken over by the Franciscans, who then went on to establish 21 missions in
Alta California.
Convents Establishments for elite creole women ,
religious sister, poet, and playwright, was famous in her lifetime in both Mexico and Spain. In the first generation of Spaniards in New Spain, women emigrated to join existing kin, generally marrying. With few marital partners of equal
calidad for Spanish men, there was pressure for Spanish women to marry rather than take the veil as a cloistered
nun. However, as more Spanish families were created and there were a larger number of daughters, the social economy could accommodate the creation of nunneries for women. The first convent in New Spain was founded in 1540 in Mexico City by the Conceptionist Order. Mexico City had the largest number of nunneries with 22. Puebla, New Spain's second largest city, had 11, with its first in 1568; Guadalajara had 6, starting in 1578; Antequera (Oaxaca), had 5, starting in 1576. In all, there were 56 convents for creole women in New Spain, with the greatest number in the largest cities. However, even a few relatively small provincial cities had convents, including Pátzcuaro (1744), San Miguel el Grande (1754), Aguascalientes (1705-07), Mérida (Yucatán) 1596, and San Cristóbal (Chiapas) 1595. The last nunnery before independence in 1821 was in Mexico City in 1811, Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe. Over the colonial period, there were 56 nunneries established in New Spain, the largest number being the
Conceptionists with 15, followed by Franciscans at 14, Dominicans with 9, and
Carmelites with 7. Sor Juana's Jeronymite order had only 3 houses. The largest concentration of convents was in the capital, Mexico City, with 11 built between 1540 and 1630, and, by 1780 another 10 for a total of 21. These institutions were designed for the daughters of elites, with individual living quarters not only for the nuns, but also their servants. Depending on the particular religious order, the discipline was more or less strict. The Carmelites were strictly observant, which prompted Doña Juana Asbaje y Ramírez de Santillana to withdraw from their community and join the Jeronymite nunnery in Mexico City, becoming Sor
Juana Inés de la Cruz, known in her lifetime as the "Tenth Muse". Nuns were enclosed in their convents, but some orders regularly permitted visits from the nuns’ family members (and in Sor Juana's case, the viceroy and his wife the virreina), as well as her friend, the priest and savant Don
Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora. Nuns were required to provide a significant dowry to the nunnery on their entrance. As "brides of Christ", nuns often entered the nunnery with an elaborate ceremony that was an occasion for the family to display not only its piety but also its wealth. Nunneries accumulated wealth due to the dowries donated for the care of nuns when they entered. Many nunneries also acquired urban real estate, whose rents were a steady source of income to that particular house.
Establishments for Indian noblewomen In the eighteenth century, the Poor Clares established a convent for noble Indian women. The debate leading up to the creation of the
convent of Corpus Christi in 1724 was another round of debate about the capacity of Indians, male or female, for religious life. The early sixteenth century had seen the demise of the
Colegio de Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco, which had been founded to train Indian men for ordination.
Holy Office of the Inquisition At the same time that the episcopal hierarchy in Mexico first had a secular cleric as archbishop, the tribunal of the
Holy Office of the Inquisition was established in 1569 to maintain orthodoxy and Christian morality. In 1570, Indians were removed from the Inquisition's jurisdiction.
Crypto-Jews '' (burning place) of the Inquisition. 1596–1771". The Inquisition tried those accused, but did not itself have the power to execute the convicted. They were turned over ("relaxed") to secular authorities for capital punishment. Non-Catholics were banned from emigrating to Spain's overseas territories, with potential migrants needing to receive a license to travel that stated they were of pure Catholic heritage. However, a number of
crypto-Jews, that is, Jews who supposedly converted to Christianity (
conversos) but continued practicing Judaism, did emigrate. Many were merchants of Portuguese background, who could more easily move within the Spanish realms during the period 1580–1640 when Spain and Portugal had the same monarch. The Portuguese empire included territories in West Africa and was the source of African slaves sold in Spanish territories. Quite a number of Portuguese merchants in Mexico were involved in the transatlantic slave trade. When Portugal successfully revolted against Spanish rule in 1640, the Inquisition in Mexico began to closely scrutinize the merchant community in which many Portuguese merchants were crypto-Jews. In 1649, crypto-Jews both living and dead were "relaxed to the secular arm" of crown justice for punishment. The Inquisition had no power to execute the convicted, so civil justice carried out capital punishment in a grand public ceremony affirming the power of Christianity and the State. '' in New Spain, 18th century The Gran Auto de Fe of 1649 saw Crypto-Jews burned alive, while the effigies or statues along with the bones of others were burned. Although the trial and punishment of those already dead might seem bizarre to those in the modern era, the disinterment of the remains of crypto-Jews from Christian sacred ground and then burning their remains protected living and dead Christians from the pollution of those who rejected Christ. A spectacular case of sedition was prosecuted a decade later in 1659, the case of Irishman
William Lamport, also known as Don Guillén de Lampart y Guzmán, who was executed in an
auto de fe.
