Residence:
Guevavi
Race or Tribe: Tudesco (German)
Notes: Born
in Sweden of a Neapolitan father he spent most of his early life in Zeren,
Duchy of Bremen, Germany. He had fair skin with blond hair and a beard
and blue eyes. He was a real individualist with very much of an international
background. He joined the Jesuits in the lower Rhineland on October 14,
1724 and was classed as a "German." He was in a Jesuit college there when
he left on April 14, 1735. He came to New Spain on November 22, 1735. Placed
in charge of Guevavi on 1 June 1737, he learned
the Piman language well, but nothing is known of his first two years as
most of the pages in the Guevavi register written by him are missing. He
professed his final vows on May 1, 1740 at San
Ignacio. He left there for the Seri missions at Pópulo on the
Río San Miguel after August 27, 1740. One year after leaving Guevavi
he was at Batuc, an Opata mission. He started the mission church there
and was there when the expulsion caught up to him. Of the seven priests
whose names appear in the Guevavi and Suamca
mission records (Nicolás Perera, Alexandro
Rapicani, Francisco Hlava, Juan
Nentvig, Pedro Díaz, Manuel
Aguirre, and Bartolomé Saenz), he was
the second to die during the forced march through the coastal jungles between
Tepic, Nayarit, and Guadalajara, Jalisco. He was sixty-five years and ten
months old when he died at Ixtlán, Nayarit, Mexico on Septermber
3, 1768.
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