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Don Quichotte und Sancho Panza (c. 1868)
Sancho's name Cervantes variously names Sancho in the first book Sancho Zancas (legs); however, in the second book, he standardizes Sancho's name in reply to the
"false" Avellaneda Quixote sequel. At one point, Sancho alludes to the "false" Avellaneda book by addressing his wife (standardized as Teresa Panza) using the wrong name. The Sancho name does not change, but he calls his wife various names throughout the first part of the volume, and her 'true' name is not revealed until almost the end of that portion of the novel.
The promised insula Don Quixote promises Sancho the governance of an
ínsula, or
island. However, Sancho has never heard of this word before and does not know its meaning. Sancho has long been expecting some vague but concrete reward for this adventure and believes the word to signify the prize that will make the trouble he has been enduring worthwhile. The two later encounter a duke and duchess who pretend to make Sancho governor of a fictional
fief,
la ínsula Barataria (roughly "Isle Come-cheaply"; see
Cockaigne). He eagerly accepts and leaves his master. In a letter, Don Quixote gives Sancho provincial advice on
governorship gleaned from the romances he has read, thought to have been inspired by the
Diálogo de Mercurio y Carón attributed to
Alfonso de Valdés (-1532). Cervantes may intend Quixote's simplistic and romantic understanding of government as an
allegory satirizing the lack of practical learning on the part of philosopher-doctors placed in positions of power. One view sees the advice as a "serio-comic twist on
Machiavelli's advice for nonhereditary rulers who newly acquire kingdoms". The Duke's servants are instructed to play several pranks upon Sancho. Surprisingly, Sancho is able to rule justly (mostly), applying common (if occasionally inconsistent) sense and practical wisdom in spite of - or because of - the simplistic advice that Don Quixote has read about. As Sancho is abused in these staged
parodies, he learns how difficult it is to rule, and "resigns" to rejoin Don Quixote and to continue the adventure.
Ricote Sancho encounters
Ricote ("fat cat"), his former
Morisco neighbor, who has buried a small fortune. Ricote, like all Moriscos, was expelled from Spain and has returned in disguise to retrieve the treasure he left behind. He asks Sancho for his help. Sancho, while sympathetic, refuses to betray his king. When Don Quixote takes to his deathbed, Sancho tries to cheer him. Sancho idealistically proposes they become
pastoral shepherds and thus becomes 'Quixotized'. ==Other appearances of the character==