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Turibius of Mogrovejo

Toribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo (16 November 1538 – 23 March 1606) was a Spanish Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Lima from 1579 until his death.[1]


Toribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo
Archbishop of Lima
ChurchCatholic Church
ArchdioceseLima
SeeLima
Appointed16 May 1579
Installed24 May 1581
Term ended23 March 1606
PredecessorDiego Gómez de Lamadrid
SuccessorBartolomé Lobo Guerrero
Orders
Ordination1578
Consecration23 August 1580
by Cristóbal Rojas Sandoval
RankBishop
Personal details
Born
Toribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo

16 November 1538
Died23 March 1606(1606-03-23) (aged 67)
Saña, Viceroyalty of Peru, Spanish Empire
BuriedLima Cathedral, Peru
12.05° S, 77.03° W
NationalitySpanish
DenominationRoman Catholic
ParentsLuis Alfonso de Mogrovejo and Ana de Roblès i Morán
OccupationPriest
EducationLaw
Alma mater
Sainthood
Feast day
  • 23 March
  • 27 April (Former)
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified2 July 1679
Rome, Papal States
by Pope Innocent XI
Canonized10 December 1726
Rome, Papal States
by Pope Benedict XIII
AttributesEpiscopal attire
Patronage
Ordination history of
Turibius of Mogrovejo
History
Priestly ordination
Date1578
Episcopal consecration
Consecrated byCristóbal Rojas Sandoval
Date23 August 1580
PlaceSeville, Seville, Habsburg Spain
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Turibius of Mogrovejo as principal consecrator
Alfonso Guerra, O.P.12 August 1582
Bartolomé Martinez Menacho y Mesa4 September 1588
Alfonso Fernández de Bonilla1593
Luis López de Solís, O.E.S.A.3 April 1594
Alonso Ramírez Vergara, O.S.1595
Reginaldo de Lizárraga, O.P.24 October 1599
Juan de La Roca1601

He first studied in the Humanities and Law before being appointed as a university professor. At the behest of King Philip II, he went on to become Grand Inquisitor, considered unusual given no previous government or judicial experience. His piety and learning had reached the ears of the king.[1][2] His distinguished work for the Inquisition earned him praise from the king, who nominated him for the vacant Lima archdiocese. This was confirmed by the pope, under protest from Turibius.[3]

Mogrovejo was ordained to the priesthood in 1578, and consecrated as an archbishop in 1580, before setting off for Peru to begin his mission. An eminent and charismatic preacher, he set about baptising and catechising the indigenous people. He confirmed almost half a million people; these included Rose of Lima and Martin de Porres.[1][2]

A staunch advocate for reform, Turibius set to work restoring some order to the priests of his diocese. He led the worst offenders away from various immoral routines and scandals, meanwhile instituting new educational programmes in priestly training.[3][4]

After his death, his reputation for holiness and learning lived on, leading to calls for his canonisation. Pope Innocent XI beatified the late archbishop, and Pope Benedict XIII canonised him as a saint on 10 December 1726.[1][3]

Life edit

Education edit

Toribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo was born 16 November 1538 in Mayorga in the Valladolid province of Habsburg Spain. He was named after Turibius of Astorga.[4] His parents were of aristocratic lineage: Luis Alfonso de Mogrovejo (1510–1568) and Ana de Roblès i Morán (1515–???). Turibius' sister was Grimanese de Mogrovejo i Robledo (1545–1635).

 
Bust of Turibius at his birthplace in Mayorga de Campos, Valladolid.

As a child, he was recognised as pious, with a strong devotion to the Blessed Virgin. In her honour, he fasted once a week and recited the rosary often.[2]

His education befitted a patrician at the time; he entered the college at Valladolid in 1550, where he studied Humanities.[1][4] At the University of Salamanca, he studied Law, and subsequently joined its faculty. His uncle Juan de Mogrovejo served as a professor there, as well as at the San Salvador High School in Oviedo.

