Julián de Cortázar y Carrillo (15 January 1576 – 31 October 1630) was a Spanish-born prelate of the Catholic Church in the part of New Spain that is now Colombia. From 1618 to 1627 he served as Bishop of Córdoba in Argentina, and from 1627 to 1630 as Archbishop of Santafé en Nueva Granada in New Spain.


Julián de Cortázar
Archbishop of Santafé en Nueva Granada
ChurchCatholic Church
ArchdioceseSantafé en Nueva Granada
Appointed7 April 1625
Installed4 July 1627
Term ended16 October 1630
PredecessorHernando de Arias y Ugarte
SuccessorBernardino de Almansa Carrión
Orders
Consecration25 December 1618
by Lorenzo Pérez de Grado
Personal details
Born15 January 1576
Died31 October 1630 (aged 54)
Bogotá, Viceroyalty of Peru
Previous post(s)Bishop of Córdoba (1618–1627)
Coat of armsJulián de Cortázar's coat of arms

Biography edit

Julián de Cortázar y Carrillo was born on 15 January 1576 in Durango, Biscay, Spain.[1] His father was Juan Martínez de Cortázar.[2]

Education and priesthood edit

Cortázar graduated from the University of Oñati, and then taught theology there.[2] He later worked as a professor at the Colegio de Santa Cruz in Valladolid, Castile, and later was the canon of Santo Domingo de la Calzada.[2]

Bishop of Córdoba edit

In 1617, King Philip III of Spain proposed Cortázar to be Bishop of Córdoba,[3] and Pope Paul V appointed him on 10 April 1617.[1] He immediately sailed to the Argentina, landing in Buenos Aires in March 1618.[3] He then traveled to Asunción, Paraguay, where he was consecrated as bishop by Bishop Lorenzo Pérez de Grado, Bishop of Paraguay.[1][3][4] He then returned to Argentina, beginning his term as bishop with a pastoral visit to many of the cities in his diocese.[3]

Cortázar arrived on 28 September 1617 in Santiago del Estero, the seat of the diocese, where he found the cathedral destroyed by fire and only half rebuilt.[3] He spent the first few years of his episcopacy there, rebuilding the cathedral and correcting certain customs of the local clergy.[3] He then moved on to Córdoba, the namesake of the diocese, where he helped develop the recently founded Jesuit-run University of Córdoba.[3] In March 1620, back in Santiago de Estero, Cortázar was the principal consecrator of Pedro Carranza Salinas, the first bishop of Buenos Aires.[1][3]

In 1620, Cortázar continued his pastoral trip throughout his diocese, visiting La Rioja, Londres, San Miguel de Tucumán.[3] During a visit to Calchaquí Valleys, the presence of an armed escort with Cortázar alarmed indigenous people, causing them to flee and refuse to meet with him.[3] From there, he visited Salta, San Salvador de Jujuy, and Nuestra Señora de Talavera.[3] He returned to Santiago de Estero in 1621.[3] In the capital, he founded a seminary for the diocese and entrusted its administration to the Society of Jesus.[5]

Throughout his tenure as bishop, Cortázar came into frequent conflict with the governor of Tucumán Province, Juan Alonso de Vera y Zárate, with it once reaching the extent of Cortázar excommunicating him for several weeks.[3]

Archbishop of Bogotá edit

On 9 January 1625, King Philip IV of Spain presented Cortázar to be Archbishop of Santafé in Nueva Granada (now the Archdiocese of Bogotá),[2] and Pope Urban VIII appointed him on 7 April of that year.[1] He traveled through Peru and arrived in Bogotá on 4 July 1627,[2] and was installed as archbishop that day.[1] As archbishop, Cortázar expanded the episcopal palace and made a pastoral trip throughout part of the archdiocese.[2]

After three years as archbishop, Cortázar died in Bogotá on 31 October 1630, at the age of 54.[1][2] He was buried in the Bogotá Cathedral.[2] His legacy includes a street in Córdoba, Argentina, that bears his name.[2]

Episcopal lineage edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Cheney, David M. "Archbishop Julián de Cortázar". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Catholic Hierarchy. Retrieved 2016-12-24.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Florez de Ocáriz, Juan. "II Arzobispos y dignidades del Nuevo Reino de Granada, parte 3 | banrepcultural.org". www.banrepcultural.org. Retrieved 2016-12-24.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bruno, Cayetano (1993). La Iglesia en la Argentina: cuatrocientos años de historia [The Church in Argentina: Four Hundred Years of History]. Salesian Center of Studies. pp. 102–105.
  4. ^ America. America Press. 1910-01-01. p. 190.
  5. ^ "El obispo Julián de Cortázar de nuestra ciudad, escribe al Rey". mariaceciliarossi.com.ar. Retrieved 2016-12-24.

External links and additional sources edit