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Negotiating Sanctity: Holy Women in Sixteenth-Century Spain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
The past ten years have seen great strides in our understanding of the many forces at work in Counter-Reformation Spain. Historians and hispanists have demonstrated clearly that the Spanish religious landscape was complex and have elucidated several problems of interpretation. How readily did Spanish monarchs, religious leaders, and laity follow the decrees of the Council of Trent? How influential was the Spanish Inquisition in enforcing religious beliefs and behaviors? In what ways did religious reform involve assumptions about gender and differing religious roles for men and women? Finally, and more to my point, how did men and women respond to such assumptions and roles?
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References
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31. Urban VIII instituted the beatification procedure and introduced a fifty-year pause between the death of the candidate and the beginning of the canonization procedure. See Burke, pp. 46–47.Google Scholar
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34. Examples of sixteenth-century religious figures investigated by the Spanish Inquisition include: Bartolomé de Carranza, Luis de León, Ignatius Loyola, Teresa of Avila, and most of the women discussed in this paper.Google Scholar
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36. Testimonials on behalf ofTeresa were gathered as early as 1591, while the Inquisition's tribunal received criticisms of Teresa's mystical doctrine through 1593.Google Scholar
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38. See Miles, Margaret, Carnal Knowing: Female Nakedness and Religious Meaning in the Christian West (New York, 1989), p. 66: “transcending gender effectively meant that both sexuality and socialization were simultaneously rejected.’Google Scholar
39. The “manly’ woman is an established ideal within early Christianity, but there is not much literature on its manifestations in sixteenth-century Spain. One resource is McKendrick, Melveena, Theatre in Spain: 1490–1700 (Cambridge, U.K., 1989), pp. 84–131.Google ScholarFor more on the evolution of the type see Aspegren, Kerstin, The Male Woman: A Feminine Ideal in the Early Church, ed. Kieffer, Rene (Uppsala, Sweden, 1990) and Miles, Carnal Knowing, pp. 53–80.Google ScholarSee also Newman, Barbara, From Virile Woman to WomanChrist: Studies in Medieval Religion and Literature (Philadelphia, Pa., 1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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41. The confessor in question was Juan de Salinas, provincial of the Dominican order. See testimony of Báñiez, Domingo, Proceso de Salamanca (1591), in Silverio, P., ed. Biblioteca Mistica Carmelitana (BMC) 35 vols. (Burgos, Spain, 1934–1949) 18:9.Google Scholar
42. See Surtz, , The Guitar of God, pp. 6–7.Google Scholar
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44. Miles documents the development of some of these attitudes in Carnal Knowing; see, for example, p. 77.Google Scholar
45. Or it seemed to mean such things to officials of the Inquisition. Obedience was a somewhat pliable virtue; depending on their relationships with their confessors, astute women could make confessors order them to do things they actually wanted to do. See Bilinkoff, Jodi, “Confessors, Penitents, and the Construction of Identities in Early Modern Avila,’ in Diefendorf, Barbara and Hesse, Carla, eds., Culture and Identity in Early Modern Europe (1500–1800) (Ann Arbor, Mich., 1993) pp. 83–100.Google Scholar
46. See the testimony of de Zapata, Luis in Jesús Imirizaldu, Monjas y Bealas Embaucadores (Madrid, 1977), p. 33. Because cilicio can refer both to hairshirts or metal penitential devices worn as belts or bracelets, I leave the term in its original Spanish. In this case, however, it is probably safe to translate the term as “hairshirt.’Google Scholar
47. Imirizaldu, , p. 47. According to Imirizaldu, this description was written by another member of the religious community at Isabel Francisca in January of 1544.Google Scholar
48. John of the Cross, “Censura y parecer que dio el beato Padre sobre el espiritu y modo de proceder en la oracion de una religiosa de nuestra Orden, y es como sigue’ in Juan de la Cruz: Obras completas, ed. Ruano de la Iglesia, Jucinio (Madrid, 1982), p. 896.Google Scholar
49. Ibid.
50. Weber, , Teresa of Avila and the Rhetoric of Femininity, p. 159.Google Scholar
51. See Ahlgren, , Teresa of Avila, chapter 5. On the effects of Teresa's rhetoric of humility, see Weber, pp. 4–5, 164–165.Google Scholar
52. But see Saint-Saens's, Alain study of the reappropriation of early penitential models (especially Mary Magdalene and Jerome) in sixteenth-century Spain: La nostalgie du désert: L'ideal érémitique en Castille au Siecle d'Or (San Francisco, Calif., 1993).Google Scholar
53. Testimony of de la Trinidad, Ana, Proceso de Salamanca (1591) in BMC 18:44. In her penitential practice Teresa took seriously the example of Mary Magdalene, describing her experience before a statue of Christ as taking over the Magdalene's place at the foot of the cross; see her Vida 9:2. Interpreting Teresa's penitential practices is difficult. Some would argue that Teresa was, in fact, quite moderate about penitential practice, citing, for example, Teresa' s comment, “As you know, I deprecate [other severe and] excessive penances, which, if practised indiscreetly, may injure the health.’Google ScholarSee Teresa, The Way of Perfection, trans, and ed. by Peers, E. Allison (New York, 1991), p. 112. I tend to agree with Alain Saint-Saens's assessment in La nostalgie, p. 174. Although Teresa herself may well have been less severe about her penitential practices over the course of her life, the fact remains that many eyewitnesses could testify to her rigorous ascetic discipline, considered more than what the “average’ nun would practice. Because all witnesses were asked about Teresa's penitential practice as part of the series of questions designed to solicit testimony about her, such information is perhaps skewed by the process itself and the ideals of sanctity already in circulation.Google Scholar
54. Teresa probably represented the esteem of many when she claimed to have seen in divinely-inspired visions both Pedro and Catalina ascend to heaven after their deaths. See Vida 38:32 and Libro de las fundaciones 28:21, in Obras Completas. For more on Pedro de Alcántara see Vida 27:16–20.Google Scholar
55. Teresa de Jesús, Libro de las fundaciones 28:27.Google Scholar
56. Information on Catalina de Cardona, including Tomás de Jesús's vita, is available in BN ms. 3537.Google Scholar
57. Few men displayed ecstatic behavior; in sixteenth-century Spain this category was nearly exclusively confined to women because of their need to establish charismatic authority.Google Scholar
58. “Censura del P. Báñez” in de Jesús, Teresa, Obras completas (Madrid, 1984), p. 306.Google Scholar
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