Traces of the Virgen of Guadalupe of México in the court of Madrid
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24310/TSN.2021.vi12.15448Keywords:
Devotion, image, Madrid, México, politics, propagation, Virgin of GuadalupeAbstract
The presence of the Virgin of Guadalupe of Mexico in Madrid during the 17th and 18th centuries has been dealt only sporadically until now. This article compiles a series of documentary and artistic data that provide evidence of the intense propagation of this marian phenomenon both at a private level and in the spheres of courtly power. Whether through the publication of sermons, the erection of altars, the possession of images or even the foundation of a specific congregation, the cult of Guadalupe became one of the most important of the time. The dynamics of an influential indian elite, together with the pressure exerted by a faction of creoles from New Spain settled in the capital, had a decisive impact on the establishment of this devotional movement, which was not exempt from clear political interests in the eyes of the Crown.




















