The Earliest Libraries in the Californias b y W. Michael Mathes M. Mathes

Loreto
Mission Nuestra Señora de Loreto
Baja, California
The founding of Nuestra Señora de Loreto on 25 October 1697 by Father Juan María de Salvatierra marked the beginning of the permanent occupation of the Californias by Europeans. Although there are no known specific reports of the entry of books either by missionaries in their baggage or by cargo shipments, it is evident that, as the range of activity increased, each missionary established a library at his respective mission. These libraries can be divided into four sections: the working section of religious books such as missals, breviaries, diurnals, bibles, devotionaries, sermons, catechisms, and confessionaries; the study section of works of theology, philosophy, patristics, metaphysics, edifying letters and biographies, and Indian languages; the reference section of works on law, medicine, architecture, mathematics, natural history, cooking, and manual arts; and, the entertainment section with books of history, poetry, essays, and novels. Due to the isolation of the peninsular missions, these libraries were the only form of contact with Western culture for the university-educated, elite missionaries of the Society of Jesus. In that the sole cultural companion of the Jesuit in Baja California was a single soldier, frequently illiterate, the few books in the mission were the fathers' only means of expanding their knowledge and of entertainment. There was evidently an active exchange of volumes between missions, and also, in many instances, there were multiple copies of some titles throughout the peninsula.
With the Pragmatic Sanction of Charles III in June of 1767 decreeing the expulsion of the Society of Jesus from Spanish domains, the Baja California missions were transferred to the Franciscans in the following year, and the latter, upon advancing their activities to Alta California, relinquished the peninsular missions to the Dominicans in 1773. As a result of these transfers, inventories taken between 19 May and 28 June 1773 include abbreviated titles of volumes contained in the respective libraries. Due to the passive nature of the Franciscan occupation and the need for more essential items from the former Jesuit missions in Alta California, these libraries were little changed from the date of expulsion. Located in the Archivo General de la Nación, Mexico, Misiones 12, expediente 10, the full inventories in their original form have been published by Eligio Moises Coronado, DESCRIPCIÓN E INVENTARIOS DE LAS MISIONES DE BAJA CALIFORNIA, 1773 (Palma: Institut D'Estudis Balearics, 1987.), and the library inventories, with complete bibliographic entries, appear in Michael Mathes, "Oasis Culturales en la Antigua California: Las Bibliotecas de las Misiones de Baja California en 1773," ESTUDIOS DE HISTORIA NOVOHISPANA 10 (1991), 369-442.

With the eventual abandonment of Baja California missions between 1833 and 1855, their libraries were also gradually dispersed by theft, neglect, or exposure to the elements. In that the Jesuit missions were the sole occupants of the peninsula during their existence, books were not branded, marked, or otherwise identified, and to date, no known title once pertaining to these missions has been located. Nevertheless, the inventories present excellent insight into mission culture, and particularly notable is the high number of works by Jesuit authors, the predominance of titles in Castilian, the number of imprints from New Spain, and the 133 titles of history and biography in light of the fact that in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, most American libraries primarily contained works in Latin, printed in Europe, and treating strictly religious, classical, or legalistic themes.

The following provides a statistical overview of these earliest California libraries:

MISSION TITLES VOLUMES
Nuestra Señora de Loreto 176 340
San Francisco Javier Viggé-Biaundó 72 138
San José de Comondu 117 144
La Purísima Concepción de Cadegomó 37 84
Santa RosaIía de Mulegé 18 273
Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Huasinapí 73 143
San Ignacio Cadacaamán 161 222
Santa Gertrudis NA 100
Santiago NA 152
Nuestra Señora del Pilar (Todos Santos) NA 193
San Francisco Borja 14 25
San Fernando Velicatá 6 10
Santa María de los Angeles 19 13
TOTAL 862 1,855

NUMBER OF
TITLES BY
LANGUAGE
Cáhita 1
Castilian 269
French 6
German 3
Italian 26
Latin 138
Nahuatl 1
Opata 1
Tarasco 1
AUTHORS BY
RELIGIOUS
ORDER
Jesuit 144
Franciscan 26
Dominican 16
Other orders 23
NUMBER OF TITLES BY SUBJECT
Biography, lives 63
Grammars, dictionaries 16
History, geography, voyages 65
Holy scripture 30
Law (civil and canon), politics 11
Literature 5
Manuals, missals, calendars,
devotionaries, rules
79
Manual arts (cooking, agriculture, etc.) 6
Morals 57
Philosophy, metaphysics 21
Sciences, medicine 15
Sermons, homilies 127
Theology 33
WORKS & AUTHORS IN
INDEX LIBORUM PROHIBITORUM
ET EXPURGATORUM

