Esteban Manuel de Villegas (5 February 1589 - 1669), a Spanish poet, was born at Matute (Logrono). He matriculated at Salamanca on 20 November 1610, and challenged attention by the mingled arrogance and accomplishment of Las Eróticas (1617), a collection of clever translations from Horace and Anacreon, and of original poems, the charm of which was thought to be marred by the writer's petulant vanity.
Marrying in 1626 or earlier, Villegas practised law at Nájera until 1659, when he was charged with expressing unorthodox views on the subject of free will; he was exiled for four years to Santa María de Ribaredonda, but was allowed to return for three months to Nájera in March 1660. It seems probable that the rest of the sentence was remitted, for the report of the local inquisition lays stress on Villegas' simple piety and on the extravagance of his attire.
References
- public ___domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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