Campuzano-Polanco family
Campuzano Polanco was a prominent family from the colony of Santo Domingo (today Dominican Republic) with origins in Santiago de los Caballeros. During the colonial era of the Hispaniola, their members and descendants went on to occupy high political, military and ecclesiastical positions, not only locally and outside the Island, but also in the metropolis of Spain. Their merits extend since the beginning and until the end of the colony.[1]
Origins
Pedro Perez Polanco (c.1635-1714) was a captain of the military bands of the "cincuentenas" (bands of 50 cavalry lancers ) from the northern part of the island of the Hispaniola who lead successful military campaigns in the English invasion of Penn and Venables in 1655[2] and in the Battle of the Limonade in 1691.[3] Along with other captains such as Luis Lopez Tirado, Antonio Pichardo Vinuesa, Jose Morel de Santa Cruz, Francisco del Monte and others, Polanco constituted the military and political class of Santiago de los Caballeros and the North coast.[4]
Perez Polanco was also Mayor of Santiago de los Caballeros and well off hatero (herder), rancher and sugar mill owner. He was the only son and successor of Garcia Perez Polanco (c.1620- 1656)[5], who had also been a captain of the northern military bands defending the northern coast and towns against the buccaneers and the filibusters from the Tortuga Island.[6] His mother was Ines Martinez Mejia de Henao.
His grandfather, Pedro Polanco de Henao (c.1585-1679), was Mayor of the town of Concepcion de La Vega in 1623[7][8] and was married to Ana Minaya Alconchel. His great grandparents Garcia Perez Polanco (c.1535) and Apolinaria de Henao y Almeida Casasola descended from nobles and the earliest settlers of Santiago de los Caballeros, La Vega and Cotui,[9][10][11] three of the oldest European settlements in the American continent. Garcia Perez Polanco was also Mayor of La Vega around 1575[12]
His great great grandfather, Garcia de Polanco (Santillana del Mar, Spain, c.1480- ) was one of the first settlers who landed in the New World[13][14][15]. He arrived with Christopher Columbus in the Gallega ship on his 4th voyage in 1502 that attempted to circumnavigate the world for the first time. [16]
His relatives Luis Polanco was mayor of Cotui in 1638,[17] and Garcia Polanco, who was Vicar General in 1660 under Archbishop Francisco Pio Guadalupe Tellez[18]
Pedro Perez Polanco married Bernarda Martinez de Rojas. Bernarda was the daughter of Fulgencio Martinez de Ugarte, a relator of the Royal Audiencia, and Ana de Rojas Figueroa, sister of Don Gabriel de Rojas Valle Figueroa, leader and commander of the Capture of Fort Rocher in the Tortuga Island in 1654.
Their daughter, Maria Josefa Perez Polanco (c.1660-1744) married Gregorio Semillan Campuzano. Campuzano (b. 1648) was an hidalgo from Guadalajara, Spain and arrived in the island in 1680 as an assessor of the Governor Francisco de Segura Sandoval y Castilla (1678-1684).[19] He was also Mayor of Santiago de los Caballeros and wrote a chronicle titled "Memorial" where the living conditions and economy of the north of the island at the time were described.[20] They had at least five sons and three daughters,[21] who used the compound surname Campuzano-Polanco as a sign of distinction, a tradition that all the descendants adopted as well.[22][23]
1st Generation
Francisco Gregorio Campuzano Polanco (1682-1765)
Dedicated to the clergy and became Prior Provincial of the Dominican Order (Order of the Preachers) in 1720 for the area of Santa Cruz de las Indias with a wide jurisdiction over the convents of Santo Domingo, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Cuba and Jamaica. He received his doctorate of theology in the Convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome in 1721[24]
Pedro Campuzano Polanco (1685-1754)
