Martínez de Espinar was the son of Cristóbal Martínez de Espinar, of Baza in Granada, and Juana Hernández Sacristán, who was from Brunete in the province of Madrid. He was baptised in the church of San Martín in Madrid. He had a sister, Jerónima Martínez de Espinar, who married Alonso Mateos, who was ballestero to the King of Spain and the brother of Juan Mateos, author of another important book on venery.[1]
Three portraits are known or believed to be of Martínez de Espinar: the frontispiece of his book Arte de ballestería y montería, an engraving by Juan de Noort [es], also known as Johannes van Noordt III;[3] an anonymous painting of the school of Velázquez in the Museo del Prado in Madrid, thought to be of him;[1] and another anonymous portrait in the Museo del Greco in Toledo.
The book is in three parts, and – despite the title, which means roughly "the art of crossbowmanship and hunting" – deals with hunting both with the crossbow and with the arquebus; it also covers hunting with lures and traps.[1]
A second edition was published in 1739 in Naples,[6] which at that time was under Spanish rule; another was published by Antonio Marín in Madrid in 1761.[1][7]
Anonymous portrait, school of Velásquez, Museo del Prado, Madrid
Notes
^The others are the Origen y dignidad de la caça by Juan Mateos, 1634;[8] and the unpublished manuscript Libro de Montería by Pedro de Pedraza Gaitán.[4]: 18 [9]
^ abcdefghijJosé Manuel Fradejas Rueda ([2018]). Alonso Martínez de Espinar (in Spanish). Diccionario Biográfico. Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia. Accessed July 2020.