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Admiral of Portugal

The high office of Admiral of the Kingdom of Portugal (Portuguese: Almirante do Reino de Portugal) as the head of the Portuguese navy was created by King Denis of Portugal in 1317 (or 1322) for the Genoese nobleman and naval officer Manuel Pessanha (Emanuele Pessagno).[1] Although there is evidence that such a title existed before (e.g. Afonso I appointed his half-brother Fuas Roupinho to the title in 1184), it seems to have been of only a temporary character, for fleets assembled in times of war.[2] The exception was perhaps Nuno Fernandes Cogominho who seems to have been appointed admiral by King Denis in 1307, and still had that title at his death in 1316, although the conditions are unclear. Nonetheless, Manuel Pessanha was the first person known to hold the title of Almirante-mor (Chief Admiral) as a permanent office for a permanent fleet. All the king's galleys were under his jurisdiction. The conditions of the Pessanha's title stipulated that he must maintain a corps of at least 20 Genoese naval officers at all times and was obliged to serve the king in military service on land as well as sea.[3]

The office of Almirante-mor became a hereditary benefice in the Pessanha family - passing successively through his sons Carlos, Bartolomeu and Lançarote. After the disastrous handling of the Portuguese fleet in the blockade of Seville in 1369, Pessanha's son Lançarote Pessanha temporarily lost the admiral title to João Afonso Telo, 6th Count of Barcelos, but was later restored by King Ferdinand of Portugal. The title then passed on through Lançarote's sons Manuel II and then Carlos II, the last of the male line. Carlos II had no male heirs, but only two daughters (Genebra & Brites) and a niece (Catarina, daughter of his late brother Antonio, who had died at Aljubarrota).[4]

In 1433, the title of Admiral went as dowry in the marriage of Genebra Pereira (daughter of Carlos II Pessanha) to D. Pedro de Menezes.[5] After Menezes death in 1437, the title was passed on to his nephew Lançarote da Cunha (the young son of Carlos II Pessanha's other daughter, Brites Pereira), but the office was de facto exercised by Brites's husband, Rui de Mello da Cunha. Being pre-deceased by his son, Rui de Mello was appointed admiral de jure in 1453.[6]

After Mello's death in 1467, the title passed to Nuno Vaz de Castelo Branco, the king's chamberlain and son of Catarina Pessanha,[7] who in turn passed it on to his own son Lopo Vaz de Castelo Branco, c.1476. After the treason and assassination of Lopo Vaz de Castelo Branco, John II of Portugal handed the title to Pedro de Albuquerque in 1483.[8] But Albuquerque himself fell into intrigues and was soon deprived of the position.

In 1485, John II gave the title of admiral to Lopo Vaz de Azevedo, a knight of the Order of Aviz (and a relative of the Pessanhas), and made it hereditary in the Azevedo family.[9] That line having lost male issue by 1646, it was passed via female lines to D. Luís de Portugal, Count of Vimioso, and then after his death in 1660, it passed on by female line to the House of Castro (Counts of Resende).

Around 1373 (exact date uncertain), the King created the office of captain-major of the fleet (capitão-mor da frota), initially a complementary position, covering the command of the alto-bordo ('high-sided', or sail-powered) ships of the fleet, leaving the Admiral exclusively in charge of the oar-powered galleys. The first capitão-mor was Gonçalo Tenreiro.[10] During the reign of John I of Portugal, Tenreiro was succeeded by Afonso Furtado de Mendonça (appointment date uncertain) and, in 1423, by Álvaro Vaz de Almada (Count of Avranches). The letter appointing Avranches designates a more extensive capitão-mor, covering the royal galleys and infringing on the traditional jurisdiction of the almirante-mor, thus suggesting that by this time, the title of almirante had become purely honorific, and the de facto high naval command had been absconded by the capitão-mor.[11] However, the letter appointing Ruy de Mello da Cunha as 'admiral' in 1453 temporarily restored his authority, including the 'alto-bordo' ships. In 1460, the admiral was deprived of his jurisdiction over arraes (fishing boats), which were passed to local councils.[12]

The title of 'Admiral' was made more specific with the establishment in 1502 of the Admiral of the Indies (Almirante das Indias), a second, separate Portuguese admiral title for the East Indies. Back in 1492, Christopher Columbus had been granted the ornate title of 'Admiral of the Ocean Sea' by the Catholic monarchs of Spain. Evidently, King Manuel I of Portugal felt that if the Spanish had an admiral sailing around, then surely Portuguese should have one too. So, in January 1502, just before the departure of the 4th India Armada, Manuel I bestowed upon the fleet captain Vasco da Gama the overwrought title of Almirante dos mares de Arabia, Persia, India e de todo o Oriente ("Admiral of the Seas of Arabia, Persia, India and all the Orient" - or 'Admiral of the Indies' for short).[13] The original 'Admiral' title became thereafter referred to narrowly as Admiral of the "Lusitanian Sea" (mar lusitano) (or simply, "Admiral of Portugal"). The Admiral of the Indies title remained hereditary with Gama's descendants, the Counts of Vidigueira.

