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Rodrigo Calderón, Count of Oliva - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rodrigo Calderón, Count of Oliva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Don Rodrigo Calderón, Count of Oliva, Marquis de las Siete Iglesias (es: Don Rodrigo Calderón, conde de Oliva, marqués de las Siete Iglesias), (d. October 21, 1621) Spanish favourite and adventurer, was born at Antwerp.

His father, Francisco Calderón, a member of a family ennobled by Charles V, was a captain in the army who became afterwards comendador mayor of Aragon, presumably by the help of his son. The mother was a Fleming, said by Calderón to have been a lady by birth and called by him María Sandelin. She is said by others to have been first the mistress and then the wife of Francisco Calderón. Rodrigo is said to have been born out of wedlock.

In 1598 he entered the service of the Duke of Lerma as secretary. The accession of Philip III in that year made Lerma, who had unbounded influence over the king, master of Spain. Calderón, who was active and unscrupulous, made himself the trusted agent of Lerma. In the general scramble for wealth among the worthless intriguers who governed in the name of Philip III, Calderón was conspicuous for greed, audacity and insolence. He was created Count of Oliva, a knight of Santiago, commendador of Ocana in the order and secretary to the king (secretario de cámara). He was loaded with plunder and made an advantageous marriage with Iñes de Vargas.

As an insolent upstart he was peculiarly odious to the enemies of Lerma. Two religious persons, Juan de Santa Maria, a Franciscan, and Mariana de San José, prioress of La Encarnacion, worked on Queen Margarita, by whose influence Calderón was removed from the secretaryship in 1612. He, however, retained the favor of Lerma, an indolent man to whom Calderón's activity was indispensable.

When Queen Margarita died in childbirth, in October 1611, Calderón was accused of having used witchcraft against her. In 1612 he was sent on a special mission to Flanders, and on his return was made Marqués de las Siete Iglesias in 1614. Soon after it became generally known that he had ordered the murder of one Francisco de Juaras.

When Lerma was driven from court in 1618 by the intrigues of his own son, the Duke of Uceda, and the king's confessor, the Dominican Aliaga, Calderón was seized upon as an expiatory victim to satisfy public clamour. He was arrested, despoiled, and on January 7, 1620 was savagely tortured to make him confess to the several charges of murder and witchcraft brought against him. Calderón confessed to the murder of Juaras, saying that the man was a pander, and adding that he gave the particular reason by word of mouth since it was more fit to be spoken than written. He steadfastly denied all the other charges of murder and the witchcraft. Some hope of pardon seems to have remained in his mind until he heard the bells tolling for Philip III in March 1621. "He is dead, and I too am dead" was his resigned comment.

One of the first measures of the new reign was to order his execution. Calderón met his fate firmly and with a show of piety on October 21, 1621, and this bearing, together with his broken and prematurely aged appearance, turned public sentiment in his favour. The magnificent devotion of his wife helped materially to placate the hatred he had aroused. Bulwer-Lytton made Rodrigo Calderón the hero of his story Calderon the Courtier. To this day a show of inordinate pride is described in Spanish-speaking countries as "con más orgullo que Don Rodrigo en la horca" ("with more pride than Don Rodrigo on the scaffold").

[edit] Sources

  • Feros, Kingship and Favoritism in the Spain of Philip III, 1598-1621 (Cambridge, 2000);
  • Modesto de la Fuente, Historia General de España (Madrid, 1850-1867), vol. xv. pp. 452 et seq.;
  • Quevedo, Obras (Madrid, 1794), vol. x. Grandes Anales de Quince Dias.
  • A curious contemporary French pamphlet on him, Histoire admirable et declin pitoyable advenue en la personne d'un favorit de la Cour d'Espagne, is reprinted by M.E. Fournier in Varietés historiques (Paris, 1855), vol. i.

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


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