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NEW & OLD
WORLD 
HISPANICA Una miscelánea
A B Ca-Cb Cc-Cz D-Fe Ff-G H-J K-L
Ma-Mew Mex-Mz N-O P-R Sa-So Sp-U V-Z
Let's NOT Bring Back
the Inquisition
S., Y. O. Anecdota importante relativa a la Inquisicion de España, y varias reflexiones sobre el mismo asunto. Mejico: Impr. de D.M. Ontiveros, 1820. Small 4to. 35, [1 (blank)] pp.
$375.00
Strong but not rabid anti-Inquisition thoughts, expressed in 63 numbered paragraphs. Also addresses the question of freedom of the press and its intersection with the role of the Inquisition in barring unapproved ideas. A good contribution to the history of Human Rights.
Uncommon: OCLC locates only the copies at the Bancroft and Chilean National libraries; although, clearly, there is or was one in the Sutro Library.
Sutro 175. Removed from a nonce volume. A good clean copy. (21742)
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Printed in Philadelphia!
Salazar, J[osé] M[aría]. Observations on the political reforms of Colombia. Tr. from the manuscript by Edward Barry. Philadelphia: Pr. by William Stavely, 1828. 8vo. 47, [1 (blank)] pp.
$1250.00
The author of this was a native of Antioquia, a lawyer, and a diplomat; he wrote this treatise while serving as the Venezuelan plenipotentiary minister to the United States. It was printed for the first time in Philadelphia, and appeared simultaneously in two editions, one in English and the other in Spanish. Writing in hopes of influencing the congress of Grand Colombia, which in 1826 was considering revising the constitution, Salazar offers his noteworthy, extended thoughts on what political organization would be best.
This is a very scarce book. Palau did not know of this English translation, and fewer than eight U.S. libraries report owning a copy of it.
Palau 286648 (for the Spanish-language edition); Sabin 75576; Shoemaker 35093a. Recent quarter dark green morocco with marbled paper sides. Pages 3 through 6 are supplied in xerographic facsimile. Browning and foxing.
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How a
Hacienda Grew
San Nicolas el Chico, Hacienda de. Manuscript: “Titulos pertenecientes a la Hacienda de San Nicolas el Chico de la propriedad del Señor Gorgonio de la Concha. In Spanish, on paper. Mexico & Tulancingo: 1643–1753. Folio. 75 ff.
$2400.00
The origins of the Hacienda de San Nicolas el Chico in the vicinity of Tulancingo, Mexico, date from the 1590s when the crown reclaimed land and grants of Indian labor and tribute that had fallen into disuse, unclaimed, or into dispute.
In 1643 the crown offered for sale two caballerías of land and the rights to two accesses to water for that land — and Pedro del Castillo of Tulancingo successfully acquired the land and water rights for 200 pesos.
The documents here are mostly originals with a few notarial certified copies of earlier writings, and they document the ownership and growth of a small-size hacienda over the period of approximately a hundred years.
Written in a variety of hands. All documents in good to very good condition. With an early 20th century calligraphic “title-page,” this with a tear and some tatters. (25741)
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Sardó, Joaquín. Relación histórica y moral de la portentosa imagen de N. Sr. Jesucristo crucificado aparecido en una de las cuevas de S. Miguel de Chalma, hoy real convento y santuario de este nombre, de religiosos ermitaños de N.G.P. y doctor S. Agustin, en esta Nueva España, y en esta provincia del santísimo nombre de Jesús de México. Con los compendios de las vidas de los dos venerables religiosos legos y primeros anacoretas de este santo desierto, F. Bartolomé de Jesús María, y F. Juan de San Josef. [Mexico]: Casa de Arizpe, 1810. Small 4to. [7] ff., 386 pp., plt.
$950.00

