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Eleno de Céspedes

Eleno de Céspedes, also known as Elena de Céspedes (1545 – died after 1588), was a Spanish surgeon who married a man and later a woman, and was tried by the Spanish Inquisition.[a] Céspedes may have been an intersex and/or transgender person, or, if a woman, may have been a lesbian and/or the first female surgeon known in Spain and perhaps in Europe.

Early life, first marriage, and travels edit

Elena de Céspedes was born around 1545 in Alhama de Granada in Andalusia, Spain, to an enslaved black Muslim woman named Francisca de Medina and a free, Christian, Castilian peasant named Pero Hernández.[5]: 30 [4][6][7]: 68  Born into slavery, and branded on the cheeks as the mulatto offspring of a slave,[7]: 68 [8][9] Céspedes was freed as a child (and took the surname of a former owner's wife),[10]: 46 [8]: 109  and married a stonemason named Cristóbal Lombardo at age fifteen or sixteen.[5]: 30 [4][2]: 58  Within a few months, while Céspedes was pregnant with his child, Lombardo left because the two did not get along.[5]: 30 [4] According to Céspedes, Lombardo died some time later.[4][3]: 15 

Céspedes said that an intersex condition became apparent while giving birth,[7]: 68 [b] and after giving birth, Céspedes left the baby boy (named Cristóbal after his father) with a friend and began to travel around Spain, working in various professions including as a tailor.[5]: 30 [4][8][2]: 58–59  After a fight during which Céspedes stabbed a pimp (and was jailed for a time), he began to wear men's instead of women's clothing, use the masculine name Eleno, and openly court women.[5]: 30 [4][c]

Céspedes then found work as a farmhand and shepherd, but an acquaintance denounced him to the corregidor who arrested him, and released him only on condition that he dress as a woman. Undeterred, he resumed dressing as a man and found work as a soldier, putting down the Morisco Revolt.[5]: 30 [4][8][2]: 58–59  Céspedes, who was literate, then purchased several books on surgery and medicine,[4] and with these and the help of a Valencian surgeon he had befriended, trained himself to be a surgeon in Madrid.[2]: 58–59 

Second marriage, arrest, and trial edit

 
The signature of Eleno de Céspedes on an Inquisition trial document.

In December 1584, Céspedes and a woman named María del Caño, the daughter of an artisan, applied to marry.[8]: 109 [11] Because Céspedes lacked facial hair, the vicar of Madrid, Juan Baptista Neroni, questioned if Céspedes was a eunuch; at either Céspedes's or Neroni's request, four men (including a doctor) examined Céspedes (from the front only) in Yepes and attested he had male genitalia and was not a eunuch, whereupon he and Caño were given a license to marry.[8]: 109 [2]: 59–60 [12]

After the banns were announced, however, two townspeople told the priest Céspedes was "male and female", with genitalia of both sexes; the priest refused to perform the marriage, and Neroni arranged for a second examination to be performed by Francisco Díaz (Philip II's doctor and a noted urologist) and Madrid doctor Antonio Mantilla on 17 February 1586.[2]: 59–60  They reported Céspedes had a normal penis and testicles, as well as a crease and aperture between them and the anus (which might indicate a vagina).[2]: 59–60  In 1586, when Céspedes was forty and Caño was twenty-four, the couple were finally married; they lived together in Yepes[2]: 59–60  in the vicinity of Toledo, Spain for a year.[4][8][d][7]: 75 

In June 1587, acting on a neighbor's accusation, the couple were arrested, charged with "sodomy",[4][10] and imprisoned in the municipal jail in Ocaña, Spain.[8] On 4 July 1587, the bailiff formally accused Céspedes of (besides sodomy) pretending to be a man, using witchcraft to appear as a man to earlier medical examiners, engaging in transvestism and, by marrying a woman, mocking the sanctity of marriage.[4][2]: 62–64  Céspedes argued that, because he had a penis when he married Caño, the marriage was legitimate.[2]: 62–64  The bailiff asked the vicar general to punish the couple severely; the penalty for female homosexuality was death.[2]: 62–64  However, the Toledo tribunal of the Spanish Inquisition ordered the secular and episcopal authorities to turn the case over to them, because the charge of witchcraft was within the Inquisition's jurisdiction; the couple were therefore transferred to an Inquisition jail in Toledo.[4][2]: 62–64 

