By wills of 1327 and 1329 it is stated that a church and hospital already existed -this would be for pilgrims, which indicates that there would be not a few-; —. Probably the priest who ran it would depend on the nearby parish of Alía, diocese of Toledo.
D. Pedro Gómez Barroso,
elected bishop of Cartagena in 1326 and later made a Cardinal, was formerly
lieutenant of the sanctuary, and did not leave this office until his death in
1342, because, although he could not remain there, he had a procurator or
substitute.
Since the beginning of the
14th century, the sanctuary was acquiring and cultivating land. Alfonso XI knew
him very well from his youth: In his hunting book he describes the mountains of
Trujillo, and of which Guadalupe says: "they are good bear mountains in
summer." The king, along with his fondness for hunting, acquired great
devotion to the Virgin of Guadalupe, as he himself affirmed in later letters, and
in 1330 he ordered the church to be expanded, already in ruins, so that
"the people who they come in pilgrimage».
The arrival of the Marinid
Moroccans then took place, who defeated the Castilian squadron and occupied
Gibraltar, threatening to invade the Christian kingdoms. Alfonso XI, aided by
the Portuguese, presented them with battle on the Salado River (Cádiz
province). Distressed, seeing that he only had 14,000 horsemen with 25,000
pawns, and that the enemy was up to ten times greater according to some historians,
he "thought he was defeated." So, although his private life left much
to be desired, he entrusted himself to the Virgin of Guadalupe, to whom he
later attributed the great victory with enormous loot and death inflicted on
the enemy, with hardly any casualties of his own, on October 29, 1340.
Fulfilling his promise, he
made important donations to the sanctuary and managed to establish it as a
priory of royal patronage. It was governed by secular priors from 1341 to 1389
when, renouncing royal patronage, the church became a monastery and the order
of S. Jerome was urged to accept it, despite his resistance. These monks,
founded shortly before, had their mother house in Lupiana (Guadalajara) and
were highly esteemed for their virtue, which is why Felipe II also entrusted
his monastery of El Escorial to them.
Universal
devotion to the Virgin of Guadalupe
Especially Isabel la
Católica, following the tradition of her ancestors, liked to go to Guadalupe
—she called it her paradise. At 13 years old she was the first time of her, and
no less than 20 of her in the 28 years of Queen of her.
The monks helped her
enormously in the war in Granada. In Guadalupe, the Catholic Monarchs signed
the definitive letter so that Columbus would be given facilities on his projected
trip. There he also wanted Mrs. Isabel to keep her will (despite which she took
and remains in the Simancas Archive).
Returning from the first
voyage, the "Santa María" having been wrecked and the
"Pinta" lost sight of, the third caravel, the "Niña", was
about to perish in the raging ocean on February 14, 1493. Christopher Columbus
offered the Virgin of Guadalupe a candle weighing five pounds of wax, which
would be carried by the lucky winner. Each one vowed to fulfill the promise if
she touched him, and it was Columbus himself, who went barefoot and in a
penitent suit to the sanctuary. On his second trip, he called the first large
island he found Guadalupe, and to this day its patron saint is the Virgin of
Guadalupe, although in 1635 it fell into the hands of France (it has 1,780 km2
and about 300,000 inhabitants). After this second trip he returned to the
monastery of Guadalupe in 1496, and there two Indians he brought were baptized:
they are the first known converts.
Rigging the first three
caravels cost 1,140,000 maravedises, which were not obtained by selling the
queen's jewels, but rather lent by the Valencian Luis de Santángelo, D.
Fernando's treasurer, but which were paid to him on May 5, 1492 by the Bishop
of Badajoz. Later it would also be Extremadura that produced the majority of
the great conquerors of America and its settlers. Of the 8 great conquerors, 7
were from Extremadura: Hernán Cortés (Medellín, Badajoz), Francisco Pizarra
(Trujillo, Cáceres), Núñez de Balboa (Jerez de los Caballeros, Badajoz). Pedro
de Alvarado (Badajoz). Hernando de Soto (Jerez de los Caballeros), Sebastián de
Belalcázar (then belonging to Extremadura, today Córdoba). Pedro de Valdivia
(Campanile, Badajoz). González de Quesada (Córdoba, the only non-Extremaduran).
In second line figures, although there are already Castilians, Basques,
Andalusians; They are from Extremadura: Gonzalo and Hernando Pizarra, Francisco
Alvarado, Diego García de Paredes, Francisco de Orellana, Nuflo de Chaves,
Nicolás de Ovando, the first colonizer of America, on whose expedition 1,200
Extremadurans already embarked. This may explain why the Virgin of Extremadura
is the one from America. (Aragonese hardly went to America, not so much because
it was forbidden to them, but because the Mediterranean was the area of their
influence and expansion). Above all, it is that this Extremaduran invocation of
the Virgin was the most popular in the kingdoms of Castile, the national one,
so to speak. In whose expedition 1,200 Extremadurans already embarked. This may
explain why the Virgin of Extremadura is the one from America. (Aragonese
hardly went to America, not so much because it was forbidden to them, but
because the Mediterranean was the area of their influence and expansion).
