Spanish scholar, born at Medina del Campo. His friendship with Antonio Pérez caused him to be arrested in 1590 and imprisoned for nearly thirteen years. His Tácito español ilustrado con aforismos (Madrid, 1614) is the only work which bears his name, but he is probably the author of the Discurso del gobierno ascribed to Pérez. Through the influence of Lerma (to whom the Tácito is dedicated) and of Olivares, he subsequently attained high official position.

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  See L’Art de gouverner, ed. J. M. Guardia (Paris, 1867); P. J. Pidal, Historia de las alteraciones de Aragon en el reinado de Felipe II. (Madrid, 1862), vol. iii. pp. 29–30; A. Pérez, Relaciones (Geneva, 1654), pp. 86–88.

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