Diego Bernardo de Peredo y Navarrete


Diego Bernardo de Peredo y Navarrete or Diego de Peredo was a Mexican Roman Catholic clergyman who became bishop of Yucatán. A street in the city centre of Villahermosa, Tabasco is now named after him.

Life

Born in the village of León de Mechoacán in Guanajuato, he studied at the Valladolid seminary in Michoacán. He was ordained priest in 1765 and consecrated in the Cathedral of Valladolid de Michoacán in 1766.
In 1767 he arrived in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, and on 22 June 1772 he was promoted to bishop of Yucatán During his episcopate, he was commissioned to carry out a census of the province, so in 1772 he published a document entitled "Nota historial sobre los pueblos y villas de la Provincia de Yucatán".
During a pastoral visit to Tabasco Province, then attached to that of Yucatán, he fell seriously ill in its capital San Juan Bautista. Three days before his death, he left to the town of San Juan Bautista a replica of the "Black Christ of Esquipulas" which he had brought from Esquipulas in Guatemala - he had been carrying it with him and had promised to build a chapel to house it. He died on 21 March 1774 in the capital of Tabasco.
The inhabitants of San Juan Bautista began to build a church for the image on 15 January 1775 and inaugurated it exactly a year later It was named the Church of Our Lord of Esquipulas. It was promoted to a cathedral in 1882, changing its name to Cathedral of Our Lord of Esquipulas.