- Martín de Valencia
-
Martín de Valencia (born at Villa de Valencia, Spain, about the middle of the fifteenth century; died Tlalmanalco, Mexico, 31 August 1534) was a Spanish Franciscan missionary.
Life
He entered the Franciscan Order at Mayorga in the Province of Santiago, built the monastery of Santa Maria del Berrogal, and was the chief founder of the Custody of San Gabriel, for which he visited Rome.
In 1523 he was chosen to head a band of twelve Franciscans who were to work for the conversion of the Mexican natives. They reached their destination on May, 1524, and were received by Hernán Cortés shortly after their arrival. Martin, as apostolic delegate, presided at the first ecclesiastical synod in the New World, 2 July 1524. At the same time he established the Custody of the Holy Gospel, of which he was elected the first custos. After an interval of three years he was re-elected in 1530.
He led a penitential life, and he and his eleven companions, the band known as the Twelve Apostles of Mexico, are said to have baptized large numbers.
References
- Harold, Epitome Annalium FF. Minorum (Rome, 1672);
- Gonzaga, De Origine Seraphicae Religionis, II (Rome, 1587);
- Mendieta, Historia Eclesiastica Indiana (Mexico, 1870);
- Vetancurt, A. de Cronica de la Prov. del Santo Evangelo (Mexico, 1697);
- Vetancurt, A. de Menologio Franciscano (Mexico, 1697);
- Torquemada, Monarquia Indiana, I (Madrid, 1723);
- Perusini, Cronologia Historico-Legalis, III (Rome, 1752).
External links
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company.
Martín de Valencia · Francisco de Soto · Martín de Jesús · Juan Juárez · Antonio de Ciudad Rodrigo · Toribio de Benavente Motolinia · García de Cisneros · Luis de Fuensalida · Juan de Ribas · Francisco Jiménez · Andrés de Córdoba · Juan de PalosCategories:- 1534 deaths
- Franciscans
- Spanish Christian missionaries
- Christian missionaries in Mexico
- 16th-century Spanish people
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.