List of the Admirals of Portugal edit

The following is the list of title-holders of the "Admiral of the Reign/Portugal/Lusitanian Sea":[14][15]

  1. Nuno Fernandes Cogominho (not normally counted in the admiral numbering).
  2. Manuel Pessanha.
  3. Carlos Pessanha.
  4. Bartolomeu Pessanha.
  5. Lançarote Pessanha.
  6. D. João Afonso Telo, 6th Count of Barcelos.
  7. Manuel (II) Pessanha.
  8. Carlos (II) Pessanha.
  9. D. Pedro de Menezes, 1st Count of Vila Real.
  10. Lançarote da Cunha.
  11. Rui de Mello da Cunha.
  12. Nuno Vaz de Castelo Branco.
  13. Lopo Vaz de Castelo Branco.
  14. Pedro de Albuquerque.
  15. Lopo Vaz de Azevedo.
  16. António de Azevedo.
  17. Lopo de Azevedo.
  18. João de Azevedo.
  19. D. João de Castro.
  20. D. Francisco de Castro.
  21. D. João José de Castro.
  22. D. Luís Inocêncio de Castro.
  23. D. António José de Castro, 1st Count of Resende.
  24. D. José Luís de Castro, 2nd Count of Resende.
  25. D. Luís Inocêncio Benedito de Castro, 3rd Count of Resende.
  26. D. António Benedito de Castro, 4th Count of Resende.
  27. D. Luís Manuel Benedito da Natividade de Castro Pamplona, 5th Count of Resende.
  28. D. Manuel Benedito de Castro Pamplona, 6th Count of Resende.
  29. D. António de Castro Pamplona, 7th Count of Resende.
  30. D. João de Castro Pamplona, 8th Count of Resende.
  31. D. Maria José de Castro Pamplona, 9th Countess of Resende.
  32. D. Maria Benedita de Castro, 10th Countess of Resende.
  33. D. João de Castro de Mendia, 11th Count of Resende.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Quintella, p.18; Vasconcelos de Saldanha (1988); Caetano de Sousa, 1735, vol. 1, p.207. Exact date is ambiguous.
  2. ^ Pereira and Rodrigues (1904: p.313-15)
  3. ^ Quintella, 1839: p.19-20; Vasconcelos de Saldanha, 1988
  4. ^ Caetano de Sousa, (vol. 3, p.54)
  5. ^ Monumenta Henricina, vol. IV, p.211
  6. ^ Baquero Moreno p.863-65; Caetano de Sousa, vol. 1 p.209; vol. 3 p.54, Vasconcelos de Saldanha (1988)
  7. ^ Baquero Moreno, p.754. According to Caetano de Sousa (vol. 1, p.208), Nuno Vaz's mother, Catarina Pessanha, was the daughter of Antonio Pessanha (died Aljubarrota, 1385), the son of the admiral Lançarote Pessanha.
  8. ^ Pereira & Rodrigues (p.142); Caetano de Sousa (vol.1, p.246)
  9. ^ Pereira & Rodrigues, p.937. According to Caetano de Sousa (vol. 1, p.208), Lopo Vaz de Azevedo was son of Gonçalo Gomes de Azevedo, alcaide of Alenquer, and Isabel Vaz Pessanha, the sister of Nuno Vaz de Castelo-Branco and daughter of Catarina Pessanha.
  10. ^ Quintella, p.32
  11. ^ Quintella, p.41-42
  12. ^ Pereira & Rodrigues, p.739
  13. ^ João de Barros (1552–59) Décadas da Ásia: Dos feitos, que os Portuguezes fizeram no descubrimento, e conquista, dos mares, e terras do Oriente. Dec. I, Lib 6, p.24
  14. ^ Viana, Mário. "O almirantado e a jurisdição sobre os homens do mar em Portugal na Idade Média" (PDF) (in Portuguese).
  15. ^ Duarte, Luís Miguel. "Crimes do Mar e Justiças da Terra" (PDF) (in Portuguese).
  • Baquero Moreno, H. (1980) A Batalha de Alfarrobeira: antecedentes e significado histórico, 2 vols.
  • Caetano de Sousa, A. (1735–37) Historia Genealogica Da Casa Real Portugueza, 3 vols.
  • "Almirante" in J.M. Esteves Pereira and G. Rodrigues, editors, (1904) Portugal; diccionario historico, chorographico, heraldico, biographico, bibliographico, numismatico e artistico Lisbon: Romano Torres. p. 313-14
  • Quintella, Ignaco da Costa (1839–40) Annaes da Marinha Portugueza, 2 vols, Lisbon: Academia Real das Sciencias. vol. 1
  • Severim de Faria, M. "Da Milicia Maritima e do officio de Almirante", in Noticias de Portugal ecritas por Manoel Severim de Faria Lisbon: A Gomes vol. 1, p. 139.
  • Vasconcelos de Saldanha, A. (1988) "O Almirante de Portugal: estatuto quatrocentista e quinhentista de um cargo", Revista da Universidade de Coimbra, vol. 34, p. 137-56. offprint