One has here the standard and well-thought-of account of the Sanctuary of Jesus Christ at Chalma, the second most visited pilgrimage site in Mexico. The cave housing the Christ Crucified statue was a pre-Columbian sacred site and pilgrimage destination; miraculously the pre-Columbian statue with magical healing power morphed into the Christ image soon after it was visited by early Augustinian friars, who took over the cave and the surrounding area and build a church and religious compound. The original Christ statue was destroyed by fire in the 18th century.
Click either image for an enlargement.
In addition to the wealth of information here about the origins of the cave as a site of miracles, its history throughout the colonial period, and accounts of miracles occurring there, this work also has important
biographies of Augustinians of the 17th century who played important roles in the care and perpetuation of the site.
The engraving shows the cave, the Christ figure, pilgrims, and Augustinian friars.
Palau 302085; Medina, Mexico, 10516. 19th-century mottled sheep, abraded, missing spine label; spine is cracking down center, and volume may sometime split into two halves. Some brown stains, most notable in inner and upper or lower margins; lower outside corner of title–page neatly excised. Old ink notes and scribblings.
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(Satires). [drop-title] Suplica de los pobres al Doctor Don Francisco Bullon. [Spain, ca. 1710?]. Small 4to. [2] ff. [with] [drop-title] Segvndo memorial del pobre de las covachvelas al Doctor Bvllon, este año de 1710. [Spain, 1710]. 8vo. [4] ff.
$325.00


A
17th-Century Set
Segneri, Paolo. El incredvlo sin escvsa. Obra...en qve se demvestra, qve no puede dexar de conocer, qual es la verdadera religion, quien quiere conocerla. Tradvcida de la lengva toscana à la castellana por don Juan de Espinola, Baeza, Echaburu.... [Volume I:] Barcelona: Impr. de Maria Marti, viuda, 1723; [volume II:] Madrid: Juan Garcia Infançon, 1696. 2 vols. Small 4to. I: [8] ff., 320 pp., [2] ff. II: [12] ff., 357, [1] pp., [17] ff.
$250.00

Segneri was an important and prolific 17th-century writer. Offered here is a mixed set:
The third edition of volume I, but first edition of volume II.
Palau 305907 & 305909; not in DeBacker-Sommervogel, but see: V, 1076. Vellum over
light boards; remnants of ties. Old ownership marks of a convent library in Bogotá. Patch of
vellum missing from back cover of volume II and that volume's front hinge (inside) reinforced
with tape. Bookplates of a U.S., 20th-century woman collector.


From a
FINE Woman Printer
Segura, José de. Manual de administrar los santos sacramentos de la eucharistia, y extremauncion, y oficiar los entierros, segun el uso, y observacion del Sagrario de la Santa Iglesia Metropolitana desta ciudad. Mexico: Por Doña Maria de Benavides, Viuda de Juan de Ribera, 1697. Small 8vo. [4] ff., 130 pp., [2] ff.
$2225.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Specifically designed for use of the Bethlemite Order in its convents
and hospitals in Mexico, based on the use of the Mexico City Cathedral! Illustrated
with a full-page woodcut of the Christ in the manger with Mary and Joseph. Father
Angel Serra's name is also associated with this volume as its compiler, and
the volume is from the press of one of Mexico's famous woman printers.
Quite rare: Via OCLC we locate only three copies in the U.S.
Medina, Mexico, 1680. Contemporary stiff vellum; binding
stained and lacking ties, and a little bowed. Text starting to loosen. Waterstaining
to early and late sections, paper yet strong. Withal, a good+ copy of a scarce
and important early Mexican medical-related item. (14649)
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Sigüenza y Góngora, Carlos de; José María Zelaa é Hidalgo (rev. & ed.). Glorias de Queretaro, en la fundacion y admirables progresos de la muy i. y ven. congregacion eclesiástica de presbiteros seculares de Maria Santisima de Guadalupe de Mexico, con que se ilustra y en el suntuoso templo que dedicó a su obsequio el Br. D. Juan Caballero y Ocio... que en otro tiempo escribio el Dr. D. Cárlos de Sigüenza y Góngora. Mexico: En la oficina de M.J. de Zúñiga y Ontiveros, 1803. Small 4to (19.8 cm; 7.875"). [8] ff., 235, [1] pp., [2] ff., 2 fold. plans. [bound with] Zelaa e Hidalgo, José María. Adiciones al libro de las Glorias de Querétaro, que se imprimió en México el año de mil ochocientos tres. Mexico: Imprenta de Arizpe, 1810. Small 4to (19.8 cm; 7.875"). [6] ff., 94 pp., [2] ff.
$11,000.00
Click any image above for an enlargement.
In 1680, in Mexico City, the Mexican polymath Sigüenza y Góngora
(1645–1700) published the first edition of this highly important work
of art history. Recounting the great celebrations surrounding the dedication
of the “temple of Our Lady of Guadalupe” in Querétaro that
the priest Juan Caballero y Ocio had built and donated, it not only describes
the festivities in detail (“Frailes, monjas, gigantes, tarascas, cofradías,
mulatos, indios, todos en la celebración’), but is profuse and
precise in telling of the nature and minutia of the art within the temple.