Captain of the Royal Armies from 1708 to 1719. He was Lieutenant Colonel of the city of La Vega, Villa del Cotuí and its parties in 1719, in charge of evicting the enemies who were approaching the coasts[25]. Along with his brother Jose, he financed many successful privateer corsair expeditions in the early 1700s. He played a major role in the pacification of the uprising in the city of Santiago, known as the "Revolt of the Captains".[26] and in charge of the incorporation to the island of the families and victims of the Guadalupe and Tolosa Shipwreck in 1724. Later he was mayor of Santo Domingo from 1752 to 1754. His son, Antonio Bruno Campuzano-Polanco, became the head/rector priest of the Cathedral Primate of the Americas.[25][27]
Jose Campuzano Polanco (1698-1760)
Arguably the most successful privateer corsair from Santo Domingo during the Golden Age of Piracy in the Caribbean in the first half of the 18th century operating under a "patente de corso" (letter of marque).[28][29] One of the most daring and active corsairs of the Caribbean region in the fight against illicit trade with countries other than Spain, capturing more than 50 foreign ships with his ships El Firme (his first vessel), N.S. Popa, and Maria.[30][31]
Known for his audacity and deep knowledge of the seas, he was awarded patente de corso to operate expeditions in Cartagena, Santa Marta, Maracaibo, Florida, Puerto Rico and the island of Santa Cruz, among other areas. In theory privateering aimed to stop contraband but in reality it was a very important activity for the island of Santo Domingo, since it provided products of basic consumption to the population and also slave workers.[32]
Jose Campuzano-Polanco was also one of the naval Captains who, along with Lorenzo Alderete and Carlos Desnaux [es], defended Cartagena in the Spanish victory in the Battle of Cartagena de Indias in 1741 commanded by Admiral Blas de Lezo (known as "Half Man"), the most crucial battle of the War of Jenkins' Ear (La Guerra del Asiento [es])[33][34][35] and considered one of the greatest defeats in British naval history.[36] He wrote a diary about the battle which along with the diary of English lieutenant William Forbes, are the two main sources for the telling of this historical encounter in the Caribbean.[37]
Juan Campuzano Polanco (1695-1780)
Juan Campuzano Polanco was a wealthy hatero and landowner in Santiago de los Caballeros and the north west region of the island involved in livestock exports and tobacco haciendas.[38] He married Beatriz Sanchez Firpo, daughter of Captain corsair Domingo Moreno Sanchez from Santa Cruz de Tenerife[39] and had at least 5 children: fray Antonio, who was Prior Provincial of the Mercedarian Order;[40][41][42] Luis, Mariana, Dr. Pbr. Pedro,[43] and Diego.[44]
His youngest son Col. Lt. Diego Polanco (1770-c.1840) was the military commander for the Cibao region of Santo Domingo in the Battle of Palo Hincado in 1808 as well as the president of the Assembly of Bondillo which returned Santo Domingo to Spain from France.
Juan Campuzano Polanco was the main inheritor of the lands and herds that belonged to his grandfather Capt. Pedro Perez Polanco[45][46], which had belonged to the family since the beginning of the XVII century or earlier[47][48]. The Polanco Sanchez family of Santiago were one of the merchant trading families active in the late 18th century in north of the island until the Era of France of Santo Domingo, along with other families such as the Espaillat, Arredondo and Pichardo[49]
Francisco Campuzano Polanco (1689-1741)
A maestre de campo who moved to Coro, Venezuela and there he married Francisca Morillo de Ayala and founded cacao farms for exportation. He became Teniente gobernador [es] (lieutenant governor) of Coro, mayor of the city in 1715 and provincial oficial of the Cajas Reales. His children were assigned military positions and engaged in agricultural activities. One of his sons Francisco Campuzano-Polanco Morillo was mayor of Coro as well and Jose moved back and resided in Santo Domingo.
2nd Generation
Jose Campuzano- Polanco Morillo (1723-c.1800)
Returned to Santo Domingo to manage the sugar mill of Barbarroja in Hato Mayor which belonged to the family and became the first Provincial Mayor of the Santa Hermandad when the title was first created in the island in 1758. Jose Campuzano, also known as Dr. Don Jose Polanco,[50][51][52] obtained a doctorate in law from the University of Santo Tomas de Aquino in 1751[53] and was named mayor of Santo Domingo in 1752 by Governor Francisco Rubio y Peñaranda (1751-1759).
