Juan Mateos (courtier)

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Juan Mateos
Kingdom of Spain
Notable workOrigen y dignidad de la caça
SpouseMaría Marquart
Parent
  • Gonzalo Mateos (father)

Juan Mateos (c. 1575 – 15 August 1643) was a horseback hunter and the principal arbalist of Philip IV of Spain. In 1634, he authored Origen y dignidad de la caça (Origin and Dignity of Hunting), a hunting treatise dedicated to the Count-Duke of Olivares. In his dedication he said, "I write solely what I have done, and what I have seen; and what I have seen, do." (Spanish: yo eſcrivo ſolamente lo que he hecho, y lo que he viſto; y lo que he viſto hazer.)[1]

Background

He was the son of Gonzalo Mateos, senior arbalist to the Marquis of Villanueva del Fresno from 1601 to 1606, i.e., while the Spanish Royal Court was in Valladolid [es].[2]: 978  Mateos entered the service of Margaret of Austria as a crossbowman and hunter. Upon her death in 1611, he entered the service of her husband, Philip III, and later the service of their son Philip IV.

Mateos' likeness is known through a bust portrait engraved by

Velázquez around 1632 (Don Juan Mateos, in the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister),[4]: 356  and, in the opinion of Enriqueta Harris, Mateos is one of the characters depicted with the Count-Duke of Olivares and Alonso Martínez de Espinar in Prince Baltasar Carlos in the Riding School.[4]
: 364 

He died in Madrid on 15 August 1643. Among the properties inventoried at his death were two full-length oil portraits, one of his wife María and the other of him, probably the Don Juan Mateos, though the name of the painter is not indicated; these were valued at 100 reales.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Origen y dignidad de la caça, "Al Exmo. Señor Conde Dvqve"" (in Spanish) – via Biblioteca Nacional de España.
  2. ^ Peris Barrio, Alejandro (2009). Los Mateos: una familia de grandes cazadores reales (in Spanish). Vol. LVII. pp. 977–988. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
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  5. ^ Barrio Moya, José Luis (1998). Aportaciones a la biografía de Juan Mateos, ballestero mayor de Felipe IV, retratado por Velázquez (in Spanish). Asociación Cultural. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)