King Juan III invited Juan him to teach at the college in Coimbra. Turibius accompanied his uncle there, and studied at the college in Coimbra before returning to Salamanca sometime later. His uncle died shortly thereafter.[3] In February 1571 Turibius’ learning and virtuous reputation encouraged King Philip II to appoint him Grand Inquisitor on the Inquisition Court at Granada.[1][2]

Episcopate edit

It was not long before Philip II nominated him for the vacant Lima archbishopric, despite his strong protests. Knowledge of canon law prompted him to remind both king and pope that priests alone could be delegated ecclesial dignities, but the Holy See prevailed.[4] Preparations were made for him to be ordained before the formal announcement.[2] He was ordained to the priesthood in 1578 in Granada (after four weeks’ successively ascending the minor orders). On 16 May 1579, Pope Gregory XIII named him Archbishop of Lima; he was consecrated in August 1580 by the Archbishop of Seville, Cristóbal Rojas Sandoval.[3]

Vast territory edit

On 12 May 1581, the new archbishop arrived in Paita. Covering 1,340,000 square kilometres, the diocese was huge, incorporating mountains, jungle and coastline. It was extremely difficult to administer from the capital on the coast. Apart from Spanish, the official tongue, most commonly spoken were Quechua, Kichwa, Aymara, Puquina and Mapuche. Mogrovejo began his new mission travelling the 970 km (600 mi) to Lima on foot, all the while baptising and teaching the local people (even had he managed to average 24 km per day, the journey to Lima would have taken six weeks). A week after he arrived, he was enthroned in his new see.[3][1] His favourite saying was: "Time is not our own and we must give a strict account of it". Allowing him to make even better use of his time after 1590 was the assistance of the missiomnary Franciscan, Francis Solanus.

Alone and on foot he traversed his entire archdiocese three times, regardless of inclement weather, ferocious wildlife or tropical heat. He also had to deal with fevers, and was often threatened by hostile tribes. He faced these, all the while baptising and confirming almost half a million people. Among these were Rose of Lima, Martin de Porres, Juan Masías and Francis Solano, who later became a close friend. All would come to be canonised.[1]

Visiting each parish, he would go straight to the church to pray before the altar, and check the condition of all objects used in divine worship, before talking with the priest about the life of the parish. He would then check the parish registers. He made a point of checking that the priest was using the missal that Pope Pius V (in 1570, more than ten years before Turibius' arrival in the viceroyalty) had ordered should be used.[4] It took seven years to complete Turibius' first visitation.[5] His second visitation took four years, but the third was shorter.

Turibius organised for the building of roads and schools as well as chapels and hospitals. He ensured these could be staffed from nearby convents, also instituted by him. Turibius' concern for the very poorest (see next section) extended also to destitute Spanish. Their seeking assistance was constrained by the colony's social norms. Succour from Turibius arrived nevertheless, often without the source coming to light.

Indigenous people edit

The start of Turibius' episcopate almost coincided with the end of eleven years under the viceroyalty of Francisco de Toledo, the fifth viceroy. His administration had had a negative impact on the indigenous peoples of Peru,[6] the cost of his bringing political and economic order that had him dubbed as the "best of Peru's viceroys".[7] In Lima, remote from the vast hinterland, was an exploitative society, derived from the encomienda tradition. Mine operators and merchant princes lived an opulent lifestyle, thriving on the enforced labour of the indigenous people. Toledo had taken advantage of the pre-existing practice of forced labour under the mit'a of the Inca Empire,[8] and had expanded it. Called "reductions", Toledo's policy had forcibly relocated many of the indigenous peoples into new settlements, to gather labour to work in mines and other Spanish enterprises, to collect tributes and taxes, and to enforce their Christianisation.[9]

Against this, Turibius was seen as a champion of the rights of the natives. The Spanish had been attracted from their homeland to make their fortunes. They were left with no effective constraint on their using almost any means in their power. Turibius often came across shocking examples of tyranny, maltreatment and cynical indifference to Christian precepts of morality. Redress for abuses by officials was nigh-on impossible. The distance from Spain was insuperable, and communication within the viceroyalty was via sparse roads in a vast territory. He learned the local dialects and fought for rights and liberties, confronting the viceroy's power and control. He was even persecuted by the civil authorities but his patient persistence prevailed.

Eventually Turibius was rewarded with some success. The eighth viceroyal, García Hurtado de Mendoza made efforts to "crack down on the oppression of the indigenous population at the hands of the Spanish colonizers.[10]"

Clerical formation edit

Partly because of a dearth of good priests, there were among the indigenous people enormous numbers who were baptised but who knew little of the christian religion. Realising that some clerical behaviour had grown too scandalous to countenance, Mogrovejo sought reformation of priests under his charge. Some came to resent this, though support and assistance was forthcoming from the viceroy. In 1591 he founded the first seminary in the Western Hemisphere. He insisted that learning indigenous languages was a prerequisite.[4][1]

Archdiocesan leadership edit

At Philip II's request he oversaw the Third Provincial Council from 1582 to 1583. He served as president, guiding rather than leading it. Two more provincial councils in 1591 and in 1601 were organised by Turibius. Mogrovejo inaugurated the third Lima Cathedral (i.e. the second rebuild) on 2 February 1604. His tenure also saw thirteen diocesan synods and three provincial councils.

Sometimes civil and ecclesiastical jurisdiction conflicted. Turibius fell out with García Hurtado de Mendoza, the viceroy for six years from 1590. The seminary school was not established without a fight over whether the entrance was to be surmounted by the coat of arms of the bishop, or that of the king. There was also a row over the excommunication of Juan Ortiz de Zárate, mayor of Lima, after he had ordered that a suspected criminal should be taken by force from a church where he had sought refuge.

Tridentine reforms edit

Mogrovejo worked to push through the ambitious aims from the Council of Trent, making evangelisation a core theme of his episcopate.[4] He produced a trilingual catechism in Spanish/Quechuan/Aymara in 1584, implementing Trent's call for preaching in indigenous languages.[1][2] He endorsed the council's decree of excommunication for clerics who engaged in business ventures; these often exploited the indigenous people.

In 1588 Pope Sixtus V confirmed the acts of the Third Council of Lima, implementing Trent's decrees. These acts from Lima were adopted by many South American dioceses[citation needed].

Death edit

Mogrovejo foresaw the exact date and hour of his death. It was in Pacasmayo during a pastoral visit that he contracted a fever. He continued working to the end of that visit, and arrived at the Saint Augustine convent[11] in Zaña in a critical condition.[1] He pulled himself up to receive the Viaticum, and died shortly thereafter at 3:30 pm on 23 March 1606 (Holy Thursday). His final words were those of Jesus Christ on the cross, as in Luke 23:46: "Lord, into Your hands I commit my spirit"[2][3] His remains were interred in the archdiocesan cathedral in Lima.

Sainthood edit

Mogrovejo's beatification was celebrated under Pope Innocent XI in 1679 (ratified in the papal bull "Laudeamus"). In the papal bull "Quoniam Spiritus", Pope Benedict XIII canonised him as a saint on 10 December 1726.[1]

At one time celebrated on 27 April, Turibius' liturgical feast is nowadays on 23 March. His cult was once limited mainly to South America, but his pioneering and enduring reforms have now made this more widespread.

