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Manuel Abad y Queipo

Manuel Abad y Queipo
Bishop elect
Diocese Michoacán, México
Installed 1810 (not confirmed)
Term ended 1822
Predecessor Marcos de Moriana y Zafrilla
Successor Juan Cayetano Gómez de Portugal y Solís
Personal details
Born August 26, 1751
Villarpedre, Asturias
Died September 15, 1825
Toledo, Spain
Nationality Spanish
Denomination Roman Catholic

Dr. Manuel Abad y Queipo (August 26, 1751, Villarpedre, Asturias – 1824, Toledo) was a Spanish Roman Catholic Bishop of Michoacán in the Viceroyalty of New Spain at the time of the Mexican War of Independence. He was "an acute social commentator of late colonial Mexico ... an exemplification of the enlightened clergyman."

Born in Asturias in the 18th century, Manuel Abad y Queipo was the natural son of an Asturian nobleman. He obtained his baccalaureate in law and canon law from the University of Salamanca. Thereafter he went to Guatemala with Bishop Monroy. In Guatemala he was ordained a priest. Beginning in 1784 he resided in Valladolid (now Morelia), where Bishop Antonio San Miguel made him a judge in a canon law court. In that position he gained considerable knowledge about church wealth in terms of capital and credit. In 1805 he obtained a doctorate in canon law from the University of Guadalajara. In 1810 he was nominated as Bishop-elect of Michoacan, but was never confirmed in the post. On the death of Bishop San Miguel, the Council of the Indies named him canon of the cathedral of Valladolid, a position which he held until 1815.

In 1807 he traveled to Spain to seek his habilitation, since his status as a natural child prohibited his promotion to the higher levels of the ecclesiastical hierarchy. He returned to New Spain in the position of vicar general.

In 1810 the Regency (the Spanish government fighting the French invasion) named him bishop-elect of Michoacán. He took over the diocese before the arrival of the pontifical bull confirming his position. The pope did not approve his nomination, and thus the bull never arrived.

Although born in Spain, Abad y Queipo felt at home in New Spain, saying he was "an American by voluntary adoption." He had strong views about New Spain and its place within the Spanish empire,saying that the crown gave Mexico's indigenous equal rights with the conquering Spaniards and that Spain despite its decline had "made the American possessions flourish until they were the envy of Europeans." He considered the decline of Spain could be attributed to emigration to the overseas territories. He critiqued economic inequality in New Spain, "in America there is no graduation or middle ground: everyone is either rich or poverty stricken, noble or infamous" leading to conflict.


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