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In the year before her pen is silenced and less than three before she falls
victim to the plague while caring for her sick Sisters, Sor Juana
attests to a legal document concerning her convent’s economic investments.
She was the nunnery’s contadora (bookkeeper). By way of horribly
evocative contrast, opposite her signature on the facing page is that of Francisco
Aguiar y Seijas, Archbishop of Mexico, the misogynist who caused her to give
up her writing and quasi-secular ways.

Able to bully the most gifted member of his religious community only following
the return to Spain of her last viceregal patron and protector, the Marquis
de la Laguna, Aguiar y Seijas applied increasing pressure to Sor Juana and
the prioress of her Hieronymite convent. It took him from 1688 until 1693
to put “la decima Musa” “in her place.”
Documents signed by the polymath Sor Juana are very rare and highly sought
after; this one desirably shows the trust her Sisters placed in her.
The
pairing of her signature with her arch enemy's is chilling and visually impactful.
In very good condition.
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Provenance: Alfredo Chavero's copy, with his bookplate on front pastedown and his stamp on the title-page.
Contemporary half black morocco over green and grey stone-patterned boards. A very good copy. (21739)
Medina, Mexico, 10842; Garritz, Impresos novohispanos, 1826; Sutro, Supplement, 125. Folded and never bound; uncut, unopened. Small hole in blank area of inner area of title-page and its conjugate. Faint stain. (21278)
Scarce: Searches of OCLC, RLIN, and NUC locate
only a Bancroft Library copy in the U.S.
Sutro 166; Steele 67; Medina, Mexico, 11662; Garritz 4020. Folded as issued. Some pencilling. Clean copy.
Uncommon: Via OCLC, RLIN, and NUC we trace only the copies at the Sutro and Bancroft libraries.
Medina, Mexico, 11719; Sutro 148; Steele 81, 82; Garritz 4240. Folded as issued; a little dog-earing and some short tears in fore-margin. A very decent copy of a very uncommon pamphlet.
Hard to find outside of California! All copies traced in the U.S. are in that state (Bancroft, Huntington, Sutro libraries).
Not in Medina, Mexico. Garritz 3445; Steele 66; Sutro 125. Folded as issued; old stitching holes. A clean, crisp copy.
Expediente concerning military discipline. Included are certified copies of original decrees by Secretary of the Army Galvez and portions of royal decrees, as well as a printed document. Specifically detailed are the punishments for first-time deserters, second timers, and third-time or more runways.
Very good condition. Sewn.
Medina, Mexico, 11586; Steele 12; Sutro 120; Garritz, Impresos novohispanos, 3227. Removed from a nonce volume; stapled. Some foxing, a little soiling, a few short tears, and a small wormhole in the lower inner corner. A few pencilled notations.
Barcia y Zambrana, José de. Epistola exhortatoria en orden a que los predicadores evangelicos no priven de la doctrina a las almas en los sermones de fiestas. Puebla: Impr. de D. Fernandez de Leon, 1693. Small 4to. [3] ff., 106 pp. Uncommon: We locate five copies in the U.S.
Medina, Puebla, 159. Contemporary limp vellum with ties. Front hinge (inside) partially open and old repair to top of spine; text block starting to separate from binding, but still strong. Large private ownership stamp on front free endpaper. Unidentified marca de fuego on top edge. In all, a decent copy. (25111)
Removed from a nonce volume. Clean, nice.
La puntual observancia Do It Right
Belaunzarán y Ureña, José María de Jesús. Quinta carta pastoral que sobre la puntual observancia de los sagrados ritos y ceremonias, en la celebracion de la santa misa y administracion de los santos sacramentos, dirige a su clero.... Mexico: Impr. de Luis Abadiano y Valdes, 1836. 8vo. 34 pp.
$100.00
A call for attention to detail in the celebration of mass and other clerical duties and obligations.
Removed from a nonce volume. Clean and nice.