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The high office of Admiral of the Kingdom of Portugal Portuguese Almirante do Reino de Portugal as the head of the Portuguese navy was created by King Denis of Portugal in 1317 or 1322 for the Genoese nobleman and naval officer Manuel Pessanha Emanuele Pessagno 1 Although there is evidence that such a title existed before e g Afonso I appointed his half brother Fuas Roupinho to the title in 1184 it seems to have been of only a temporary character for fleets assembled in times of war 2 The exception was perhaps Nuno Fernandes Cogominho who seems to have been appointed admiral by King Denis in 1307 and still had that title at his death in 1316 although the conditions are unclear Nonetheless Manuel Pessanha was the first person known to hold the title of Almirante mor Chief Admiral as a permanent office for a permanent fleet All the king s galleys were under his jurisdiction The conditions of the Pessanha s title stipulated that he must maintain a corps of at least 20 Genoese naval officers at all times and was obliged to serve the king in military service on land as well as sea 3 The office of Almirante mor became a hereditary benefice in the Pessanha family passing successively through his sons Carlos Bartolomeu and Lancarote After the disastrous handling of the Portuguese fleet in the blockade of Seville in 1369 Pessanha s son Lancarote Pessanha temporarily lost the admiral title to Joao Afonso Telo 6th Count of Barcelos but was later restored by King Ferdinand of Portugal The title then passed on through Lancarote s sons Manuel II and then Carlos II the last of the male line Carlos II had no male heirs but only two daughters Genebra amp Brites and a niece Catarina daughter of his late brother Antonio who had died at Aljubarrota 4 In 1433 the title of Admiral went as dowry in the marriage of Genebra Pereira daughter of Carlos II Pessanha to D Pedro de Menezes 5 After Menezes death in 1437 the title was passed on to his nephew Lancarote da Cunha the young son of Carlos II Pessanha s other daughter Brites Pereira but the office was de facto exercised by Brites s husband Rui de Mello da Cunha Being pre deceased by his son Rui de Mello was appointed admiral de jure in 1453 6 After Mello s death in 1467 the title passed to Nuno Vaz de Castelo Branco the king s chamberlain and son of Catarina Pessanha 7 who in turn passed it on to his own son Lopo Vaz de Castelo Branco c 1476 After the treason and assassination of Lopo Vaz de Castelo Branco John II of Portugal handed the title to Pedro de Albuquerque in 1483 8 But Albuquerque himself fell into intrigues and was soon deprived of the position In 1485 John II gave the title of admiral to Lopo Vaz de Azevedo a knight of the Order of Aviz and a relative of the Pessanhas and made it hereditary in the Azevedo family 9 That line having lost male issue by 1646 it was passed via female lines to D Luis de Portugal Count of Vimioso and then after his death in 1660 it passed on by female line to the House of Castro Counts of Resende Around 1373 exact date uncertain the King created the office of captain major of the fleet capitao mor da frota initially a complementary position covering the command of the alto bordo high sided or sail powered ships of the fleet leaving the Admiral exclusively in charge of the oar powered galleys The first capitao mor was Goncalo Tenreiro 10 During the reign of John I of Portugal Tenreiro was succeeded by Afonso Furtado de Mendonca appointment date uncertain and in 1423 by Alvaro Vaz de Almada Count of Avranches The letter appointing Avranches designates a more extensive capitao mor covering the royal galleys and infringing on the traditional jurisdiction of the almirante mor thus suggesting that by this time the title of almirante had become purely honorific and the de facto high naval command had been absconded by the capitao mor 11 However the letter appointing Ruy de Mello da Cunha as admiral in 1453 temporarily restored his authority including the alto bordo ships In 1460 the admiral was deprived of his jurisdiction over arraes fishing boats which were passed to local councils 12 The title of Admiral was made more specific with the establishment in 1502 of the Admiral of the Indies Almirante das Indias a second separate Portuguese admiral title for the East Indies Back in 1492 