'Bernardino de Mendoza' (c.
1540 –
August 3,
1604) was a
Spanish military commander, a diplomat and a writer on military history and politics.
Life and works
Bernardino de Mendoza was born in
Guadalajara, Spain around 1540. In 1560, he joined the army of
King Philip II and for more than fifteen years fought in the
Low Countries under the command of
Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, Duke of Alva. In 1576, he was appointed a member of the
military order of St. James (Orden militar de Santiago) in recognition of his military achievements.
In 1578, Philip II sent Mendoza as his
ambassador to
London. There he acted not only as diplomat but also as spy, using a variety of
secret codes in the reports he returned to Spain. He was expelled from England in 1584 after his involvement in
Francis Throckmorton's plot against
Queen Elizabeth I was revealed. Crucial to this plot was his correspondence with Phillip II, using a code known only to himself and the king which they had learnt years earlier.
For the next six years, Bernardino de Mendoza served as Spanish ambassador to the
king of France. In 1590, he resigned due to ill health. His eyesight had been deteriorating for years and by the time of his return to Spain, he had become completely blind. His last years were spent in his house in Madrid.
Among Mendoza's writings is a famous account of the war in the Low Countries entitled ''Comentario de lo sucecido en los Paises Bajos desde el año 1567 hasta el de 1577''. Bernardino also published a book on the art of warfare under the title ''Teoria y práctica de la guerra'' and a Spanish translation of the ''Politicorum sive civilis doctrinae libri sex'' of the Flemish philosopher
Justus Lipsius.
References
★ Miguel Cabañas Agrela (ed.), ''Bernardino de Mendoza, un escritor soldado al servicio de la monarquía católica (1540-1604)'', Diputación de Guadalajara: 2001.
External links
★
Biography of Bernardino de Mendoza by Prof. Dr. Antonio Herrera Casado.