Francisca Nuñez de Carabajal

Francisca Nuñez de Carabajal

Francisca Nuñez de Carabajal (ca. 1540, Portugal—December 8, 1596, Mexico City) was a Marano (converted Jew) in New Spain executed by the Inquisition for "judaizing" in 1596.

Around 1580 Don Luis de Carabajal, Spanish governor of Nuevo León, brought with him to Mexico his brother-in-law, Don Francisco Rodríguez de Matos, and his sister, Doña Francisca Nuñez de Carabajal, with their children, Doña Isabel, the oldest, 25 years of age, widow of Gabriel de Herrera; Doña Catalina, Doña Mariana, Doña Leonor, Don Baltasar, Don Luis, Miguel and Anica (the last two being very young). Another son, Caspar, a pious young man, perhaps a monk, in the convent of Santo Domingo, Mexico, had arrived a short time before. Doña Catalina and Doña Leonor married respectively Antonio Diaz de Caceres (see "Caceres family") and Jorge de Almeida — two Spanish merchants residing in Mexico City and interested in the Tasco mines. The entire family then removed to the capital, where, in the year 1590, while in the midst of prosperity, and seemingly leading Christian lives, they were seized by the Inquisition. Doña Isabel was tortured until she implicated the whole of the Carabajal family.

The whole family was forced to confess and abjure at a public auto de fé, celebrated on Saturday, February 24, 1590. Luis de Carabajal the younger, with his mother and four sisters, was condemned to perpetual imprisonment, and his brother, Baltasar, who had fled upon the first warning of danger, was, along with his father, Francisco Rodriguez de Matos, deceased, burnt in effigy. In January, 1595, Doña Francisca and her children were accused of a relapse into Judaism, and convicted. During their imprisonment they were tempted to communicate with one another on Spanish pear seeds, on which they wrote touching messages of encouragement to remain true to their faith. At the resulting auto da fé, Doña Francisca and her children, Isabel, Catalina, Leonor, and Luis, died at the stake, together with Manuel Diaz, Beatriz Enriquez, Diego Enriquez, and Manuel de Lucena. Of her other children, Doña Mariana, who lost her reason for a time, was tried and put to death at an auto da fé held in Mexico City on March 25, 1601; Anica, the youngest child, being "reconciled" at the same time.

ources

*JewishEncyclopedia|article=Carabajal|author=Cyrus Adler and George Alexander Kohut|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=138&letter=C
*Vicenta Riva Palacio, "El Libro Rojo", Mexico, 1870.
*C.K. Landis, "Carabajal the Jew, a Legend of Monterey", Vineland, N. J., 1894.


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