In 1983, Pope John Paul II proclaimed him patron saint of the Latin American episcopate.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Saint Turibius of Mogroveio". Saints SQPN. 28 July 2017. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira. "St. Toribio de Mogrovejo, March 23". Tradition in Action. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "San Turibio de Mogrovejo". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 16 October 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Sladky, Joseph F.X. (21 August 2014). "St. Toribio de Mogrovejo: Apostle of Peru". Crisis Magazine.
  5. ^ Farmer DH. (2011) Oxford Dictionary of Saints. 5th Ed Revd. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. ISBN 978-0-19-959660-7.
  6. ^ Wightman, AM. (1990) Indigenous Migration and Social Change: The Forasteros of Cuzco, 1570-1720. Duke University Press. Durham, New Carolina. ISBN 9780822382843.
  7. ^ Tantaleán Arbulú, J. (2011) El Virrey Francisco de Toledo y su tiempo. 2 Tomos. Universidad de San Martín de Porres. Lima. ISBN 978-612-4088-17-9. https://www.elvirrey.com/libro/el-virrey-francisco-de-toledo-y-su-tiempo-2-tomos_86988
  8. ^ Under the Incas, everyone had to work without pay for state enterprises for a certain period of time.
  9. ^ Valcárcel LE. (1940) The viceroy Toledo, great tyrant of Peru: a historical review. Lima, National Museum Press. Encyclopedia Britannica. Viceroyalty of Peru. Historical area, South America. https://www.britannica.com/place/Viceroyalty-of-Peru. Accessed 25 March 2024.
  10. ^ Ordinances Issued by the Marquis of Cañete, Viceroy of the Kingdom of Peru, as a Remedy for the Excesses That the Judges of the Natives Commit When They Deal and Bargain with the Indians and the Damages as Well as the Grievances That the Indians Endure. Lima, Peru, 1614. https://www.loc.gov/item/2021666924
  11. ^ https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/zana

External links edit

  •   Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Toribio Alfonso Mogrovejo". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Catholic Hierarchy [self-published]
  • Lives of the Saints
  • Catholic Online
  • (in Spanish)
  • American Catholic

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Toribio Alfonso Mogrovejo". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Archbishop of Lima
16 May 1579 – 23 March 1606
Succeeded by

