Vol. 41 Núm. 2 (2017)

Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://54.81.141.168/handle/123456789/175391

Tabla de Contenido


Artículos
  • El Pucará de Aconquija «que llaman del Inga» y el pueblo de los Malle en la frontera sudoriental del Tawantinsuyu Patané Aráoz, Claudio Javier; 7-55
  • La universidad y el Cabildo eclesiástico de México: siglo XVI Castillo Flores, José Gabino; 57-88
  • Lima festeja a la Inmaculada (1656): texto criollo y poderes urbanos Latasa, Pilar; 89-108
  • Entre quehaceres conventuales y arrebatos místicos: el Diario Espiritual de Úrsula de Jesús (Lima, siglo XVII) Pignano Bravo, Giovanna; 109-142

  • Notas
  • Los libros de cabildo y la temprana historia política del Perú colonial Alarcón Olivos, Marcos; 145-168
  • Garcilaso y el caso de la mala muerte del virrey Toledo Julien, Catherine; 169-188

  • Reseñas
  • Gaune Corradi, Rafael. Escritura y salvación. Cultura misionera jesuita en tiempos de Anganamón, siglo XVII. Santiago de Chile: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile y Universidad Alberto Hurtado, 2016, 486 pp. Gálvez Peña, Carlos; 191-194
  • Kusunoki, Ricardo y Luis Eduardo Wuffarden (eds.). Pintura cuzqueña. Lima: Asociación Museo de Arte de Lima, 2016, 368 pp., ilust. Barriga Calle, Irma; 195-198
  • Saito, Akira y Claudia Rosas Lauro (eds.). Reducciones: la concentración forzada de las poblaciones indígenas en el virreinato del Perú. Lima: National Museum of Ethnology de Osaka y Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2017, 678 pp., ilust. Domínguez Faura, Nicanor; 199-202
  • Del Valle Pavón, Guillermima. Donativos préstamos y privilegios. Los mercaderes y mineros de la ciudad de México durante la guerra anglo-española de 1779-1783. México: Instituto Mora, 2017, 228 pp. Mazzeo, Cristina; 203-206
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    Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
    • Item
      Lima festeja a la Inmaculada (1656): texto criollo y poderes urbanos
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2017-12-21) Latasa, Pilar
      Analysis of the festivities of the Immaculate Conception celebrated in Lima in 1656, from the account written by Diego de León Pinelo Gutiérrez. This Creole text reinterprets in baroque terms the cult of the Immaculate Conception in the City of Kings. Through it we can study these lengthy festivals, which involved the participation of the city’s most important institutions and corporate bodies, mobilizing considerable resources and people. Thus, the text is conceived as a political and religious exaltation of the city of Lima, typical of the festive genre and of the chorographic literature, which also connects with the emerging Creole discourse.
    • Item
      Los libros de cabildo y la temprana historia política del Perú colonial
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2017-12-21) Alarcón Olivos, Marcos
      No presenta resumen
    • Item
      Garcilaso y el caso de la mala muerte del virrey Toledo
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2017-12-21) Julien, Catherine
      No presenta resumen
    • Item
      La universidad y el Cabildo eclesiástico de México: siglo XVI
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2017-12-21) Castillo Flores, José Gabino
      This article examines the role of the University of Mexico in the formation of the Ecclesiastical Cabildo of Mexico City in the second half of the 16th century, since it was in its classrooms that the learned men who would occupy key positions in the secular and ecclesiastical government of the kingdom of New Spain were groomed. They were the sons of the conquistadors and the earliest colonists who settled in the Indies. Thanks to the university, a local bureaucracy was created that would shape and consolidate the principal corporate bodies of the kingdom, including the Ecclesiastical Cabildo of Mexico. The text elucidates how the close relationship between these two corporate bodies benefitted the project of the secular Church and functioned to anchor the population of Spanish origin in New Spain.
    • Item
      El Pucará de Aconquija «que llaman del Inga» y el pueblo de los Malle en la frontera sudoriental del Tawantinsuyu
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2017-12-21) Patané Aráoz, Claudio Javier
      The analysis of the nuances of the Inca conquest in the southern Andes has received consistent attention from both archaeologists and historians. Recent studies carried out in different regions of Collasuyu have evaluated the relationship between expansionary policies, systems of defense, and ethnic interaction in borderland contexts. These studies have generated promising areas of debate. In this paper I present results of archaeological studies and analysis of historical sources related to the Pucará of Aconquija (Catamarca, Argentina). This site is one of the most important Inca fortresses located on the southeastern frontier of Tawantinsuyu.
    • Item
      Entre quehaceres conventuales y arrebatos místicos: el Diario Espiritual de Úrsula de Jesús (Lima, siglo XVII)
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2017-12-21) Pignano Bravo, Giovanna
      The present article studies the case of the black donada Ursula de Jesus (Lima, 1604-1666), whose exceptional religiosity was described by a Franciscan friar and nun, both anonymous. She spent the greater part of her life inside the convent of Santa Clara, which she entered as the slave of a nun of the black veil. Later she obtained her liberty and, supported by certain nuns, entered as a donada. She went on to write a Spiritual Diary in which she described her everyday life in the convent and the vicissitudes of her spirituality. While we know of other Afro-descendants who were recognized for their piety, we know them only through the dominant discourse that shaped their individual experiences to make them fit the models of Western sanctity. In this case, it is the opposite: the Spiritual Diary allows us to hear the voice of an Afro-descended woman. Through an analysis of the Spiritual Diary, written between 1650 and 1661 and published in Lima in 2004, this article studies the identity that Ursula de Jesus constructs in her text, which reinterprets the reigning Catholic dogma and constructs a Black mystical spirituality.