Extraordinarily difficult to find today, that 1680 work was already rare and
hard to obtain by the beginning of the 19th century — so José María
Zelaa e Hidalgo decided, in the first years of the century before last, to bring
out a new edition with some editorial revision and additions. This he accomplished
in 1803. Zelaa was a zealous historian of his home town of Querétaro,
and the combination of his scholarship with Sigüenza's earlier scholarship
made this second edition of the latter’s work a true advance. Then, in
1810, Zelaa brought out a volume entirely made up of his own reportings, and
that volume is here bound with his 1803 edition of Sigüenza.
The pairing of Zelaa’s two efforts in one volume is both uncommon and
intellectually reinforcing. But here, it is more than that: It is a personal
memento of a life’s work as well, for
this
copy bears the bookplate of the editor himself.
Provenance: Bookplate
of José María Zelaa é Hidalgo. 20th-century rubber-stamp
with initials only of a private Mexican collector.
Sigüenza: Medina, Mexico, 9637; Palau 312964. Zelaa:
Medina, Mexico, 10540; Garritz 940; not in Palau. Publisher's sheep,
gilt spine; small amount of leather missing from base of spine. Collector’s
stamp partly offset to title-page; otherwise, the occasional stray stain only.
“Association
copies” don’t get much more “associated” than this.
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Uncommon
& Carefully
Printed
Society
of Jesus. Constitutiones Societatis Iesu. Cum earum
declarationibus. Romae: In Collegio Romano eiusdem Societatis, 1615. 8vo. 309,
[71] pp.
[SOLD]
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Early Latin printing of the Jesuit Rule first adopted and published in 1556. Originally written in Spanish by St. Ignatius of Loyola, the work was given its official Latin translation by Juan Polanco, Ignatius's personal secretary, who had assisted in the document's composition; this translation was first printed in 1558.
The contents include “Primvm ac generale examen iis omnibvs, qvi in Societatem Iesv admitti petent, proponendum”; “Constitvtiones cum declarationibus”; “Formvla votorvm simplicivm, quae professi emittunt post professionem, iuxta constitutiones; extracta ex prima Congregatione generali, & recognita à tertia”; “Index in examen, & constitutiones”; each of those sections starts with a decorative capital. An extensive index is provided.
Much attention was paid overall to the attractive typography of this work, which was printed at the Jesuits' Roman college. A four-element woodcut architectural title-page border, woodcut initials and tailpieces, and carefully laid-out columns of roman and italic text adorn the volume. The text of the Constitutiones is printed in roman type and the “declarationibus” that supplements them is printed in italic, sometimes surrounding the text, other times in a column to the right or left.
Scarce: Only three U.S. institutions report holdings.
DeBacker-Sommervogel, V, 78; Graesse, II, 255. Recent calf, covers ruled in blind in period style: blind rules above
and below each band extending onto the covers forming a V with a trefoil at the end of each V; each band with fine gilt rule. Title-page with inked Jesuit ownership inscription dated 1625. Light foxing throughout; waterstaining to lower and outer portions of some early leaves. All edges stained red. A handsome production in a good copy. (23547)
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