turibius, mogrovejo, saint, turibius, redirects, here, other, saints, with, this, name, turibius, toribio, alfonso, mogrovejo, november, 1538, march, 1606, spanish, catholic, prelate, served, archbishop, lima, from, 1579, until, death, sainttoribio, alfonso, m. Saint Turibius redirects here For other saints with this name see Turibius Toribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo 16 November 1538 23 March 1606 was a Spanish Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Lima from 1579 until his death 1 SaintToribio Alfonso de MogrovejoArchbishop of LimaChurchCatholic ChurchArchdioceseLimaSeeLimaAppointed16 May 1579Installed24 May 1581Term ended23 March 1606PredecessorDiego Gomez de LamadridSuccessorBartolome Lobo GuerreroOrdersOrdination1578Consecration23 August 1580by Cristobal Rojas SandovalRankBishopPersonal detailsBornToribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo16 November 1538Mayorga de Campos Kingdom of Leon Habsburg SpainDied23 March 1606 1606 03 23 aged 67 Sana Viceroyalty of Peru Spanish EmpireBuriedLima Cathedral Peru12 05 S 77 03 WNationalitySpanishDenominationRoman CatholicParentsLuis Alfonso de Mogrovejo and Ana de Robles i MoranOccupationPriestEducationLawAlma materUniversity of CoimbraUniversity of ValladolidUniversity of SalamancaSainthoodFeast day23 March27 April Former Venerated inRoman Catholic ChurchBeatified2 July 1679Rome Papal Statesby Pope Innocent XICanonized10 December 1726Rome Papal Statesby Pope Benedict XIIIAttributesEpiscopal attirePatronagePeruLimaLatin American bishopsNative rightsScoutsValladolid Ordination history of Turibius of MogrovejoHistoryPriestly ordinationDate1578Episcopal consecrationConsecrated byCristobal Rojas SandovalDate23 August 1580PlaceSeville Seville Habsburg SpainEpiscopal successionBishops consecrated by Turibius of Mogrovejo as principal consecratorAlfonso Guerra O P 12 August 1582Bartolome Martinez Menacho y Mesa4 September 1588Alfonso Fernandez de Bonilla1593Luis Lopez de Solis O E S A 3 April 1594Alonso Ramirez Vergara O S 1595Reginaldo de Lizarraga O P 24 October 1599Juan de La Roca1601 He first studied in the Humanities and Law before being appointed as a university professor At the behest of King Philip II he went on to become Grand Inquisitor considered unusual given no previous government or judicial experience His piety and learning had reached the ears of the king 1 2 His distinguished work for the Inquisition earned him praise from the king who nominated him for the vacant Lima archdiocese This was confirmed by the pope under protest from Turibius 3 Mogrovejo was ordained to the priesthood in 1578 and consecrated as an archbishop in 1580 before setting off for Peru to begin his mission An eminent and charismatic preacher he set about baptising and catechising the indigenous people He confirmed almost half a million people these included Rose of Lima and Martin de Porres 1 2 A staunch advocate for reform Turibius set to work restoring some order to the priests of his diocese He led the worst offenders away from various immoral routines and scandals meanwhile instituting new educational programmes in priestly training 3 4 After his death his reputation for holiness and learning lived on leading to calls for his canonisation Pope Innocent XI beatified the late archbishop and Pope Benedict XIII canonised him as a saint on 10 December 1726 1 3 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Education 1 2 Episcopate 1 2 1 Vast territory 1 2 2 Indigenous people 1 2 3 Clerical formation 1 2 4 Archdiocesan leadership 1 2 5 Tridentine reforms 1 3 Death 2 Sainthood 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksLife editEducation editToribio Alfonso de Mogrovejo was born 16 November 1538 in Mayorga in the Valladolid province of Habsburg Spain He was named after Turibius of Astorga 4 His parents were of aristocratic lineage Luis Alfonso de Mogrovejo 1510 1568 and Ana de Robles i Moran 1515 Turibius sister was Grimanese de Mogrovejo i Robledo 1545 1635 nbsp Bust of Turibius at his birthplace in Mayorga de Campos Valladolid As a child he was recognised as pious with a strong devotion to the Blessed Virgin In her honour he fasted once a week and recited the rosary often 2 His education befitted a patrician at the time he entered the college at Valladolid in 1550 where he studied Humanities 1 4 At the University of Salamanca he studied Law and subsequently joined its faculty His uncle Juan de Mogrovejo served as a professor there as well as at the San Salvador High School in Oviedo King Juan III invited Juan him to teach at the college in Coimbra Turibius accompanied his uncle there and studied at the college in Coimbra before returning to Salamanca sometime later His uncle died shortly thereafter 3 In February 1571 Turibius learning and virtuous reputation encouraged King Philip II to appoint him Grand Inquisitor on the Inquisition Court at Granada 1 2 Episcopate edit It was not long before Philip II nominated him for the vacant Lima archbishopric despite his strong protests Knowledge of canon law prompted him to remind both king and pope that priests alone could be delegated ecclesial