Christopher Columbus had been granted the ornate title of Admiral of the Ocean Sea by the Catholic monarchs of Spain Evidently King Manuel I of Portugal felt that if the Spanish had an admiral sailing around then surely Portuguese should have one too So in January 1502 just before the departure of the 4th India Armada Manuel I bestowed upon the fleet captain Vasco da Gama the overwrought title of Almirante dos mares de Arabia Persia India e de todo o Oriente Admiral of the Seas of Arabia Persia India and all the Orient or Admiral of the Indies for short 13 The original Admiral title became thereafter referred to narrowly as Admiral of the Lusitanian Sea mar lusitano or simply Admiral of Portugal The Admiral of the Indies title remained hereditary with Gama s descendants the Counts of Vidigueira List of the Admirals of Portugal editThe following is the list of title holders of the Admiral of the Reign Portugal Lusitanian Sea 14 15 Nuno Fernandes Cogominho not normally counted in the admiral numbering Manuel Pessanha Carlos Pessanha Bartolomeu Pessanha Lancarote Pessanha D Joao Afonso Telo 6th Count of Barcelos Manuel II Pessanha Carlos II Pessanha D Pedro de Menezes 1st Count of Vila Real Lancarote da Cunha Rui de Mello da Cunha Nuno Vaz de Castelo Branco Lopo Vaz de Castelo Branco Pedro de Albuquerque Lopo Vaz de Azevedo Antonio de Azevedo Lopo de Azevedo Joao de Azevedo D Joao de Castro D Francisco de Castro D Joao Jose de Castro D Luis Inocencio de Castro D Antonio Jose de Castro 1st Count of Resende D Jose Luis de Castro 2nd Count of Resende D Luis Inocencio Benedito de Castro 3rd Count of Resende D Antonio Benedito de Castro 4th Count of Resende D Luis Manuel Benedito da Natividade de Castro Pamplona 5th Count of Resende D Manuel Benedito de Castro Pamplona 6th Count of Resende D Antonio de Castro Pamplona 7th Count of Resende D Joao de Castro Pamplona 8th Count of Resende D Maria Jose de Castro Pamplona 9th Countess of Resende D Maria Benedita de Castro 10th Countess of Resende D Joao de Castro de Mendia 11th Count of Resende See also editConstable of Portugal Marshal of PortugalReferences edit Quintella p 18 Vasconcelos de Saldanha 1988 Caetano de Sousa 1735 vol 1 p 207 Exact date is ambiguous Pereira and Rodrigues 1904 p 313 15 Quintella 1839 p 19 20 Vasconcelos de Saldanha 1988 Caetano de Sousa vol 3 p 54 Monumenta Henricina vol IV p 211 Baquero Moreno p 863 65 Caetano de Sousa vol 1 p 209 vol 3 p 54 Vasconcelos de Saldanha 1988 Baquero Moreno p 754 According to Caetano de Sousa vol 1 p 208 Nuno Vaz s mother Catarina Pessanha was the daughter of Antonio Pessanha died Aljubarrota 1385 the son of the admiral Lancarote Pessanha Pereira amp Rodrigues p 142 Caetano de Sousa vol 1 p 246 Pereira amp Rodrigues p 937 According to Caetano de Sousa vol 1 p 208 Lopo Vaz de Azevedo was son of Goncalo Gomes de Azevedo alcaide of Alenquer and Isabel Vaz Pessanha the sister of Nuno Vaz de Castelo Branco and daughter of Catarina Pessanha Quintella p 32 Quintella p 41 42 Pereira amp Rodrigues p 739 Joao de Barros 1552 59 Decadas da Asia Dos feitos que os Portuguezes fizeram no descubrimento e conquista dos mares e terras do Oriente Dec I Lib 6 p 24 Viana Mario O almirantado e a jurisdicao sobre os homens do mar em Portugal na Idade Media PDF in Portuguese Duarte Luis Miguel Crimes do Mar e Justicas da Terra PDF in Portuguese Baquero Moreno H 1980 A Batalha de Alfarrobeira antecedentes e significado historico 2 vols Caetano de Sousa A 1735 37 Historia Genealogica Da Casa Real Portugueza 3 vols Almirante in J M Esteves Pereira and G Rodrigues editors 1904 Portugal diccionario historico chorographico heraldico biographico bibliographico numismatico e artistico Lisbon Romano Torres p 313 14 Quintella Ignaco da Costa 1839 40 Annaes da Marinha Portugueza 2 vols Lisbon Academia Real das Sciencias vol 1 Severim de Faria M Da Milicia Maritima e do officio de Almirante in Noticias de Portugal ecritas por Manoel Severim de Faria Lisbon A Gomes vol 1 p 139 Vasconcelos de Saldanha A 1988 O Almirante de Portugal estatuto quatrocentista e quinhentista de um cargo Revista da Universidade de Coimbra vol 34 p 137 56 offprint Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Admiral of Portugal amp oldid 1194581483, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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