Cardinal Morton-of talk at whose table there are recollections in “Utopia”-delighted in the quick wit of young Thomas More. sent to the Tower was busy afterwards in hostility to Richard and was a chief adviser of Henry VII., who in 1486 made him Archbishop of Canterbury, and nine months afterwards Lord Chancellor. Cardinal Morton had been in earlier days that Bishop of Ely whom Richard III. The patron used, afterwards, his wealth or influence in helping his young client forward in the world. The youth wore his patron’s livery, and added to his state. It was not unusual for persons of wealth or influence and sons of good families to be so established together in a relation of patron and client. Anthony’s School, in Threadneedle Street, he was placed, as a boy, in the household of Cardinal John Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury and Lord Chancellor. Meaney’s line by line comparison of Quiroga’s ordenanzas for the government of the hospitals and More’s Utopia in his “Bishop of Utopia,” Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia, LX (December, 1949), 197-212.Sir Thomas More, son of Sir John More, a justice of the King’s Bench, was born in 1478, in Milk Street, in the city of London. ![]() Finally, the author might have saved himself considerable effort had he used John W. ![]() This is not an argument against chattel slavery, as Father Warren would have it. Hence such change in status would be unjust. Such purchases, he says, must be prohibited because the conditions of slavery are spelled out in Spanish law this was not the case in Indian servitude. For example, as a jurist, Quiroga considers the right of Spaniards to purchase Indians already enslaved by their fellows. This position seems much more plausible than Father Warren’s belief that the attraction for More came suddenly from his reading of the Utopia after arriving in Mexico.įather Warren truncates Quiroga’s careful and lengthy discussion of slavery. If the details of his early life could be resolved, they might reveal that long-time influences shaped his affinity for More’s utopian ideas, as Zavala has suggested. Some of the unresloved problems of such a biography must hopefully depend upon the discovery of new materials, such as the almost complete void concerning Quiroga’s years in Spain before his arrival in the New World in 1531 or the testing of the chroniclers’ accounts of his seven-year sojourn in Spain from 1547 to 1554. Moreover, because of Father Warren’s self-imposed limitation to consider only the pueblo-hospitals, Quiroga still awaits an English biographer. His diligent search through the Spanish archives yielded little to the materials already known, and the errors and omissions discovered in published sources result in no substantial modification of the traditional account. The principal documents upon which Father Warren depends have long been published, though somewhat faultily, and in large measures exploited by the Mexican writers. There follows in principally narrative form the vicissitudes of the two communities of Indians from their foundation in the 1530s until Quiroga’s death in 1565. So sketchy are the data that the author cannot even be sure whether Quiroga was fifty-seven or sixty years old when he first crossed the ocean. He begins with a brief bibliographical essay and a sketch of Quiroga’s life in Spain. Father Warren has performed a useful service in bringing to a wider audience the account of the now famous pueblo-hospitals and their founder. In English, however, there have been only scattered articles. ![]() Among these were his sympathy with the native cultures, his narrow concept of the role of Spaniards and Spanish dominion in the New World, and his intellectual kinship with the English humanist, Thomas More. In the present century there has been a quickening interest Nicolás León, Aguayo Spencer, and Silvio Zavala have collected archival materials and interested themselves in manifold aspects of his thought and work. How well he succeeded is attested to by the shrines and the rich local traditions that have preserved his memory among the Indians and which brought him to the attention of his first biographer, Juan José Moreno, in 1766. Failing in this, he labored indefatigably and at his own expense to bring the reality two Indian communities, one on the outskirts of Mexico City and the other on the shores of Lake Pátzcuaro in Michoacán, both working models of his master plan. Vasco de Quiroga, judge and bishop in 16th-century New Spain, tried to prick Spanish official consciences into building an Indian commonwealth which would be primitively Christian and tolerantly humanist.
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