dignities but the Holy See prevailed 4 Preparations were made for him to be ordained before the formal announcement 2 He was ordained to the priesthood in 1578 in Granada after four weeks successively ascending the minor orders On 16 May 1579 Pope Gregory XIII named him Archbishop of Lima he was consecrated in August 1580 by the Archbishop of Seville Cristobal Rojas Sandoval 3 Vast territory edit On 12 May 1581 the new archbishop arrived in Paita Covering 1 340 000 square kilometres the diocese was huge incorporating mountains jungle and coastline It was extremely difficult to administer from the capital on the coast Apart from Spanish the official tongue most commonly spoken were Quechua Kichwa Aymara Puquina and Mapuche Mogrovejo began his new mission travelling the 970 km 600 mi to Lima on foot all the while baptising and teaching the local people even had he managed to average 24 km per day the journey to Lima would have taken six weeks A week after he arrived he was enthroned in his new see 3 1 His favourite saying was Time is not our own and we must give a strict account of it Allowing him to make even better use of his time after 1590 was the assistance of the missiomnary Franciscan Francis Solanus Alone and on foot he traversed his entire archdiocese three times regardless of inclement weather ferocious wildlife or tropical heat He also had to deal with fevers and was often threatened by hostile tribes He faced these all the while baptising and confirming almost half a million people Among these were Rose of Lima Martin de Porres Juan Masias and Francis Solano who later became a close friend All would come to be canonised 1 Visiting each parish he would go straight to the church to pray before the altar and check the condition of all objects used in divine worship before talking with the priest about the life of the parish He would then check the parish registers He made a point of checking that the priest was using the missal that Pope Pius V in 1570 more than ten years before Turibius arrival in the viceroyalty had ordered should be used 4 It took seven years to complete Turibius first visitation 5 His second visitation took four years but the third was shorter Turibius organised for the building of roads and schools as well as chapels and hospitals He ensured these could be staffed from nearby convents also instituted by him Turibius concern for the very poorest see next section extended also to destitute Spanish Their seeking assistance was constrained by the colony s social norms Succour from Turibius arrived nevertheless often without the source coming to light Indigenous people edit The start of Turibius episcopate almost coincided with the end of eleven years under the viceroyalty of Francisco de Toledo the fifth viceroy His administration had had a negative impact on the indigenous peoples of Peru 6 the cost of his bringing political and economic order that had him dubbed as the best of Peru s viceroys 7 In Lima remote from the vast hinterland was an exploitative society derived from the encomienda tradition Mine operators and merchant princes lived an opulent lifestyle thriving on the enforced labour of the indigenous people Toledo had taken advantage of the pre existing practice of forced labour under the mit a of the Inca Empire 8 and had expanded it Called reductions Toledo s policy had forcibly relocated many of the indigenous peoples into new settlements to gather labour to work in mines and other Spanish enterprises to collect tributes and taxes and to enforce their Christianisation 9 Against this Turibius was seen as a champion of the rights of the natives The Spanish had been attracted from their homeland to make their fortunes They were left with no effective constraint on their using almost any means in their power Turibius often came across shocking examples of tyranny maltreatment and cynical indifference to Christian precepts of morality Redress for abuses by officials was nigh on impossible The distance from Spain was insuperable and communication within the viceroyalty was via sparse roads in a vast territory He learned the local dialects and fought for rights and liberties confronting the viceroy s power and control He was even persecuted by the civil authorities but his patient persistence prevailed Eventually Turibius was rewarded with some success The eighth viceroyal Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza made efforts to crack down on the oppression of the indigenous population at the hands of the Spanish colonizers 10 Clerical formation edit Partly because of a dearth of good priests there were among the indigenous people enormous numbers who were baptised but who knew little of the christian religion Realising that some clerical behaviour had grown too scandalous to countenance Mogrovejo sought reformation of priests under his charge Some came to resent this though support and assistance was forthcoming from the viceroy In 1591 he founded the first seminary in the Western Hemisphere He insisted that learning indigenous languages was a prerequisite 4 1 Archdiocesan leadership edit At Philip II s request he oversaw the Third Provincial