Madrid: Emmanuelis Fernández, 1747
Works 22
Authors 40
PLACES OF IMPRINT
IN SPAIN
Alcalá de Henares
Barcelona
Burgos
Cervera
Córdoba
Gerona
Granada
Madrid
Medina del Campo
Oliva
Pamplona
Sacer
Salamanca
Sevilla
Valencia
Valladolid
Zaragoza
TITLES IMPRINTED
OUTSIDE EUROPE
Mexico and Puebla 85
Lima 2
Manila 1


MOST FREQUENTLY LISTED AUTHORS AND TITLES

(Bibles, missals, breviaries, etc. excepted)

Brígida, Santa.
MANUALE, SIVE COMPENDIUM REVELATORIUM COELESTIUM SELECTIORUM.
    Zaragoza: Augustinus Verges, 1660.
      6 copies; theology; Latin; Spanish imprint.

de Loyola, San Ignacio (Castilian; Jesuit author)
EXERCICIOS ESPIRITUALES, Y PRACTICA DE LA PRIMERA SEMANA.
    México: Viuda de Bernardo Calderón, 1655; Bibliotheca Mexicana, 1765.
      5 copies; manual; Mexican imprint.

Esteyneffer, Juan de, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
FLORILEGIO MEDICINAL DE TODAS LAS ENFERMEDADES.
    México: Herederos de Juan Joseph Guillena.Carrascoso.1712.
    Madrid: Joachím Ibarra, 1755.
      9 copies; medicine; Mexican imprint.

Martínez de la Parra, Juan Manuel de la, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
LUZ DE VERDADES CATÓ1ICAS.
    México: Diego Fernandez de León, 1691-1692. 2 vols.
    Madrid: Pedro Marín, 1767.
      5 copies; morals; Mexican imprint.

Nieremberg, Juan Eusebio, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
OBRAS
    Madrid: Domingo García y Morras, 1651. 3 vols.
      5 copies; morals; Spanish imprint.

Ortega, José, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
APOSTÓLICOS AFANES DE LA COMPAÑÍA DE JESÚS.
    Barcelona: Pablo Nadal, 1764.
      5 copies; history; Spanish imprint.

Oviedo, Juan Antonio, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
PANEGYRICOS SAGRADOS, EN HONRA, Y ALABANZA DE DIOS, DE MARÍA SANTISSIMA, SU MADRE, Y DE LOS SANTOS.
    Madrid: Francisco del Hierro, 1718. 2 vols.
      5 copies; sermons; Spanish imprint.

Palma, Luis de la, S.J. (Castilian author)
HISTORIA DE LA SAGRADA PASIÓN SACADA DE LOS QUATRO EVANGELIOS.
    Alcalá de Henares: Juan de Orduña, 1624.
    Madrid: Joachím Ibarra, 1762.
      6 copies; holy scripture; Spanish imprint.

Peña y Montenegro, Alonso de la (Castilian author)
ITINERARIO PARA PAROCHOS DE INDIOS.
    Madrid: Joseph Fernández de Buendía, 1668.
    Pedro Marín, 1771.
      8 copies; manual; Spanish imprint.

Ribadeneyra, Pedro de, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
FLOS SANCTORUM.
    Madrid: Gabriel de Barrio, 1716-1718. 6 vols.
      5 copies; biography, Spanish imprint.

SACROSANCTI ET OECUMENICI CONCILII TRIDENTINI.
    Medina del Campo: Franciscus a Canto, 1577
    Cervera: Universitatis, 1768.
      6 copies; history; Latin; Spanish imprint.

Segneri, Paolo, S.J. (Castilian; Jesuit author)
CONCORDIA ENTRE LA QUIETUD Y LA FATIGA DE LA ORACIÓN.
    Barcelona: Rafael Figueró, 1688
    Madrid: Pantaleón Aznar, 1767.
      8 copies; morals, Spanish imprint.

PROPORTIONS
Jesuit authors, 10/12
Mexican imprints, 3/12

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