Amazons of Secrets at the "Graf von Pötting" Embassy in Madrid (1663-1674)

The article focuses on the study of the agents of secrets who served the Holy Roman Germanic Empire’s Ambassador in Madrid, Francisco Eusebio of Pötting, during the years of his embassy at the Court of Madrid (1663-1674). The count of Pötting acquired and read two of the most influential manuals of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laura Oliván Santaliestra
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Navarra 2016-12-01
Series:Memoria y Civilización
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.unav.edu/publicaciones/revistas/index.php/myc/article/view/7666
Description
Summary:The article focuses on the study of the agents of secrets who served the Holy Roman Germanic Empire’s Ambassador in Madrid, Francisco Eusebio of Pötting, during the years of his embassy at the Court of Madrid (1663-1674). The count of Pötting acquired and read two of the most influential manuals of ambassadors of the period: El enbaxador, written by Juan Antonio de Vera (1620), and Cristóbal de Benavente y Benavides’s Advertencias para reyes, principes y embaxadores (1643). In these treatises, the authors illustrated ambassadors about the persons which they could trust for the hunt and custody of secrets. Among these trustworthy people pointed out by De Vera and Benavente, are the ambassador’s own wife, women and spies. The microhistorial analysis of the count of Pötting’s diary reveals that the Empire’s ambassador applied the theory of the cited works to his daily diplomatic practice.
ISSN:1139-0107
2254-6367