The Landowner Who Was Impregnated by 3 Slaves: The Forbidden Case of Venezuela, 1831

In the burning lands of Venezuela, where the sun punishes mercilessly and secrets are buried under cocoa plantations, a woman broke all the rules. Doña Catalina Mendoza y Salazar, heiress of the most prosperous hacienda in Barlovento, committed the unthinkable in 1831.

 

He had relations with three of his slaves. But what began as sin turned into tragedy, and what seemed like a story of forbidden passion ended in a scandal that shook the foundations of Venezuelan colonial society.

The Hacienda San Jerónimo extended over more than 1,000 hectares. Its cocoa plantations were the most productive in the region and its owner, Doña Catalina, barely 28 years old, had inherited everything after the sudden death of her husband, Don Fernando de Alcántara, a man thirty years older than her.

Catalina was a woman of singular beauty, with dark and deep eyes and a refined education in Madrid. But for the first time in her life, after the death of her husband, she was free. Free to manage his fortune and free from the absolute solitude of the big house, which housed 143 slaves.

Among them, three men stood out.

Domingo Lucumí, 32, the black foreman. He had been born free in Cuba, but was kidnapped and sold. He was tall, intelligent, literate, and retained a dignity that fascinated Catherine.

José Gregorio, a 26-year-old mulatto, was his personal butler. With delicate features and cinnamon skin, he moved invisibly between two worlds. He knew of Catherine’s sadness and secretly began to love her through late-night conversations in the library, where they discovered an intellectual connection that none of them expected.

Miguel Tomás, the youngest at 22 years old, was the blacksmith. With weathered hands and a sad smile, she created beauty in the stables. Catalina sought his company with the excuse of repairing an old chest, and in the privacy of the workshop, he saw the vulnerable woman behind the mask of the landowner.

Without fully understanding it, Catherine began to cross the forbidden lines. With Domingo, she found a passion based on mutual respect; They were in secret, away from the eyes. With José Gregorio, he found an emotional and intellectual connection in the library, talking about philosophy and impossible dreams. With Miguel Tomás, she discovered a pure tenderness in the workshop, where he guided her hands to teach her his craft.

The three men, without Catherine knowing it, learned the truth. On a hacienda there are no secrets. One night, they met near the barracks. The tension was palpable.

“We all know what’s going on,” Domingo said. “It’s crazy. They will kill us all,” whispered José Gregorio. “I love her,” confessed Miguel, the youngest. “I can’t help it.”

It was Domingo who sealed the pact. “We all love her, brother. In different ways. Take care of each other. And take care of her. Because when this explodes, and it will explode, she will suffer as much as we do.” They were not rivals, but accomplices in an impossible alliance.

 

In July, the truth struck Catherine. Morning sickness. His period did not come. She was pregnant.

Panic invaded her. Whose son was it? He had been with all three of them. There was no way of knowing. I was trapped.

One night, he sent for the three of them to the library. “I’m pregnant,” she said bluntly. “And I don’t know whose son it is.”

The silence was deafening. They knew that the punishment was torture and death. “We could run away,” Miguel said. “We wouldn’t even make it to Caracas,” Domingo replied.

It was José Gregorio who proposed the most desperate solution. “And if everything is revealed. If we tell the full truth. They will kill us anyway, but if we tell the story, at least there will be a record that it was not rape. That it was love.”

It was a suicidal plan, but it was the only thing they had. For weeks, they meticulously prepared an explosive document. José Gregorio wrote the story. Catherine took responsibility, explaining her loneliness and her rebellion against a hypocritical society. Dominic wrote about the dehumanization of slavery. Miguel, about a love that knows no barriers.

They made copies and sent them to a liberal newspaper in Caracas, to a progressive priest and to a politician who was an enemy of Catalina’s uncle, Don Sebastián Mendoza, who came in September to review the accounts.

Don Sebastián arrived with his prudish wife, Doña Clemencia, and his lawyer son, Rodrigo. The first days were quiet. But on the third day, Don Sebastián, alerted by Rodrigo, noticed the truth.

When a gust of wind glued Catherine’s dress to her body, she saw the unmistakable curve. “Catalina, to my office. Now.”