Inquisitors focused on Céspedes's claim to be, in the parlance of the time, a hermaphrodite; Céspedes argued this state made both marriages licit, as he had been a woman during the first marriage and when he had had sexual intercourse with men, and it was only after a male organ appeared when he gave birth that he went on to have intercourse with women and marry Caño; he argued this natural (intersex/hermaphroditic) condition also made the witchcraft charge, of having the devil's aid in appearing as a man or woman, unfounded.[4][10][2]: 62–64  He said the penis-like organ first emerged after childbirth,[7]: 68  became engorged when aroused, and retracted inside of him otherwise. He said this organ was initially curved downward by skin, but a surgeon was able to successfully sever this skin.[7]: 75 

Thereafter, he said, he urinated through his penis and usually ejaculated, and he gave the names of previous partners who could attest to his sex;[3]: 19–20, 206 note 38  during the trial, several doctors, female lovers, and male friends testified they had viewed Céspedes as a man.[13][14] In turn, midwives who examined and penetrated what they interpreted as Céspedes's vagina with a candle and fingers found it so tight and resistant to penetration that they concluded Céspedes was not only female but a virgin.[e][2]: 62–64  To explain the lack of visible evidence of a penis, Eleno said it had been injured and amputated shortly before his imprisonment, following a riding injury. The Inquisition also ordered Francisco Díaz to perform a second examination; this time, Díaz found only female genitalia, but maintained he had seen male genitals during his earlier examination.[2]: 65–66 

Many of the physical signs inquisitors focused on were also racial; they noted, for example, that Céspedes had no facial hair and had pierced ears, like a (Castilian) woman; Lisa Vollendorf says that Caño is not recorded as indicating whether she thought, for example, that mulattoes might have less facial hair than Castilians or that enslaved people often pierced their ears.[3]: 19–20, 206 note 38  Inquisitors also argued Caño should have noticed when Céspedes menstruated,[3]: 19–20, 206 note 38  which Céspedes said he had done, though he had always had an infrequent cycle; Caño said that when Céspedes had blood on his nightshirt, he told her it was from bleeding (of hemorrhoids or wounds) caused by horseback riding.[3]: 19–20, 206 note 38 

Verdict and sentence edit

The medical examiners at Toledo said Céspedes was and had always been female,[8] but the tribunal declined to rule on the "legally messy" charges set forth by the prosecutor related to that, like sodomy or witchcraft, and convicted Céspedes only of bigamy, for failing to adequately document Lombardo's death before marrying Caño.[8] It imposed the standard sentence imposed on male bigamists in that era, 200 lashes and ten years of confinement.[5]: 31 [8] Céspedes was also subjected to a public humiliation, an auto-da-fé, being paraded around Toledo's central square in a sanbenito mitre and robes.[8]

On account of his medical skills, Céspedes was ordered to spend his ten-year sentence caring for the poor in a public hospital, initially the Hospital del Rey in Toledo.[5]: 31 [8] However, many people came to see and be healed by the now well-known Céspedes, so on 23 February 1589 the administrator there requested Céspedes be transferred to a more remote facility, saying his presence was causing an "annoyance and embarrassment".[8] The tribunal exonerated Caño of knowingly doing anything wrong, and released her.[3]: 24 

Sex, gender, and sexuality edit

Various historical and medical studies of Céspedes's case have attempted to classify the Spaniard as intersex, as transsexual, or as a hypospadic male; other authors have viewed Céspedes as a lesbian woman (who may have adopted male clothes to acquire more social freedom), as transgender (perhaps a trans man whose claims of being a "hermaphrodite" were attempts to explain his gender dysphoria without a specific word for it),[15] or as non-binary, defying a binary model of gender and sex.[10][7]: 75  Lisa Vollendorf says that while "even when medical doctors provided contradictory evidence, the Inquisition maintained that sex was an indisputable material fact" (displaying, she says, "an almost fetishistic interest in Céspedes's genitalia"), Céspedes described not only his physiology but also gave "behavioral and psychological explanations for his masculinity" he had lived for decades, and drew on his knowledge of medicine and history and cited Aristotle, Augustine, Cicero, and Pliny in arguing that his intersex body was not "unnatural or unprecedented".[2]: 64 [3]: 21  Most information about Céspedes stems from the trial, and testimony during it. If a woman, Céspedes would be the first known female surgeon in Spain and perhaps Europe.[16]