He married Rosa Fernandez de Lara and had one son, Adrian and three daughters, Maria Magdalena who married Nicolas Heredia Serrano Pimentel, Josefa who married Jose Maria Mieses Guridi, a wealthy rancher and Maria Magdalena Catalina who married Ignacio Perez Caro, great grandson of former Governor Ignacio Perez Caro.
3rd Generation
Adrian Campuzano-Polanco Fernandez (1754-1819)
Adrian Campuzano-Polanco was the first criollo from Santo Domingo to be elected as a deputy to the Cortes de Cadiz in 1811 as a Member for America and the Philippines, positions to which he resigned or did not accept. He married Rosa Perez-Caro, granddaughter of the Governor Ignacio Perez Caro. He was the last mayor of Santo Domingo in 1797-1798 before the Era of France of Santo Domingo. He was also rector of the University of Santo Tomas de Aquino in 1795 after obtaining his doctorate in law that same year,[54] asesor of the Army in Cuba and lawyer for the Royal Audencia in Camaguey, Cuba [es].[55]
4th Generation
Francisco Javier Caro (Santo Domingo, 1773- Madrid, 1848)
Francisco Javier Caro was the son of Maria Magdalena Catalina Campuzano-Polanco Fernandez and Ignacio Perez Caro y Oviedo, great grandson of former Governor Ignacio Perez Caro. One of his three sisters, Maria Belen Caro Campuzano-Polanco, was married to Manuel Zequeira y Arango, considered the first Cuban poet.[56]
He became rector of the University of Salamanca from 1798 to 1800 after studying there years before, being one of the few American criollos ever to do so.
He was member of the Supreme Central and Governing Junta and Captain General of Castilla la Vieja (1808-1810) and was the royal commissary for the King of Spain in the island of Santo Domingo in charge of the institutional reorganization of the country at the start of the 2nd Spanish Colony after La Reconquista of Juan Sanchez Ramirez in 1808.[57]
He was diputy for America in the Cortes de Cadiz from 1813-1814 and in 1821, minister of the Consejo de Indias from 1815-1817 and in 1834 and a member of the court of Isabel II from 1833 to 1836. Caro was named Procer del Reino [es] by Isabel II in 1834[58][59]. He was also testamentary of King Fernando VII.[22][60]
5th Generation
Maria Mercedes Heredia Campuzano-Polanco, daughter of Nicolas Heredia Serrano and Maria Magdalena Campuzano-Polanco Fernandez, married Jose Francisco Heredia Mieses. They were the parents of poet Jose Maria Heredia (1803-1839), considered by many to be the first romantic poet of America[61][62] He is known as "El Cantor del Niagara" and was named National Poet of Cuba [es]. Jose Maria Heredia's mentor and professor was his own cousin, Francisco Javier Caro.[63]
Private burial chapel of the Campuzano-Polanco
In the early 18th century Francisco Gregorio Campuzano-Polanco built the Chapel of Virgin del Rosario in the Church of the Convent of the Dominican Order [es][64][65][66]. The family became the owners of the chapel and most its members are buried there.
The vault of the chapel is decorated with the twelve zodiacal sign around the sun, and because of this the chapel is also called the Chapel of the Zodiac. In addition in the vault there are other personages like the Olympic Gods that represent the four seasons. This interesting and unique chapel is the only one of its kind in America and one of the four vaults with astrological representations that exist today in the world,[66] along with the Celestial Vault or "Sky of Salamanca" [es] in the University of Salamanca, Chapel of the Benaventes [es] in Rioseco and the Chapel of Osiris in the Hathor Temple of Dandera[67][68]
References
- ^ Utrera, Fray Cipriano de. "Dominicanos Insignes en el exterior. Pag 11". CLIO Vol. 33.
- ^ Utrera, Fray Cipriano de. "Heredia: Centenario de Jose Maria Heredia, Pag. 139". Editorial Franciscana, Ciudad Trujillo 1939.
- ^ Del Monte y Tejada, Antonio. "Historia de Santo Domingo Tomo III, page 50". Imprenta Garcia Hermanos, 1890.
- ^ Del Monte y Tejeda, Antonio. "Historia de Santo Domingo Tomo III, page 23". Imprenta Garcia Hermanos, 1890.
