Isabel de Josa
Isabel de Josa, whose full name was Dona Isabel de Josa y Cardona, (c. 1508 in Lleida, Catalonia, Spain – 1575 in Lérida, Spain) was a Catalan noble woman.[1]
Born Isabel d'Orrit as a member of an influential and wealthy Barcelona family, she married Guillem Ramon de Josa.[1] She was a humanist, Latinist, philosopher, and specialist on the theology of Dun Scotus.[1] Along with other women from wealthy and influential Barcelona families, she belonged to an exclusively female organization called “las Iñigas,” which was composed of devotees of Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order.[1] She helped Ignatius during his studies, and corresponded with him for a number of years.[2] Isabel de Josa was widowed in 1539, after which she travelled to Rome.[3]
She wrote a treatise entitled Tristis Isabella, which is now lost.[4]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Cruz, edited by Anne J.; Hernández, Rosilie. Women's literacy in early modern Spain and the new world. Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate. p. 72. ISBN 9781409427131.
- ↑ Caraman, Philip (1990). Ignatius Loyola : a biography of the founder of the Jesuits (1st U.S. ed.). San Francisco, Calif.: Harper & Row. p. 56. ISBN 0062501305.
- ↑ Caraman, Philip (1990). Ignatius Loyola : a biography of the founder of the Jesuits (1st U.S. ed.). San Francisco, Calif.: Harper & Row. p. 135. ISBN 0062501305.
- ↑ Stevenson, Jane (2005). Women Latin poets language, gender, and authority, from antiquity to the eighteenth century (1. publ. in paperback. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 219. ISBN 9780198185024.