Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin (1474-1548), [a] also known simply as Juan Diego (Spanish pronunciation: [ˌxwanˈdjeɣo]), was a Nahua peasant and Marian visionary. St. Juan Diego (born 1474, Cuautitlán [near Mexico City], Mexico-died May 30, 1548, Tepeyac Hill [now in Mexico City]; canonized July 31, 2002; feast day December 9) was an Indigenous Mexican convert to Roman Catholicism who, according to tradition, was visited by the Virgin Mary (Our Lady of Guadalupe) on four occasions in December 1531.
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Saint Juan Diego was born in 1474 as Cuauhtlatoatzin, a native to Mexico. He became the first Roman Catholic indigenous saint from the Americas. Following the early death of his father, Juan Diego was taken to live with his uncle.
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From the age of three, he was raised in line with the Aztec pagan. Learn about St. Juan Diego, the indigenous Mexican saint who witnessed the apparition of the Virgin Mary as Our Lady of Guadalupe.
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Discover his humble life, miraculous experience, and lasting impact on Catholicism. St. Juan Diego was born in 1474 as Cuauhtlatoatzin, a native to Mexico.
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He became the first Roman Catholic indigenous saint from the Americas. Saint Juan Diego, born in 1474 in Tlayacac, Cuauhtitlan-a region established in 1168 by Nahua tribes and later conquered by the Aztecs in 1467-lived a modest life as a weaver, farmer, and laborer. Situated 20 kilometers north of Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City), this area was rich in history and culture.
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Juan Diego was born in 1474, in the Calpulli of Tlayacac in Cuautitlan, a small village 12 miles north of Mexico City. His birth name was Juan Cuauhtlatoatzin, which translates as Talking Eagle in the Nahuatl language. Saint Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin, also known as Juan Diego (1474-1548), a native of Mexico, is the first Roman Catholic indigenous saint from the Americas.
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He is said to have been granted an apparition of the Virgin Mary on four separate occasions in December 1531 at the hill of Tepeyac, then a rural area but now within the borders of Mexico. St. Juan Diego History of St.
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Juan Diego Juan Diego, born in 1474 in Cuautitlán, Mexico, was the first indigenous saint from the Americas. Not much is known about his early life, but at 50 years old, he and his wife Maria Lucia were among the first people to be baptized into Christianity after Spanish missionaries brought the religion to Mexico. Saint Juan Diego, also known as Cuauhtlatoatzin or Juan Diego Cuautlatoatzin, was born in 1474 in the village of Tlayacac, Cuauhtitlan, located approximately 15 miles north of modern Mexico City, Mexico.
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He was born into a society marked by strong class divisions, and he grew up in poverty as a farm worker and field laborer. Juan Diego, a married layman with no children, possessed a mystical.
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