When the doors closed, the confrontation was brutal. “I’m pregnant, man. Four months,” she confessed. “Who’s the father?” he roared. “We’ll arrange a marriage!” “I can’t marry him.” “Why? Is he a priest? Speak!” “Because I don’t know which of the three is the father.” Don Sebastian turned pale. “Three men?” “Yes,” she said, lifting her chin. “Domingo Lucumí, José Gregorio Silva and Miguel Tomás Barrios. Your black foreman, your mulatto butler and your black blacksmith.”

Chaos broke out. Doña Clemencia fainted. Rodrigo was speechless. Don Sebastian, livid with anger, swore vengeance. “Slaves! You’ve wallowed with slaves! You have destroyed us!” “I did it because I wanted to. Nobody forced me.” “Worse! You are crazy. The slaves will be executed immediately. You will be declared insane and locked up in a convent.” “Too late, uncle,” Catherine said with a bitter smile. “Everything is already written. The letters have already been sent to Caracas. At this moment, half the city must be reading our history.”

Don Sebastian’s fury was total. He grabbed Catalina, but Rodrigo stopped him. “Father, calm down. We need to think.” “The three will be executed tomorrow at dawn,” Don Sebastian said. “And you will face an ecclesiastical judgment. May God have mercy on your soul.”

That night, the three men awaited their fate in a shed, chained but together. “Do you think it was worth it?” asked Miguel, trembling. “Yes,” said José Gregorio. “We live with dignity, even if only for a short time.” Domingo looked at the big house. “It will take time, but the day will come when a black man will be able to love whoever he wants. We won’t get to see it.” “No,” said José Gregorio. “But maybe Catherine’s son does.” That child, who would carry the blood of one of them but the legacy of all three, was his only transcendence.

In the big house, Catherine was locked in her room, listening to the dawn approaching. He had begged, offered his fortune, but Don Sebastian was determined.

The morning of the fourth day brought not the sun, but the sound of guards dragging the men toward the hacienda’s central plaza. Catalina ran to the window. She saw them. Domingo, head held high. José Gregorio, praying silently. Miguel, weeping but walking alongside his brothers.

“No!” Catalina shouted, pounding on the glass. “Murderer! Uncle, no!”

Don Sebastián, from the courtyard, didn’t even look up. He gave the order. The execution was public, brutal, and swift, a bloody example for the rest of the slaves. Catalina collapsed to the ground, her scream stifled by a sob that seemed to break her soul.

But while the bodies still lay in the courtyard, a dust-covered rider burst into the hacienda. He brought news from Caracas.

“Don Sebastián! Don Sebastián!” the man shouted, waving a newspaper. “The scandal! It’s in ‘El Liberal’! All of Caracas knows about it!”

The document had arrived. Catalina’s story had exploded. Don Sebastián’s political enemies were demanding an investigation into his “cruel management” of the estate. The Church was horrified. Caracas society, though scandalized by Catalina, was even more fascinated by the audacity of her confession.

Don Sebastián was trapped. He had committed the murders, but now the world was watching him. He couldn’t simply “make his niece disappear.” His own name was tarnished.

Rodrigo, the lawyer, saw the only way out. “Father, this is a public relations disaster. We need to control the damage. She has to go.”

The ecclesiastical trial was a silent farce. To avoid further scandal, Don Sebastián arranged everything. Catalina was stripped of the San Jerónimo estate, which passed into the hands of her cousin Rodrigo. She was declared “morally unfit” to manage her property.

Six weeks later, she gave birth to a boy. A healthy son, with tan skin and deep, dark eyes. It was never known which of the three was the father; all three lived within the child.

Catalina’s ultimate fate was exile. Don Sebastián, in a final act of control to save face, sent her back to Madrid, to the same place where she had received her education. He gave her a modest pension, enough to live on but not enough to wield power, on one condition: that she never set foot in Venezuela again.

Catalina Mendoza y Salazar, the wealthiest woman in Barlovento, left her homeland like an outcast. She lost her home, her fortune, and her reputation. But as the ship sailed away from the coast, she did not weep. In her arms, she held her son, whom she named Miguel José Domingo.

She had lost everything except the freedom she had so desperately longed for, and the living proof that, for a brief moment, amidst the horror of slavery, three men and a woman had dared to be, simply, human. Her story became a whispered legend in Barlovento, a hidden truth that official history tried, but never could, completely erase.