During the trial, inquisitorial scribes inconsistently used both masculine and feminine pronouns to refer to Céspedes, while in his own testimony he consistently described himself with masculine terms.[2]: 58 [3]: 13 

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Scholarly literature varies in referring to Céspedes as Eleno, as Elena, interchanging back and forth between the two names, giving both in full e.g. as Eleno/Elena,[1] or combining them as e.g. Eleno(a),[2]: 57  Eleno/a,[3]: 11  Elena/o,[4]: 10  etc.
  2. ^ According to Delgado & Saens (2000),[5]: 30  Michèle Escamilla alternatively says it was in Sanlúcar de Barrameda, where Céspedes moved at age 20, that "she discovered her double sexuality".
  3. ^ Eleno(a) stated that, following a fight in which he stabbed a pimp, he changed his first name from Elena to the masculine form Eleno, began to wear male clothes and worked as a farmhand and as a shepherd. ... [and] as a soldier ... to put down the Morisco rebellion ... Soyer (2012)[2]: 58 
  4. ^ [De Céspedes] was a woman, a hermaphrodite, a man, a wife, a husband, a slave, a freed slave, a weaver, a draper, a shepherd, a domestic servant, a soldier and a surgeon. Garcia (2015).[10]
  5. ^ Ramet (ed.) (2002), ch. 7[8] adds that the midwives said Caño was "wide and roomy", i.e. non-virginal.

References edit

  1. ^ Bullough, Vern L.; Bullough, Bonnie (1993). Cross Dressing, Sex, and Gender. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 94. ISBN 9780812214314.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Soyer, Francois (2012). Ambiguous Gender in Early Modern Spain and Portugal. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004232785.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vollendorf, Lisa (2005). The Lives of Women: A new history of inquisitional Spain. Vanderbilt University Press. ISBN 0826514812.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kagan, Richard; Dyer, Abigail (2011). Inquisitorial Inquiries: Brief lives of secret Jews and other heretics. JHU Press. chapter 3. ISBN 978-1421403403.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Delgado, María José; Saens, Alain Saint (2000). Lesbianism and Homosexuality in Early Modern Spain. University Press of the South. ISBN 1889431532.
  6. ^ Molloy, Sylvia; Irwin, Robert McKee (1998). Hispanisms and Homosexualities. p. 3.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Velasco, Sherry Marie (2011). Lesbians in Early Modern Spain. Vanderbilt University Press. ISBN 978-0826517524.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Ramet, Sabrina Petra, ed. (2002). Gender Reversals and Gender Cultures. Routledge. chapter 7. ISBN 1134822111. (Céspedes's profession, Caño's name, their being married, being in summer 1587 in Ocaña prison, etc.)
  9. ^ Velasco, Sherry (2003). "Interracial Lesbian Erotics in Early Modern Spain". In Torres, Lourdes; Perpetusa-Seva, Inmaculada (eds.). Tortilleras: Hispanic and U.S. Latina Lesbian Expression. Temple University Press. p. 214. ISBN 1592130070.
  10. ^ a b c d e Garcia, Francisco Vazquez (2015). Sex, Identity and Hermaphrodites in Iberia, 1500–1800. Routledge. p. 46. ISBN 978-1317321194. (Also has dates of marriage and arrest.)
  11. ^ Burshatin, Israel (1998). "Interrogating Hermaphroditism". In Molloy, Sylvia (ed.). Hispanisms and Homosexualities. Duke University Press. p. 17, note 1. ISBN 082232198X.
  12. ^ Mendieta, Eva (2009). In search of Catalina de Erauso: the national and sexual identity of the lieutenant nun. p. 173. discusses Eleno.
  13. ^ Burshatin, Israel (1999). "Written on the Body". In Blackmore, Josiah; Hutcheson, Gregory S. (eds.). Queer Iberia. Duke University Press. p. 428. ISBN 0822382172.
  14. ^ Finucci, Valeria (2003). The Manly Masquerade: Masculinity, paternity, and castration. Duke University Press. p. 213. ISBN 0822330652.
  15. ^ Pavón, Emilio Maganto (2007). El proceso inquisitorial contra Elena/o de Céspedes. Biografía de una cirujana transexual del siglo XVI. Madrid.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  16. ^ Carrillo-Esper, R.; et al. (2015). "Elena de Céspedes: The eventful life of a XVI century surgeon" (PDF). Gaceta Médica de México. Vol. 151. pp. 502–506.

