Diego Alfonso de Medrano

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Diego Alfonso de Medrano (Logroño, 16th century – 17th century) was a noble from the House of Medrano and a prominent alchemist tried by the Spanish Inquisition during the Spanish Renaissance. He practiced alchemical medicine in Madrid, collaborating with many of the city's leading physicians, distillers and apothecaries. Medrano worked within an environment of alchemy that prospered at the Spanish court.[1] He was the tutor of the Duke of Infantado.[2]

Education

Coat of arms of the municipality of Medrano, La Rioja (17km from the capital, Logroño)

Don Diego Alfsono de Medrano was from the important and noble House of Medrano in Logroño, La Rioja. Pedro de Toledo Osorio, II Duke of Ferdandina was the patron of Diego Alfonso de Medrano. Medrano's wife was a wealthy Sicilian noblewoman and it is possible that she may have connected him with alchemists of Italian origin in Aranjuez. Pedro de Toledo Osorio, II Duke of Ferdandina was also the 5th Marquess of Villafranca del Bierzo, Governor of the Duchy of Milan, Prince of Montalbano, a Spanish-Italian nobleman and a Grandee of Spain.[2]

Diego Alfonso de Medrano was an established nobleman and in his home town of Logroño he initially started his study of alchemical medicine. His method of crafting medicines was scholarly, deeply rooted in the traditional alchemical and hermetic literature that utilized a complex language of emblems, mystical symbols and allegories to decipher medical secrets. Diego Alfonso de Medrano's practice of alchemical medicine was supposedly linked with astrology and 'magic'.[2]

Tutor to the Duke of Infantado

Diego Alfonso de Medrano served as the tutor to Íñigo López de Mendoza y Mendoza, 5th Duke of the Infantado during the latter half of the 16th century. His position as the Duke's educator solidified his ties with the court's noble and scientific circles, which included many Italians. Diego's teachings to the Duke encompassed a variety of subjects, astrology among them.[2] Valerio Forte, the chief distiller for King Philip III of Spain, provided Medrano with an astrology book, which Medrano utilized in his capacity as a tutor to the Duke of Infantado.[3]

Trials in the Spanish Inquisition

References

Biography

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