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 ...