- ^ "Méritos del Capitan y Sargento Mayor Don Pedro Perez Polanco. Carta del Gobernador Francisco Segura Sandoval y Castilla (1680)". Archivo General de Indias, Santo_Domingo, 64,R.2,N.39. pp. Image no. 1.
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(help) - ^ Torres Agudo, Ruth. "Los Campuzano-Polanco, una familia de la élite de la ciudad de Santo Domingo". Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos [online].
- ^ "Confirmacion de oficio: Pedro Polanco de Henao". Archivo General de Indias; Santo Domingo,32,N.18.
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(help) - ^ Gil-Bermejo García, Juana. "La española: anotaciones históricas, 1600-1650 (p. 249)".
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(help) - ^ Del Monte y Tejada, Antonio. "Historia de Santo Domingo, page 16". Imprenta Garcia Hermanos, 1890.
- ^ Rodriguez Demorizi, Emilio. "Relaciones Historicas de Santo Domingo, Vol II page 407". Editora Montalvo, 1945.
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(help) - ^ "Meritos: García Polanco (1644)". Archivo General de Indias, Indiferente,112,N.97. p. Image 21.
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(help) - ^ Utrera, Fray Cipriano de. "Noticias Históricas de Santo Domingo Vol. Vl page 241". Editora Taller, 1983.
- ^ Leon Guerrero, Montserrat. "Los Pasajeros del Cuarto Viaje de Colon. Page 12" (PDF).
- ^ Esteves Volckers, Guillermo (1964). "Los primeros pobladores de Santo Domingo" (PDF). CLIO No. 121. p. 7.
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(help) - ^ Arranz Marquez, Luis. "El Repartimiento de Alburquerque de 1514: Villa Buenaventura". Fundacion Garcia Arvelo. p. 544.
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(help) - ^ Columbus called this 4th and last voyage his greatest and most challenging one. "Columbus:The Lost Voyage"
- ^ "Confirmacion de oficio: Luis Polanco". Archivo General de Indias Santo Domingo,34,N.2.
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(help) - ^ "Meritos: Garcia Polanco". Archivo General de Indias Indiferente,196,N.35.
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(help) - ^ "MERITOS: Gregorio Cemillan y Campuzano". Archivo General de Indias Indiferente,130,N.95.
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(help) - ^ Rodriguez Demorizi, Emilio. "Familias Hispanoamericas: Campuzano-Polanco" (PDF). BAGN- Boletin del Archivo General de la Nacion.
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(help) - ^ "Gregorio Semillán Campuzano". Ancestry.
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(help) - ^ a b Cassa, Roberto. "Biografias sumarias de los diputados de Santo Domingo en las cortes españolas". Archivo General de la Nacion, 2013. p. 33.
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(help) - ^ Sometimes the Campuzano Polanco family members used just their second last name Polanco as appears in various documents of the Royal Audiencia of Santo Domingo from the AGI.
- ^ "Meritos: fray Gregorio Semillán Campuzano Polanco". Archivo General de Indias Indiferente,219,N.23.
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(help) - ^ a b "Meritos: Pedro Campuzano Polanco". Archivo General de Indias Indiferente,141,N.82.
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(help) - ^ Cassa, Roberto. "Rebelion de los Capitanes: Que viva el rey y muera el mal gobierno". Archivo General de la Nacion, 2014.
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(help) - ^ Alemar, Luis. "La Catedral de Santo Domingo". p. 99.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Stapells Johnson, Victoria. "Corsairs of Santo Domingo: A Socio Economic study 1718- 1779, page 102" (PDF). University of Ottawa, 1985.
- ^ "Meritos: Jose Campuzano Polanco". Archivo General de Indias Indiferente,145,N.52.
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(help) - ^ Benei, Veronique. "The corsair, the bishop, the governor and the runaways: Negotiating slavery in early eighteenth century Santa Marta, New Granada". Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos [Online].
- ^ Britto Garcia, Luis (1998). Demonios Del Mar: Piratas Y Corsarios En Venezuela, 1528-1727. Comision Presidencial V Centenario de Venezuela.
- ^ Sánchez Valverde, Antonio. "Idea del valor de la Isla Española y utilidades, que de ella puede sacar su monarquía, page 142". Editora Montalvo, 1958.
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(help) - ^ Hargreaves- Mawdsley, W. N. "Spain under the Bourbons, 1700–1833: A collection of documents (p. 101-102)".
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(help) - ^ Marley, David (2008). Wars of the Americas: a chronology of armed conflict in the Western Hemisphere, 1492 to the present, Volume 1. ABC, CLIO. p. 391.
- ^ "In memory of Blas de Lezo: Battle of Cartagena de Indias". Grandes Batallas.
- ^ Conde Sturla, Pedro (2015). "Blas de Lezo: el vasco que humillo a los ingleses" – via El Caribe.
- ^ Cerdá Crespo, Jorge (2010). Conflictos coloniales: la guerra de los nueve años 1739-1748. Universidad de Alicante. p. 186.
- ^ Hernández González, Manuel Vicente. "La Colonización de la Frontera Dominicana, 1680-1795 (p. 112)".
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(help) - ^ Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel Vicente. "El Sur Dominicano (1680-1795). Cambios sociales y transformaciones economicas. (p. 352)".
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(help) - ^ Utrera, Cipriano de (1982). Noticias Históricas de Santo Domingo Vol. V. Editora Taller. p. 202.
- ^ Castillo Lara, Lucas (1980). "Los mercedarios y la vida política y social de Caracas en los siglos XVII y XVIII, Volume 2". Academia Nacional de la Historia de Venezuela. p. 146.
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(help) - ^ Campillo Perez, Julio. "Francisco Espaillat y el desarrollo del Cibao: documentos". p. 113.
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(help) - ^ Utrera, Cipriano de (1983). Noticias Históricas de Santo Domingo Vol. VI. Editora Taller. p. 266.
- ^ Campillo Perez, Dr. Julio G. "Revista CLIO no. 123 p. 50".
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(help) - ^ In his testament Don Juan Polanco affirms to have inherited at the beginning of the XVIII century the hato of Romero in la Vega, which is part of the land of Bonagua which belonged to his grandfather Capt Pedro Perez Polanco until his death in 1714, besides the hatos of La Penda and La Torre which are in the same vicinities as Bonagua.
He further acquired new lands and hatos in the northeast of the island in the middle of the XVIII century. Rodriguez Demorizi, Emilio. "Geografía y sociedad. Testamento de Don Juan Polanco. Vecino de la Ciudad de Santiago de los Caballeros (1780)". Editora del Caribe. p. 649-651.
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(help) - ^ His youngest son Col. Diego Polanco later acquired tobacco lands in the region of Gurabo and Pontezuela in the north of Santiago in the end of the XVIII century, where his sons Gral Tomas Polanco and Gral. Francisco Javier Polanco also settled. [1]
- ^ Capt Pedro Perez Polanco had inherited from his grandfather, Pedro Polanco de Henao, the Hato of Guanagua in La Vega according to the census of Antonio de Osorio in 1605 (Demorizi Relaciones Historicas II, page 437) or Hato of Buenagua (today Bonagua) in La Vega according to the census of governor Sandoval around 1660. Gil-Bermejo García, Juana. "La española: anotaciones históricas, 1600-1650 (p. 58-60)".
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(help) - ^ Lugo, Americo (1952). Historia de Santo Domingo desde el 1556 hasta 1608: edad media de la isla española. Editorial Librería Dominicana. p. 219.
- ^ Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel Vicente. "Expansion fundacional y desarrollo en el norte dominicano (1680-1795) (p.56-58)".
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(help) - ^ "Documentos para estudio: marco de la época y problemas del Tratado de Basilea de 1795, en la parte española de Santo Domingo, Volume 5 (p. 301)". Academia Dominicana de la Historia.
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(help) - ^ "Panorama de la filosofía en Santo Domingo, Volume 1 (p.21)". Impresora "Arte y Cine".
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(help) - ^ "Publicaciones / Academia Dominicana de la Historia, Volume 22 (p.73)".
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(help) - ^ "Historia del Poder Judicial en Santo Domingo" (PDF). Poderjudicial.gov.do.
