Palafox was ordained in 1629, and became the chaplain and almoner of
Maria of Austria, Holy Roman Empress, the sister of King
Philip IV of Spain. He left for America and arrived in
Veracruz on 24 June 1640. He was in the company of the new
Viceroy of New Spain,
Diego López Pacheco, 7th Duke of Escalona, whom he had gotten to know during the voyage. That same ship brought an Irishman,
William Lamport, known in New Spain as Don Guillén de Lombardo y Guzmán, who played a role in political turmoil during the 1640s. Palafox was also named
Visitador (royal inspector, representative of the king), to investigate the two previous viceroys. His retinue further included the Aragonese painter
Pedro García Ferrer and the Flemish painter
Diego de Borgraf. He served as
Bishop of Puebla from 1640 to 1655, and as interim archbishop of Mexico from May 1642 to 1643. On principle, Palafox asserted that it was the spiritual duty of all to pay the tithe, which the Jesuits steadfastly refused to do. The tithe transferred wealth from the countryside's landed estates to cities and towns, supporting the cathedral chapter, parish priests, and charitable institutions. Obviously, as a powerful bishop, Palafox would have been interested in increasing the revenue from Jesuit tithes, but also in asserting episcopal authority over that order. In 1647, the diocese of Puebla ordered all Jesuits to produce licenses from the diocese to preach and hear confession, something that was required under canon law and empowered bishops. The Jesuits asserted they needed no such licenses, that they could exercise such powers without special permission of a bishop. Palafox wrote that if this were true, that the bishop had no power in his own diocese and he would be separated from his own flock by "an alien authority". The Jesuits found an ally against Palafox in the new viceroy,
García Sarmiento de Sotomayor, 2nd Count of Salvatierra. Salvatierra sought to arrest Palafox. In 1647, rather than be arrested, which might have produced an uprising in Puebla against the viceroy's abuse of authority, Palafox fled to the mountains outside the city. The move was calculated to show the crown that the situation in New Spain was grave, that the viceroy and the Jesuits were challenging the rightful place of episcopal authority. In that he failed and was ultimately humiliated by being recalled to Spain. , 1643 Palafox laid formal complaints against the Jesuits at
Rome. The
pope, however, refused to approve his censures, and all he could obtain was a brief from
Pope Innocent X (on 14 May 1648), commanding the Jesuits to respect the episcopal jurisdiction. On 20 May 1655, Palafox and the Jesuits signed an accord, but disagreements continued. In the same year the Jesuits succeeded in securing his transfer to the
see of Osma in
Old Castile. Although Palafox's ecclesiastical career went into eclipse, his writings against the Jesuits were subsequently published in France and in the eighteenth century, his writings were used to strengthen the case for regalist authority resulting in the expulsion of the Jesuits from Spain and Spanish territories in 1767. Some of Palafox's influential anti-Jesuit writings deal with the
Chinese Rites controversy. Palafox had jurisdiction as a bishop on certain Asian missions, but - according to Costa Rican scholar Ricardo Martínez Esquivel - the main reason he declared the Jesuit's tolerance for traditional ancestor worship practices among Chinese converts to Christianity as heretic was "his personal conflict" with the Jesuits.
Viceregal legacy Palafox founded the
Biblioteca Palafoxiana, the first public library in the
Americas, on 5 September 1646, donating his own collection of 5,000 books to the College of San Juan to start the collection. It was the first public library in the Americas. He also founded the Dominican Convent of Santa Inés, the Colleges of San Pedro and San Pablo, and the girls school Purísima Concepción. He amended the by-laws of the seminary of San Juan. When Palafox arrived in Puebla he carried with him a
real cédula dated January 19, 1640 that ordered the long-delayed completion of
the cathedral. To finance the resumed construction, Palafox increased the tithes, which exacerbated his poor relations with the Jesuits. The cathedral was dedicated 18 April 1649. As bishop, Palafox y Mendoza distinguished himself by his efforts to protect the
Native Americans, forbidding any methods of conversion other than persuasion. While bishop, Palafox was the principal consecrator of
Francisco Diego Díaz de Quintanilla y de Hevía y Valdés (1640),
Bishop of Durango;
Fernando Montero Espinosa (1640),
Bishop of Nueva Segovia;
Diego de Guevara y Estrada (1642),
Archbishop of Santo Domingo;
Marcos de Torres y Rueda (1645),
Bishop of Yucatán;
Juan de Mañozca y Zamora (1645),
Archbishop of México; and
Diego López de la Vega (1650),
Bishop of Badajoz. , in
Puebla, Puebla Palafox was an enthusiastic patron of the arts, and it was during his tenure in Puebla that the city became the musical center of New Spain. Composers such as
Juan Gutierrez de Padilla,
maestro di capilla of the cathedral under Palafox and the most famous seventeenth century composer in Mexico, brought the latest European music styles to the New World. Palafox also strongly believed in education in general. ==Political career==