Juan González de Mendoza


Juan González de Mendoza, O.S.A. was the author of one of the earliest Western histories of China. Published by him in 1586, Historia de las cosas más notables, ritos y costumbres del gran reyno de la China is an account of observations several Spanish travelers in China. An English translation by Robert Parke appeared in 1588 and was reprinted by the Hakluyt Society in two volumes, edited by Sir George T. Staunton, Bart..
González de Mendoza's Historia was mostly superseded in 1615 by the work of much more informed Jesuit missionaries who actually lived in China, Matteo Ricci and Nicolas Trigault, De Christiana expeditione apud Sinas. Much of González de Mendoza's work was plagiarised from Escalante's Discurso de la navegacion

Biography

González de Mendoza was born at Torrecilla en Cameros in 1545. He joined the army but after some years resigned to enter the Order of Saint Augustine. He based his most famous text on the journals of Miguel de Luarca, whose 1580 trip to Ming China provided a simple majority thereof. He never set foot in China, but spent two years in Mexico before returning to Spain.
On 31 May 1593, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Clement VIII as Bishop of Lipari.On 7 June 1593, he was consecrated bishop by Filippo Spinola, Cardinal-Priest of Santa Sabina, with Cristóbal Senmanat y Robuster, Bishop of Orihuela, and Lorenzo Celsi, Bishop of Castro del Lazio, serving as co-consecrators.
On 24 May 1599, he resigned as Bishop of Lipari.
On 7 May 1607, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Paul V as Bishop of Chiapas.
On 17 November 1608, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Paul V as Bishop of Popayán.
He served as Bishop of Popayán until his death on 14 February 1618.

Episcopal succession

While bishop, he was the principal co-consecrator of: