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Nuns Navigating the Spanish Empire

Posted By: readerXXI
Nuns Navigating the Spanish Empire

Nuns Navigating the Spanish Empire
by Sarah E. Owens
English | 2017 | ISBN: 0826358942 | 208 Pages | PDF | 2.48 MB

Nuns Navigating the Spanish Empire tells the remarkable story of a group of nuns who traveled halfway around the globe in the seventeenth century to establish the first female Franciscan convent in the Far East.

In 1620 Sor Jeronima de la Asuncion (1556–1630) and her cofounders left their cloistered convent in Toledo, Spain, journeying to Mexico to board a Manila galleon on their way to the Philippines. Sor Jeronima is familiar to art historians for her portrait by Velazquez that hangs in the Prado Museum in Madrid. What most people do not know is that one of her travel companions, Sor Ana de Cristo (1565–1636), wrote a long biographical account of Sor Jeronima and their fifteen-month odyssey. Drawing from Sor Ana’s manuscript, other archival sources, and rare books, Owens’s study offers a fascinating view of travel, evangelization, and empire.

"Sarah Owens, a professor of Spanish at the College of Charleston, has successfully used Sor Ana's account and other records to give life to an intrepid group of settlers. She also reveals how women played powerful roles in shaping the Spanish empire overseas in the early modern era. This book offers valuable insight into social dynamics after the wars of Spanish global conquest, when the conquistadors became administrators and settlers, remaking cities in their own Hispanic image." - Post and Courier (Charleston, S.C.)