Main Menu
Powered by <TEI:TOK>
Maarten Janssen, 2014-
Author(s) | Francisco de la Iglesia |
---|---|
Addressee(s) | Rosa de Carbia |
In English | Letter from Francisco de la Iglesia to Rosa de Carbia. The author writes his wife, Rosa de Carbia, to give her his opinion about the marriage of some relatives, the sale of some properties and the profit made from the crops. In 1827, Juana Cristobo, represented by her husband Francisco López, brought a lawsuit against Francisco de la Iglesia, represented by his son-in-law Pedro de la Iglesia. They were all residents in San Miguel de Cora (Pontevedra). Juana Cristobo, daughter of Rosa Verde, had three aunts and uncles: Manuel Verde, Andrés Verde and María Antonia Verde. The first two uncles were considered dead after having been missing for 80 years, and their properties were inherited by María Antonia Verde, who gave them to her son, Francisco de la Iglesia, and to his wife, Rosa de Carbia. Juana Cristobo brought a lawsuit against them, demanding half of her maternal uncles' inheritance. At that moment, Francisco de la Iglesia was not there, and his whereabouts were unknown, so he was represented by his son. Rosa de Carbia, however, presented this letter to demonstrate that her husband was not missing and that he was in Cádiz, so he did not need to be represented by someone else. At first instance, the tribunal ruled in favour of Francisco de la Iglesia, because the death of Manuel Verde and Andrés Verde had not been proved. However, Francisco López appealed this sentence, and eventually the tribunal ruled in his favour, because he managed to demonstrate that Manuel Verde y Andrés Verde were actually dead. |
Bere
yo
porsaber
ludado
ente
Deczones
ran
ger
es
tado
ño
Gante
cho
cho
por
no
tiña
tigos
Anto
ero
ros
Deses
chon
Berlo
lguna
mos
ta
D
Des
nto
ando
nesq
es
testaciones
cansar
Da
a
lia
sido
Legenda: | Expanded • Unclear • Deleted • Added • Supplied |
Download XML • Download text • Wordcloud • Facsimile view • Manuscript line view • Pageflow view • Sentence view