Above all, it is that this Extremaduran invocation of the Virgin was the most
popular in the kingdoms of Castile, the national one, so to speak. In whose
expedition 1,200 Extremadurans already embarked. This may explain why the
Virgin of Extremadura is the one from America. (Aragonese hardly went to
America, not so much because it was forbidden to them, but because the
Mediterranean was the area of their influence and expansion). Above all, it
is that this Extremaduran invocation of the Virgin was the most popular in the
kingdoms of Castile, the national one, so to speak.
But the Sanctuary of
Guadalupe also had a, today unknown, universal projection. It can be said,
without exaggeration, that from the 14th to the 18th century, Guadalupe was
what Lourdes is today. Fernando the Catholic himself was more closely linked
with Guadalupe than with El Pilar. He was leaving the monastery in January
1470, when emissaries from Aragon reached him, notifying him that he was
already king due to the death of his father Juan II. And he was going to the
monastery in January 1516, when he overtook his death in Madrigalejo (Cáceres),
in a house belonging to the Jerónimos, a branch of Guadalupe. (At that time the
most revered Virgin in the kingdom of Aragon was Montserrat, who was spread
throughout their possessions, and in Rome the church of Montserrat, which was
the national temple of Aragon, still exists as a Spanish church).
Portugal rivaled Castile in
devotion and donations to Guadalupe, and her images are still venerated in
Evora, Braga, Vila do Bispo, Zamora Correia, and even in Goa and Cochin
(India).
In many other places, even in
Poland, images dedicated to Guadalupe are venerated, which proves the
extensiveness of her devotion. And this was because the monks did not allow it
to be copied, and they were opposed to its being worshiped outside its sanctuary,
so as not to diminish devotion to it, and to avoid taking advantage of the name
from obtaining alms to the detriment of those destined to sustain the notable
cult and charity of the monastery, whose "demands", people of
recognized honesty, traveled through Spain and America collecting alms.
It was also ordered in
Castile from the 15th century, and from the 16th century in America, a
mandatory mandate in all wills of a certain amount, in favor of the sanctuary
of Guadalupe, a privilege that it shared with Santiago de Compostela and Rome,
and lasted until the century XVIII.
The devotion of the Basques
to the sanctuary of Guadalupe was equally remarkable, and more than fifty
miracles to them are collected in their codices, only in the fifteenth century.
The majority made by men from the sea of Zumaya, Lequeitio, Deva, Bermeo,
Fuenterrabía. Oyarzum, Rentería, Orduña... Already in the fourteenth century, a
famous poet from Alava, the chancellor Pedro López de Ayala, invoked her from
his prison in Portugal: «Lady, since I heard your acorros [relief] I hope in
you; At your house in Guadalupe I promise to be a pilgrim». It would be for
something that when, at the end of the 15th century, two shepherd boys from
Mount Jaizquíbel (Fuenterrabía) found an image of the Virgin more or less
miraculously (tradition says that the image gave off a light that attracted
them), they named it Guadalupe. And Guadalupe Fort is also called today the one
that there, undermined in the mountain,
In Madrid, in 1603, after
many difficulties, the Jerónimos of S. Jerónimo el Real obtained a copy of the
image of Guadalupe. Before her the beginning of the reign of all the kings from
Felipe III to Alfonso XIII was celebrated. (The religious solemnity of the
beginning of the reign of Juan Carlos I also took place there, but now the
image is on another side altar).
Some exceptional witnesses
attest to Guadalupe as "the medieval Lourdes". Sharchek, a German
chronicler of Bohemia, wrote in 1467: "It is famous that in no corner of
Christendom is there usually such a great gathering of people for devotion and
piety, as here." The Italian ambassador Andrés Navagiero in 1526:
"This site is close to the border of Portugal, and a large number of
people moved by their devotion to this Virgin come from this kingdom and from
all of Spain." Paul III, in a brief from 1535 granting a jubilee, affirms:
"Great concourses of people from all over the world come to
Guadalupe." The historian friar José de Sigüenza assured in 1600: «People
from all over Spain attend; of various towns in Portugal and other more distant
kingdoms and lordships. It is the group of the most numerous that come together
in Europe by title of devotion.
And so we could continue
highlighting the great devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe that all of Mexico
professes to her. For there is no city or town where a sanctuary or a chapel or
an oratory is dedicated to her name. Finally, she has been given the title of
QUEEN OF MEXICO AND EMPERATRIS OF AMERICA.
With this last article we end
with the writings about Our Lady of Guadalupe. I admit that our contribution
was poor, but made with all our hearts, may Our Lady of Guadalupe bless you
dear readers.
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