External links edit

eleno, céspedes, also, known, elena, céspedes, 1545, died, after, 1588, spanish, surgeon, married, later, woman, tried, spanish, inquisition, céspedes, have, been, intersex, transgender, person, woman, have, been, lesbian, first, female, surgeon, known, spain,. Eleno de Cespedes also known as Elena de Cespedes 1545 died after 1588 was a Spanish surgeon who married a man and later a woman and was tried by the Spanish Inquisition a Cespedes may have been an intersex and or transgender person or if a woman may have been a lesbian and or the first female surgeon known in Spain and perhaps in Europe Contents 1 Early life first marriage and travels 2 Second marriage arrest and trial 3 Verdict and sentence 4 Sex gender and sexuality 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksEarly life first marriage and travels editElena de Cespedes was born around 1545 in Alhama de Granada in Andalusia Spain to an enslaved black Muslim woman named Francisca de Medina and a free Christian Castilian peasant named Pero Hernandez 5 30 4 6 7 68 Born into slavery and branded on the cheeks as the mulatto offspring of a slave 7 68 8 9 Cespedes was freed as a child and took the surname of a former owner s wife 10 46 8 109 and married a stonemason named Cristobal Lombardo at age fifteen or sixteen 5 30 4 2 58 Within a few months while Cespedes was pregnant with his child Lombardo left because the two did not get along 5 30 4 According to Cespedes Lombardo died some time later 4 3 15 Cespedes said that an intersex condition became apparent while giving birth 7 68 b and after giving birth Cespedes left the baby boy named Cristobal after his father with a friend and began to travel around Spain working in various professions including as a tailor 5 30 4 8 2 58 59 After a fight during which Cespedes stabbed a pimp and was jailed for a time he began to wear men s instead of women s clothing use the masculine name Eleno and openly court women 5 30 4 c Cespedes then found work as a farmhand and shepherd but an acquaintance denounced him to the corregidor who arrested him and released him only on condition that he dress as a woman Undeterred he resumed dressing as a man and found work as a soldier putting down the Morisco Revolt 5 30 4 8 2 58 59 Cespedes who was literate then purchased several books on surgery and medicine 4 and with these and the help of a Valencian surgeon he had befriended trained himself to be a surgeon in Madrid 2 58 59 Second marriage arrest and trial edit nbsp The signature of Eleno de Cespedes on an Inquisition trial document In December 1584 Cespedes and a woman named Maria del Cano the daughter of an artisan applied to marry 8 109 11 Because Cespedes lacked facial hair the vicar of Madrid Juan Baptista Neroni questioned if Cespedes was a eunuch at either Cespedes s or Neroni s request four men including a doctor examined Cespedes from the front only in Yepes and attested he had male genitalia and was not a eunuch whereupon he and Cano were given a license to marry 8 109 2 59 60 12 After the banns were announced however two townspeople told the priest Cespedes was male and female with genitalia of both sexes the priest refused to perform the marriage and Neroni arranged for a second examination to be performed by Francisco Diaz Philip II s doctor and a noted urologist and Madrid doctor Antonio Mantilla on 17 February 1586 2 59 60 They reported Cespedes had a normal penis and testicles as well as a crease and aperture between them and the anus which might indicate a vagina 2 59 60 In 1586 when Cespedes was forty and Cano was twenty four the couple were finally married they lived together in Yepes 2 59 60 in the vicinity of Toledo Spain for a year 4 8 d 7 75 In June 1587 acting on a neighbor s accusation the couple were arrested charged with sodomy 4 10 and imprisoned in the municipal jail in Ocana Spain 8 On 4 July 1587 the bailiff formally accused Cespedes of besides sodomy pretending to be a man using witchcraft to appear as a man to earlier medical examiners engaging in transvestism and by marrying a woman mocking the sanctity of marriage 4 2 62 64 Cespedes argued that because he had a penis when he married Cano the marriage was legitimate 2 62 64 The bailiff asked the vicar general to punish the couple severely the penalty for female homosexuality was death 2 62 64 However the Toledo tribunal of the Spanish Inquisition ordered the secular and episcopal authorities to