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(help) - ^ "Historia del poder judicial en Santo Domingo" (PDF). Poderjudicial.gov.do.
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(help) - ^ Cassa, Roberto. "Biografias sumarias de los diputados de Santo Domingo en las Cortes españolas". Archivo General de la Nacion, 2013. p. 33.
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(help) - ^ Historia de familias cubanas, Volume 6. Editorial Hércules. 1950. p. 369.
- ^ Cassa, Roberto. "Personajes dominicanos, Tomo I, page 84". Archivo General de la Nacion, 2014.
- ^ "Francisco Javier Caro". Portal de Archivos Españoles.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Francisco Javier Caro". Real Academia de la Historia.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Torres Agudo, Ruth. "Dos catedraticos dominicanos en la Universidad de Salamanca (p. 245)" (PDF). CLIO No. 168, 2004.
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(help) - ^ "Great Authors of World Literature". Enotes.
- ^ Ellis, Keith. "Jose Maria Heredia Immortal Niagara: A Pan-American Story".
- ^ Augier, Angel. Niágara y otros textos: poesía y prosa selectas. Venezuela: Biblioteca Ayacucho. p. 267.
- ^ Cassa, Roberto. "Biografias sumarias de los diputados de Santo Domingo en las Cortes españolas". Archivo General de la Nacion, 2013. p. 34.
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(help) - ^ Von Kugelgen, Helga (2004). "Exilio con la antiguedad. Erwin Walter Palm en Santo Domingo" (PDF). Boletin de Arte No. 25, Universidad de Malaga. p. 104-105.
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(help) - ^ a b Walter Palm, Erwin (1950). "A Vault with Cosmotheological Representations at the "Imperial Monastery" of the Dominicans on the Island of Hispaniola". The Art Bulletin. JSTOR 3047296.
- ^ Rubio, Fray Vicente (1986). "Capilla del Rosario: La mas extraña boveda del pais" (PDF). El Caribe.
- ^ Del Monte, Manuel (2015). "Capilla de Nuestra Senora del Rosario".
Works cited
- Ruth Torres Agudo, ‘Los Campuzano-Polanco, una familia de la élite de la ciudad de Santo Domingo’, Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos [online], Coloquios, Online 05.01.2007. URL : http://nuevomundo.revues.org/3240 ; DOI : 10.4000/nuevomundo.3240.
- Emilio Rodríguez Demorizi, Familias Hispanoamericanas, Vol. 1, Trujillo, Dominican Rep., Montalvo, 1959, p. 61
- Victoria Stapells Johnson, Corsarios de Santo Domingo 1718-1779: Un estudio socio-económico, Lleida, Spain, Espai-Temps, 1992.
- Ruth Torres Agudo, "Elites y grupos de poder: Los Hacendados de Santo Domingo (1750- 1795). University of Salamanca, 2008. URL: http://gredos.usal.es/jspui/bitstream/10366/21683/3/DHMMC_TorresAgudo_Elites.pdf
- Machado Baéz, Manuel. Santiagueses ilustres de la colonia. 2nd Edition, Santo Domingo, Ediciones Centurión, 1972
- Torres Agudo, Ruth. “Dos catedráticos dominicanos en la Universidad de Salamanca”. CLÍO 168 (Santo Domingo, 2004) pp. 245–264.
- Ugarte, María. Iglesias, Capillas y ermitas coloniales. Santo Domingo, Colección Banreservas, 1995.
- Utrera, Fray Cipriano de. Centenario de José María Heredia (1839-1939). Ciudad Trujillo, Editoral Franciscana, 1939.
- Utrera, Fray Cipriano de. Santo Domingo. Dilucidaciones históricas. Santo Domingo, Publicaciones de la Secretaría de Estado de Educación, Bellas Artes y Cultos, 1978, Vol I.
- Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel Vicente. Expansion fundacional y desarrollo en el norte dominicano (1680-1795), Santo Domingo, Editora Buho, 2007.
- Gabriel García, José. Compendio de la Historia de Santo Domingo. Tomo II, Santo Domingo, Imprenta de Garcia Hermanos, 1894