Juan Paez De Castro
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Juan Paez de Castro (c.1512-1570) was a Jesuit Priest and cataloger to Phillip II of Spain. Educated at Educated at Alcala de Henares, Salamanca and Bologna, he was well-versed in Greek and Latin. After touring the libraries of Italy, he came to appreciate their great value. Thus, Paez de Castro became among the first to recognize the usefulness of a state-funded library and drafted a proposal to Phillip II requesting such. As a result of his proposal a library was indeed built called the Escorial, which was completed after his death. He also helped to develop a demographic survey to study the population of Spain, although he died before the survey was actually implemented.
[edit] References
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1. Hobson, Anthony. Renaissance Book Collecting. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. 2. Burton, Margaret. Famous Libraries of the World: Their History, Collections, and Administrations. London: Grafton and Co., 1937.
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