Alonso Martínez de Espinar

Alonso Martínez de Espinar (5 May 1588 – 14 May 1682) was a Spanish courtier, and one of three important writers on venery of the Spanish Baroque.[1] He was a ballestero ("crossbowman") and arquebusier to several kings of Spain.[1]

Alonso Martínez de Espinar
Anonymous portrait in the Museo del Greco, Toledo
Born(1588-05-05)May 5, 1588
DiedMay 14, 1682(1682-05-14) (aged 94)
Madrid
NationalityKingdom of Spain
Occupation
Notable work
Arte de ballestería y montería
Spouse(s)
  • Francisca de Rojas
  • Juliana Romano
Parents
  • Cristóbal Martínez de Espinar (father)
  • Juana Hernández Sacristán (mother)

Life

Martínez de Espinar was the son of Cristóbal Martínez de Espinar, of Baza in Granada, and Juana Hernández Sacristán, who was from Brunete in the province of Madrid. He was baptised in the church of San Martín in Madrid. He had a sister, Jerónima Martínez de Espinar, who married Alonso Mateos, who was ballestero to the King of Spain and the brother of Juan Mateos, author of an important book on venery.[1]

Pictorial representations

Martínez de Espinar appears in the original version of Prince Baltasar Carlos in the Riding School painted by Diego Velázquez at the Palacio del Buen Retiro in 1636.[2]:272 He is shown in the right middle ground of the picture, handing a lance to Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares, riding-master to Prince Baltasar Carlos, who will then hand it to his charge, who is on horseback in the foreground; behind Martínez de Espinar is Juan Mateos, while on a balcony of the palace stand King Philip IV and Queen Isabel.[1][2]:272

Three portraits are known or believed to be of Martínez de Espinar: the frontispiece of his book Arte de ballestería y montería, an engraving by Johan de Noort; an anonymous painting of the school of Velázquez in the Museo del Prado in Madrid, thought to be of him;[1] and another anonymous portrait in the Museo del Greco in Toledo.

Published work

The Arte de ballestería y montería is one the three principal works on venery of the Spanish Baroque period.[1][3]:18[lower-alpha 1] It was published in Madrid in 1644, with a preface by Francisco de Quevedo Villegas.[1][4] It is dedicated to Balthasar Charles, Prince of Asturias, and contains portrait engravings of him and of Martínez de Espinar by Juan de Noort; the other engravings, of hunting scenes, are by an unknown hand.[1]

The book is in three parts, and – despite the title, which means roughly "the art of crossbowmanship and hunting" – deals with hunting both with the crossbow and with the arquebus; it also covers hunting with lures and traps.[1]

A second edition was published in 1739 in Naples,[5] which at that time was under Spanish rule; another was published by Antonio Marín in Madrid in 1761.[1][6]

Notes

  1. The others are the Origen y dignidad de la caça by Juan Mateos, 1634;[7] and the unpublished manuscript Libro de Montería by Pedro de Pedraza Gaitán.[3]:18[8]

References

  1. Fradejas Rueda, José Manuel (2018). Alonso Martínez de Espinar. Diccionario Biográfico (in Spanish). Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  2. Harris, Enriqueta (1976). Velázquez's Portrait of Prince Baltasar Carlos in the Riding School. 118. The Burlington Magazine. pp. 266–275.(subscription required).
  3. López Ontiveros, Antonio (1991). Algunos aspectos de la evolución de la caza en España (PDF). Agricultura y Sociedad (in Spanish). 58. pp. 13–51.
  4. Martínez de Espinar, Alonso (1644). Arte de ballestería y montería (in Spanish). Madrid: Imprenta Real.
  5. Martínez de Espinar, Alonso (1739). Arte de ballestería y montería (in Spanish). Napoles: Francisco Ricciardo.
  6. Martínez de Espinar, Alonso (1761). Arte de ballestería y montería (in Spanish). Madrid: Por Antonio Marin.
  7. Mateos, Juan (1634). Origen y dignidad de la caça al exmo. sr. don Gaspar de Guzman, conde duque de San Lucar la Mayor (in Spanish). Madrid: Fran[cis]co Martinez.
  8. de Pedraza Gaitán ([n.d.]), Pedro. Libro de montería: que trata cómo se a de seguir el monte con el arcabuz y sabuesso: dirigido a la Magestad del Rey Don Felipe Nuestro Señor IIII (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de España. Unpublished manuscript, reference MSS/8285
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