turn the case over to them because the charge of witchcraft was within the Inquisition s jurisdiction the couple were therefore transferred to an Inquisition jail in Toledo 4 2 62 64 Inquisitors focused on Cespedes s claim to be in the parlance of the time a hermaphrodite Cespedes argued this state made both marriages licit as he had been a woman during the first marriage and when he had had sexual intercourse with men and it was only after a male organ appeared when he gave birth that he went on to have intercourse with women and marry Cano he argued this natural intersex hermaphroditic condition also made the witchcraft charge of having the devil s aid in appearing as a man or woman unfounded 4 10 2 62 64 He said the penis like organ first emerged after childbirth 7 68 became engorged when aroused and retracted inside of him otherwise He said this organ was initially curved downward by skin but a surgeon was able to successfully sever this skin 7 75 Thereafter he said he urinated through his penis and usually ejaculated and he gave the names of previous partners who could attest to his sex 3 19 20 206 note 38 during the trial several doctors female lovers and male friends testified they had viewed Cespedes as a man 13 14 In turn midwives who examined and penetrated what they interpreted as Cespedes s vagina with a candle and fingers found it so tight and resistant to penetration that they concluded Cespedes was not only female but a virgin e 2 62 64 To explain the lack of visible evidence of a penis Eleno said it had been injured and amputated shortly before his imprisonment following a riding injury The Inquisition also ordered Francisco Diaz to perform a second examination this time Diaz found only female genitalia but maintained he had seen male genitals during his earlier examination 2 65 66 Many of the physical signs inquisitors focused on were also racial they noted for example that Cespedes had no facial hair and had pierced ears like a Castilian woman Lisa Vollendorf says that Cano is not recorded as indicating whether she thought for example that mulattoes might have less facial hair than Castilians or that enslaved people often pierced their ears 3 19 20 206 note 38 Inquisitors also argued Cano should have noticed when Cespedes menstruated 3 19 20 206 note 38 which Cespedes said he had done though he had always had an infrequent cycle Cano said that when Cespedes had blood on his nightshirt he told her it was from bleeding of hemorrhoids or wounds caused by horseback riding 3 19 20 206 note 38 Verdict and sentence editThe medical examiners at Toledo said Cespedes was and had always been female 8 but the tribunal declined to rule on the legally messy charges set forth by the prosecutor related to that like sodomy or witchcraft and convicted Cespedes only of bigamy for failing to adequately document Lombardo s death before marrying Cano 8 It imposed the standard sentence imposed on male bigamists in that era 200 lashes and ten years of confinement 5 31 8 Cespedes was also subjected to a public humiliation an auto da fe being paraded around Toledo s central square in a sanbenito mitre and robes 8 On account of his medical skills Cespedes was ordered to spend his ten year sentence caring for the poor in a public hospital initially the Hospital del Rey in Toledo 5 31 8 However many people came to see and be healed by the now well known Cespedes so on 23 February 1589 the administrator there requested Cespedes be transferred to a more remote facility saying his presence was causing an annoyance and embarrassment 8 The tribunal exonerated Cano of knowingly doing anything wrong and released her 3 24 Sex gender and sexuality editVarious historical and medical studies of Cespedes s case have attempted to classify the Spaniard as intersex as transsexual or as a hypospadic male other authors have viewed Cespedes as a lesbian woman who may have adopted male clothes to acquire more social freedom as transgender perhaps a trans man whose claims of being a hermaphrodite were attempts to explain his gender dysphoria without a specific word for it 15 or as non binary defying a binary model of gender and sex 10 7 75 Lisa Vollendorf says that while even when medical doctors provided contradictory evidence the Inquisition maintained that sex was an indisputable material fact displaying she says an almost fetishistic interest in Cespedes s genitalia Cespedes described not only his physiology but also gave behavioral and psychological explanations for his masculinity he had lived for decades and drew on his knowledge of medicine and history and cited Aristotle Augustine Cicero and Pliny in arguing that his intersex body was not unnatural or unprecedented 2 64 3 21 Most information about Cespedes stems from the trial and testimony during it If a woman Cespedes would be the first known female surgeon in Spain and perhaps Europe 16 During the trial inquisitorial scribes inconsistently used both masculine and feminine pronouns to refer to Cespedes while in his own testimony he consistently described himself with masculine terms 2 58 3 13 See also editCatalina de Erauso 1585 1650 Spanish nun and conquistador Fernanda Fernandez 1755 fl 1792 Spanish intersex nunFootnotes edit Scholarly literature varies in referring to Cespedes as Eleno as Elena interchanging back and forth between the two names giving both in full e g as Eleno Elena 1 or combining them as e g Eleno a 2 57 Eleno a 3 11 Elena o 4 10 etc According to Delgado amp Saens 2000 5 30 Michele Escamilla alternatively says it was in Sanlucar de Barrameda where Cespedes moved at age 20 that she discovered her double sexuality Eleno a stated that following a fight in which he stabbed a pimp he changed his first name from Elena to the masculine form Eleno began to wear male clothes and worked as a farmhand and as a shepherd and as a soldier to put down the Morisco rebellion Soyer 2012 2 58 De Cespedes was a woman a hermaphrodite a man a wife a husband a slave a freed slave a weaver a draper a shepherd a domestic servant a soldier and a surgeon Garcia 2015 10 Ramet ed 2002 ch 7 8 adds that the midwives said Cano was wide and roomy i e non virginal References edit Bullough Vern L Bullough Bonnie 1993 Cross Dressing Sex and Gender University of Pennsylvania Press p 94 ISBN 9780812214314 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Soyer Francois 2012 Ambiguous Gender in Early Modern Spain and Portugal BRILL ISBN 978 9004232785 a b c d e f g h i Vollendorf Lisa 2005 The Lives of Women A new history of inquisitional Spain Vanderbilt University Press ISBN 0826514812 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kagan Richard Dyer Abigail 2011 Inquisitorial Inquiries Brief lives of secret Jews and other heretics JHU Press chapter 3 ISBN 978 1421403403 a b c d e f g h i Delgado Maria Jose Saens Alain Saint 2000 Lesbianism and Homosexuality in Early Modern Spain University Press of the South ISBN 1889431532 Molloy Sylvia Irwin Robert McKee 1998 Hispanisms and Homosexualities p 3 a b c d e f g Velasco Sherry Marie 2011 Lesbians in Early Modern Spain Vanderbilt University Press ISBN 978 0826517524 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Ramet Sabrina Petra ed 2002 Gender Reversals and Gender Cultures Routledge chapter 7 ISBN 1134822111 Cespedes s profession Cano s name their being married being in summer 1587 in Ocana prison etc Velasco Sherry 2003 Interracial Lesbian Erotics in Early Modern Spain In Torres Lourdes Perpetusa Seva Inmaculada eds Tortilleras Hispanic and U S Latina Lesbian Expression Temple University Press p 214 ISBN 1592130070 a b c d e Garcia Francisco Vazquez 2015 Sex Identity and Hermaphrodites in Iberia 1500 1800 Routledge p 46 ISBN 978 1317321194 Also has dates of marriage and arrest Burshatin Israel 1998 Interrogating Hermaphroditism In Molloy Sylvia ed Hispanisms and Homosexualities Duke University Press p 17 note 1 ISBN 082232198X Mendieta Eva 2009 In search of Catalina de Erauso the national and sexual identity of the lieutenant nun p 173 discusses Eleno Burshatin Israel 1999 Written on the Body In Blackmore Josiah Hutcheson Gregory S eds Queer Iberia Duke University Press p 428 ISBN 0822382172 Finucci Valeria 2003 The Manly Masquerade Masculinity paternity and castration Duke University Press p 213 ISBN 0822330652 Pavon Emilio Maganto 2007 El proceso inquisitorial contra Elena o de Cespedes Biografia de una cirujana transexual del siglo XVI Madrid a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Carrillo Esper R et al 2015 Elena de Cespedes The eventful life of a XVI century surgeon PDF Gaceta Medica de Mexico Vol 151 pp 502 506 External links edit Proceso de fe de Elena de Cespedes Digital Transgender Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eleno de Cespedes amp oldid 1176929991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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