Idiáquez was the dedicatee of a book on letter-writing, De conscribendis epistolis published in the 1530s. He met the author, Juan Luis Vives, in the Habsburg Netherlands.[1] Vives begins by telling “Señor Idiáquez” to always consider the rhetorical situation for the letter, primarily evaluating the relationship of the writer to the recipient.
He may have commissioned the illuminated manuscript known as the Munich-Montserrat Book of Hours, which was the work of the Flemish miniaturist Simon Bening. The manuscript is known to have been in the possession of a Dominican friary in San Sebastian associated with Idiaquez.[3]
Death and legacy
He met a violent death by the Elbe River in Torgau, Germany, at the hands of Protestants. His body was taken to San Sebastián for burial in the tomb that, along with his wife Gracia de Olazábal, he had built in the monastery of San Telmo, where they both currently lie.[1]
^Proyectos, HI Iberia Ingeniería y. "Historia Hispánica". historia-hispanica.rah.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-06-29.
^Kren, Thomas (1998). "Landscape as Leitmotif, a Reintegrated Book of Hours Illuminated by Simon Bening". In Michelle Brown; Scot McKendrick (eds.). Illuminating the Book, Makers and Interpreters: Essays in Honour of Janet Backhouse. London: British Library. pp. 209–232.