Council from 1582 to 1583 He served as president guiding rather than leading it Two more provincial councils in 1591 and in 1601 were organised by Turibius Mogrovejo inaugurated the third Lima Cathedral i e the second rebuild on 2 February 1604 His tenure also saw thirteen diocesan synods and three provincial councils Sometimes civil and ecclesiastical jurisdiction conflicted Turibius fell out with Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza the viceroy for six years from 1590 The seminary school was not established without a fight over whether the entrance was to be surmounted by the coat of arms of the bishop or that of the king There was also a row over the excommunication of Juan Ortiz de Zarate mayor of Lima after he had ordered that a suspected criminal should be taken by force from a church where he had sought refuge Tridentine reforms edit Mogrovejo worked to push through the ambitious aims from the Council of Trent making evangelisation a core theme of his episcopate 4 He produced a trilingual catechism in Spanish Quechuan Aymara in 1584 implementing Trent s call for preaching in indigenous languages 1 2 He endorsed the council s decree of excommunication for clerics who engaged in business ventures these often exploited the indigenous people In 1588 Pope Sixtus V confirmed the acts of the Third Council of Lima implementing Trent s decrees These acts from Lima were adopted by many South American dioceses citation needed Death edit Mogrovejo foresaw the exact date and hour of his death It was in Pacasmayo during a pastoral visit that he contracted a fever He continued working to the end of that visit and arrived at the Saint Augustine convent 11 in Zana in a critical condition 1 He pulled himself up to receive the Viaticum and died shortly thereafter at 3 30 pm on 23 March 1606 Holy Thursday His final words were those of Jesus Christ on the cross as in Luke 23 46 Lord into Your hands I commit my spirit 2 3 His remains were interred in the archdiocesan cathedral in Lima Sainthood editMogrovejo s beatification was celebrated under Pope Innocent XI in 1679 ratified in the papal bull Laudeamus In the papal bull Quoniam Spiritus Pope Benedict XIII canonised him as a saint on 10 December 1726 1 At one time celebrated on 27 April Turibius liturgical feast is nowadays on 23 March His cult was once limited mainly to South America but his pioneering and enduring reforms have now made this more widespread In 1983 Pope John Paul II proclaimed him patron saint of the Latin American episcopate 3 See also editPortals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Saints nbsp History nbsp Spain nbsp Peru List of Catholic saints Mogrovejo Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lima Saint Turibius of Mogrovejo patron saint archiveReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Saint Turibius of Mogroveio Saints SQPN 28 July 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2017 a b c d e f g Plinio Correa de Oliveira St Toribio de Mogrovejo March 23 Tradition in Action Retrieved 16 October 2017 a b c d e f g h San Turibio de Mogrovejo Santi e Beati Retrieved 16 October 2017 a b c d e f g Sladky Joseph F X 21 August 2014 St Toribio de Mogrovejo Apostle of Peru Crisis Magazine Farmer DH 2011 Oxford Dictionary of Saints 5th Ed Revd Oxford University Press Oxford UK ISBN 978 0 19 959660 7 Wightman AM 1990 Indigenous Migration and Social Change The Forasteros of Cuzco 1570 1720 Duke University Press Durham New Carolina ISBN 9780822382843 Tantalean Arbulu J 2011 El Virrey Francisco de Toledo y su tiempo 2 Tomos Universidad de San Martin de Porres Lima ISBN 978 612 4088 17 9 https www elvirrey com libro el virrey francisco de toledo y su tiempo 2 tomos 86988 Under the Incas everyone had to work without pay for state enterprises for a certain period of time Valcarcel LE 1940 The viceroy Toledo great tyrant of Peru a historical review Lima National Museum Press Encyclopedia Britannica Viceroyalty of Peru Historical area South America https www britannica com place Viceroyalty of Peru Accessed 25 March 2024 Ordinances Issued by the Marquis of Canete Viceroy of the Kingdom of Peru as a Remedy for the Excesses That the Judges of the Natives Commit When They Deal and Bargain with the Indians and the Damages as Well as the Grievances That the Indians Endure Lima Peru 1614 https www loc gov item 2021666924 https www atlasobscura com places zanaExternal links edit nbsp Herbermann Charles ed 1913 St Toribio Alfonso Mogrovejo Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Catholic Hierarchy self published Lives of the Saints Catholic Online Short biography at MSN Encarta in Spanish American Catholic nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 St Toribio Alfonso Mogrovejo Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Catholic Church titles Preceded byDiego Gomez de Lamadrid Archbishop of Lima16 May 1579 23 March 1606 Succeeded byBartolome Lobo Guerrero Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turibius of Mogrovejo amp oldid 1220980207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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