Although he may previously have worked in Segovia,[2] and there was also a Juan de la Cuesta based in Alcalá de Henares in 1589[3] (although the latter may refer to another person[4]), it was not until 1599 that he started working in Madrid, taken on as manager of the printing shop owned by María Rodríguez de Rivalde,[5] widow of the printers Juan Íñiguez de Lequerica and Pedro Madrigal.[3]
An inventory carried out of the premises in September 1595,[6] just a few years before he was taken on to run the business for the woman who would become his mother-in-law,[7] referred to six presses, and the year they started printing the Quixote, 1604, it had twenty employees.[6]
He married María de Quiñones in 1604,[8] and in 1607 he left Madrid, abandoning his pregnant wife,[7] who would, after her husband's death, take over the business and become an important printer in her own right.[8]
Cuesta's print shop, at 87 Calle Atocha in Madrid, has been restored, and is now the headquarters of the Sociedad Cervantina, founded by Luis Astrana Marín in 1953.[9] It has a replica of Cuesta's printing press. It was officially opened as a museum by the king and queen of Spain in 1987.[who?][1]