Our Lady of Guadalupe: The Madonna of the Americans
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The Santuario de Guadalupe honors the Mexican Mary of Guadalupe. The legend surrounding the Guadalupe of the Americas says that she appeared four times to Juan Diego, a Christianized Aztec Indian, in December of 1531. His age at the time of the Virgin’s manifestations is still uncertain, but many scholars claim he was in his late 50s, and was not the young boy depicted in most of the artwork surrounding the legend.
The story unfolds through four different events that took place on Tepeyac Hill at the northeast rim of present-day Mexico City. One account of the 1531 apparitions records that the Virgin Mary of Guadalupe called herself the “Ever Virgin.” Miguel Sánchez published the first Spanish-language imprint of the story in 1648, which was followed in 1649 by the Nahautal version written by Lasso (Lazo) de la Vega. The Virgin rapidly became the most popular Madonna of the masses, the one to whom they turned in time of need.
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