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Maarten Janssen, 2014-
Author(s) | Eugenio González de María |
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Addressee(s) | Nicolás Gómez Ramírez |
In English | Letter from Eugenio González de María, a presbyter of Algete, to Nicolás Gómez Ramírez, a revenue collector agent. The author apologises for not having answered before and gives some news. They deal with some mutual business with Nicolás Hernández, who is a client of the addressee. He lets him know he has sent him some goods and provides information on the Blessed Agustina Salgado, who has been having raptures and is in a delicate condition. He asks him to pray for her. The trial for fooled and self-delusion against Agustina Salgado, blessed of Our Lady of Carmel, occurred between 1712 and 1716. She was found guilty. The correspondence relates to Nicolás Hernández’s healing process, who suffered from an unknown affection that requested the blessed’s intervention. Agustina Salgado was staying at her nephew’s house, Andrés Merlo, because she was ill and she was found once in a very bad condition «rolled up on herself, very injured, with puzzled arms and broken bones in her body without being able to move [...] word was passed around that an evil spirit had come upon her»(7v). Eugenio González de María, the sender of some of the letters from this set, witnessed one of the moments in which the defendant was under the influence of the devil. Nicolas Hernández heard that Agustina Salgado was a virtuous woman and, before going to her, he inquired Eugenio Aguado about her capabilities (PS8023). Aguado explains him she was a very spiritual woman and, consequently, Nicolás Hernández decided to contact her. He intended for her to entrust him to God and also ask her if it was appropriate for him to marry María Teresa Pezeño. Agustina Salgado told him that the marriage would please God. So they got married in 1712 and ever since they did Nicolás Hernández suffered from an unknown soul affection (127v). Fl.128. Eventually, Nicolás Hernández denounced Agustina through Manuel Garzo and the defendant tried to convince Nicolás Hernández to leave the businesses in which his agent, Nicolás Gómez Ramírez, was working so that he did not get sick as it happened to himself. It seems that the ulterior motive behind her demands was to pass these businesses to her relatives. The letters are provided to the process by their addressees. On the left margin of the folio 166r, the inquisitors wrote down “4 ª". On the left margin of folio 167r it is written down: “this letter is quoted by witness 3, folio 22 bn at the beginning”. Besides, there is a mark covering the text in which the blessed is mentioned. |
Page 166r | > 166v |
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[4] | çias |
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[8] | pondido |
[9] | do |
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[11] | ñar |
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[13] | sinua |
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