Mansión Iturbe and the Conspiracy of Valladolid
The stately Mansión Iturbe has lived and breathed the history of Pátzcuaro. One chapter of its long and colorful past was a time when Don José María Abarca – who was an integral part of the “Conspiracy of Valladolid” of 1809 – and some of his trusted friends wanted put together a Government Junta, made up entirely of local individuals. The challenge initially was to create an autonomous government, while somehow maintaining loyalty to King Fernando VII of Spain (1784-1833, son of King Carlos IV). In the search for this delicate balance, thinkers in and around Morelia (San Nicolás College and the Tridentino Seminary) came up with a premise that greatly influenced the ultimate direction of the Conspiracy of Valladolid: The responsibility of sovereignty of a nation falls on the shoulders of the people, in the absence of the king’s influence. As fate would have it, the Spanish king was currently engaged with the French invasion of the peninsula and the New Spa