• Home

  • About

  • More

    Use tab to navigate through the menu items.

    ADRIANMMASTERS@GMAIL.COM

    NonSufficitOrbis

    ​

    a history blog by Adrian Masters

    ​

    "The rest of this story, curious traveler / is a very long tale - travel on." don Diego de Mendoza (†1575)

    Non Sufficit Orbis

    An early modern global history blog

     
    Renaissance Quarterly: Powerful Women, Masculine Bureaucrats, and Early Modern State Formation

    Renaissance Quarterly: Powerful Women, Masculine Bureaucrats, and Early Modern State Formation

    Archival Woes and a Plan to Escape to Peru

    Archival Woes and a Plan to Escape to Peru

    Amores cerdos: An early modern Spanish ode to the pig (and to pork)

    Amores cerdos: An early modern Spanish ode to the pig (and to pork)

     

    Our Recent Posts

    Renaissance Quarterly: Powerful Women, Masculine Bureaucrats, and Early Modern State Formation

    Renaissance Quarterly: Powerful Women, Masculine Bureaucrats, and Early Modern State Formation

    Archival Woes and a Plan to Escape to Peru

    Archival Woes and a Plan to Escape to Peru

    Amores cerdos: An early modern Spanish ode to the pig (and to pork)

    Amores cerdos: An early modern Spanish ode to the pig (and to pork)

    Archive

    • March 2021
    • January 2020
    • May 2018
    • April 2018

    Tags

    • Animal adoption
    • archives
    • AtlanticHistory
    • Ávila
    • bureaucracy
    • Cáceres
    • Castile
    • cats
    • Chickens
    • Coria
    • corruption
    • Council of the Indies
    • documents
    • Extremadura
    • feminism
    • gifts
    • GlobalHistory
    • Heaven
    • Hell
    • justice
    • law
    • Lima
    • Madrid
    • Mary
    • Peru
    • procurators
    • race
    • Scribes
    • Spain
    • Spanish Empire
    • Superstition
    • UTAustin
    • Virgin Mary
    • Women
    Women in control of an Empire? The 'women's council' and the Council of the Indies, ~156

    Women in control of an Empire? The 'women's council' and the Council of the Indies, ~156

    Men ran the Council of the Indies, so says every book and almost every document we know about it. Little wonder; during the Habsburg era...
     

    Subscribe

    Stay up to date

     

    Contact Adrian Masters

    128 Inner Campus Drive
    Austin, Travis County 78705
    USA

    adrianmmasters@gmail.com

    Thanks for submitting!

     

    ©2018 BY NON SUFFICIT ORBIS - THE ARCHIVES OF ATLANTIC HISTORY. PROUDLY CREATED WITH WIX.COM