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The
Threat of Protestantism
Belaunzarán y Ureña, José María de Jesús. Segunda carta pastoral que dirige a su clero y diocesanos..., el...obispo de Monterey [sic]. México: Impr. de Luis Abadiano y Valdes, 1835. 8vo. 16 pp.
$100.00
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Concerns the influx of Protestant theological and doctrinal publications.
Removed from a nonce volume. Light stain in upper outer corners, and on title-page (only) in an additional few places. Still, a crisp, good copy.
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Belaunzarán y Ureña, José María de Jesús. Septima carta pastoral que el...obispo de Monterey, dirige a su venerable clero secular y regular y diocesanos. Mexico: Impreso por Jose Uribe y Alcalde, 1838. 8vo. 14 pp.
$100.00
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Talks of how hard it is to be a Mexican because of the endless round of war, hunger, and turmoil, and of the need to be strong in one’s religion.
Removed from a nonce volume. Light foxing in some upper margins. Crisp.
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The Abbé Brasseur de Bourbourg travelled throughout Mexico and Central America as part of his ecclesiastical duties, and channeled his interest in archeology and antiquities into a number of publications on the original Mesoamerican sources he collected or copied. The present work includes commentary by him on the Chichicastenango manuscript, and much speculation regarding the prehistoric connections between the Old World and the New.
Leclerc, Bibliotheca Americana, 1082; Sabin 7437. Contemporary half morocco and paper-covered sides, spine gilt extra; edges/corners rubbed, small repairs to spine and joints. Front free endpaper with institutional rubber-stamp; back pastedown with rubber-stamp partially touching the small affixed ticket of a New York bookseller. Outer margin of half-title and one other leaf chipped. A few leaves towards back of volume unopened. (20651)
(Broadside Decree). Mexico (Viceroyalty). Laws, statutes, etc. 12 January 1814. Broadside. Begins: "Don Felix Maria Calleja del Rey...El Exmô. Sr. Ministro de la Guerra con fecha 14 de Junio último me comunica la Real orden siguiente...." [Mexico, 1814]. Double folio. [1] p.
This
copy printed on blue paper.
Uncommon: NUC locates only two copies (at the Bancroft and the
John Carter Brown libraries).
Garritz, Impresos novohispanos, 1917; not in Harper, Americana Iberica.
Also incorporated here are some of the poetic effusions that the statue inspired: sonnets by Manuel Antonio Valdés, Dr. Alcocer, José Manuel Sartorio, Mariano Barazabal, and José Aries de Villafañe, plus at least two whose authors are not specifically identified.
A historically important work for
Mexico during the period of May through early September, 1810, and apparently rare: Two major bibliographies fail to list it, and NUC Pre-1956, OCLC, and RLIN combined locate only four copies, although there is a fifth at the Sutro.
The drop-title of this item is “Memoria principal de la piedad y lealtad del pueblo de México, en los solemnes cultos de nuestra Señora de los Remedios, desde su llegada hasta su regreso al santuario de Totoltepec.”
Medina, Mexico, 10436; Garritz, Impresos novohispanos, 624; Sutro 71; not in Steele; not in Palau. As issued, without a title-page but with a dated dedication leaf that serves as the front wrapper and is integral with the blank back wrapper. Worming in upper and foremargins. Staining in lower outer corner of pp. 25 to end, heaviest at end. Small loss of lower outer corner of the rear wrapper. Overall, a good+ copy of this important work on “the other” Virgin that is important in Mexico. (24592)
In this edition Lic. Pablo de Mendibil has edited the letters into four large chapters and added
lithographic portraits of Hidalgo, Morelos, Bravo, Guerrero, and Guadalupe Victoria. They are variously from originals by Gauci or unidentified artists, and are lithographed by either R.Cooper or Englemann & Co.
Sabin 47810; Palau 163362 (under Mendibil). Mid–19th century half red leather, flat spine, machine-made marbled paper on covers and as endpapers, marbled edges. Leather abraded and refurbished; interior clean and nice. (21727)
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