Other jurisdictional transgressions In general though the Inquisition imposed penalties that were far less stringent than capital punishment. They prosecuted cases of bigamy, blasphemy, Lutheranism (Protestantism), witchcraft, and, in the eighteenth century, sedition against the crown was added to the Inquisition's jurisdiction. Historians have in recent decades utilized Inquisition records to find information on a broad range of those in the Hispanic sector and discern social and cultural patterns and colonial ideas of deviance.
Indigenous beliefs Indigenous men and women were excluded from the jurisdiction of the Inquisition when it was established, but there were on-going concerns about indigenous beliefs and practice. In 1629, Hernando Riz de Alarcón wrote the
Treatise on the Heathen Superstitions that today live among the Indians native to this New Spain. 1629. Little is known about Ruiz de Alarcón himself, but his work is an important contribution to early Mexico for understanding Nahua religion, beliefs, and medicine. He collected information about Nahuas in what is now modern Guerrero. He came to the attention of the Inquisition for conducting
autos-de-fe and punishing Indians without authority. The Holy Office exonerated him due to his ignorance and then appointed him to a position to inform the Holy Office of pagan practices, resulting in the
Treatise on the Heathen Superstitions.
Devotions to holy men and women Virgin of Guadalupe and other devotions to Mary . In 1531, a Nahua,
Juan Diego, is said to have experienced a vision of a young girl on the site of a destroyed temple to a
mother goddess. The cult of the Virgin of Guadalupe was promoted by Dominican archbishop of Mexico,
Alonso de Montúfar, while Franciscans such as
Bernardino de Sahagún were deeply suspicious because of the possibility of confusion and idolatry. The vision became embodied in a physical object, the cloak or
tilma on which the image of the Virgin appeared. This ultimately became known as
Our Lady of Guadalupe. The widespread conversion of the Indigenous people of Mexico, especially the Nahua, didn’t solely come from the Spanish claiming that there was a sudden miracle of certain proof that their religion was the correct one, but also what the Nahua perceived in the story. For one, the hill of Tepeyacac, as is the original name, was previously the site of worship for another goddess, Tonantzin, whose name means “our mother”, and was the mother of the gods and considered an earth deity similar to the figure of Mother Earth, as noted by friar Bernardino de Sahagún. As previously mentioned, aspects of Catholicism often got lost in translation, however, in this case, the comparisons were easier for Nahua to process: the mother of a god, who appeared on a holy hill of worship, symbolically declaring herself mother of all on earth, which explains why even today, the Virgin of Guadalupe is sometimes referred to as Tonantzin Besides the comparisons between this new female religious figure and their old goddess, there was also the personal aspect that brought many Nahua and Indigenous people of Mexico to the religion and the cult of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Something particularly striking is the distinction in the appearance between the Virgin of Guadalupe and the standard Marian image in Europe, which boasts European features such as pale skin, blond or light brown hair, with light eyes, such as those seen in the painting
The Virgin of the Navigators which was painted around the same time as the apparition at Tepeyac. In contrast, the mantle image of Mary depicts her with a tan-olive skin tone and straight black hair, which can be compared to the features of a mestiza,
Mexican saints New Spain had residents who lived holy lives and were recognized in their own communities. Late sixteenth-century Franciscan
Felipe de Jesús, who was born in Mexico, became its first saint, a martyr in Japan; he was beatified in 1627, a step in the process of sainthood, and canonized a saint in 1862, during a period of conflict between Church and the liberal State in Mexico. One of the martyrs of the Japanese state's crackdown on Christians, San Felipe was crucified. in the convent of San Antonioof Padua in Puebla.
Sebastian de Aparicio, another sixteenth-century holy person, was a lay Franciscan, an immigrant from Spain, who became a Franciscan late in life. He built a reputation for holiness in Puebla, colonial Mexico's second largest city, and was beatified (named Blessed) in 1789. Puebla was also the home of another immigrant, Catarina de San Juan, one who did not come to New Spain of her own volition, but as an Asian (
China) slave. Known as the "
China Poblana" (Asian woman of Puebla), Catarina lived an exemplary life and was regarded in her lifetime as a holy woman, but the campaign for her recognition by the Vatican stalled in the seventeenth century, despite clerics’ writing her spiritual autobiography. Her status as an outsider and non-white might have affected her cause for designation as holy.
Juan Diego, the Nahua who is credited with the vision of
Our Lady of Guadalupe was beatified in 1990 and canonized in 2002 by John Paul II in the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe. The Church has also canonized a number of twentieth-century
Saints of the Cristero War; Father
Miguel Pro was beatified in 1988 by
John Paul II. ==Spanish Bourbon Era 1700–1821==