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Alfonso Enríquez, Count of Gijón and Noreña

Alfonso Enríquez (Gijón, 1355 – Marans or Portugal, c. 1400),[1] Count of Noreña and of Gijón and lord of several places, was the eldest son of King Henry II of Castile and Elvira Íñiguez born before the king's marriage.[2][a] As one of the most powerful feudal lords in Asturias, where he owned many properties, he attempted to declare the independence of this region from his brother King John I and then from his nephew, King Henry III of Castile. He and his Portuguese wife, Isabel of Portugal, a natural daughter of King Ferdinand I, are the ancestors of the Noronha lineage in Portugal.

Early years edit

Alfonso was raised close to his father during his youth. A year before his reign as king of Castile and León, Henry II gave Alfonso the lordship of Noreña and as such he appears confirming a charter in November 1368. He was knighted by his father in Santiago de Compostela in the spring of 1372 and it was probably at that time that he received the titles of Count of Noreña and of Gijón.[6][b] He also received the properties that his father had inherited from his godfather and tutor, Rodrigo Álvarez, in León.[9] In Asturias, these included the strategic counties of Noreña and Gijón plus Ribadesella, Villaviciosa, Nava, Laviana, Cudillero, Luarca, and Pravia. In León, he also owned the two Babias and Argüellos, both territories on the border with Asturias thanks to which he was able to move from one region to another without having to abandon his domains.

His first military experience was during the second Fernandine war in 1372 – 1373 where he succeeded in quashing the rebellions in Viana do Bolo and Cascais. The war came to an end with the signing of the Treaty of Santarém on 19 March 1373. One of the stipulations of the treaty was the marriage of Alfonso Enríquez with Isabel of Portugal,[10] a natural daughter of King Ferdinand I, who at that time was about nine years old.

Uprisings against his brother John I and nephew Henry III of Castile edit

Alfonso's father, King Henry II, died in May 1379 and was succeeded by his first-born son who reigned as John I of Castile. In the spring of 1381, King John I was preparing to go to war with Portugal. His half-brother, Alfonso Enríquez, knowing that all the soldiers from Asturias were away from the region, offered England, an ally of Portugal, the harbor of Gijón. Upon hearing this, King John I imprisoned his brother and confiscated his properties. Alfonso was only able to recover his territories in Asturias and León, including the County of Noreña, thanks to the intervention of the Bishop of Oviedo and after paying homage to his brother in Oviedo Cathedral.[11][12]

The Count of Noreña, however, prepared a new uprising. His brother, King John, entrusted him with a diplomatic mission for negotiations with Portugal and, in early 1382, Alfonso, with his brother's permission, went to Braganza but, instead of defending Castile, he hid his intentions and tried to secure England's support for Portugal.[13] The Castilian monarch in reprisal confiscated Alfonso's properties in Asturias and in the mountains of León.

In 1383, King John I discovered that his brother Alfonso had entered into new agreements with the King of Portugal. The king rushed to Asturias and subdued the entire region except for the port city of Gijón where his rebellious brother had sought refuge. At the end, the King forgave his brother on 18 July 1383 after having imprisoned him in La Puebla de Montalban under the custody of Pedro Tenorio, the archbishop of Toledo.[14]

In September of that year, after the Courts of Segovia, the King donated all of Count Alfonso's properties in Asturias to Gutierre de Toledo, bishop of Oviedo, including the county of Noreña.[15][16][17] As compensation, King John I granted Alfonso the title of Count of Valencia de Don Juan, a territory that was more accessible and controllable. The King also granted his son Henry the title of Prince of Asturias, with all the lordships thereby linking this difficult to reach territory — the ideal setting for conspiracies and uprisings due to its isolation and terrain — to the crown.

Shortly afterwards, following the death of King Ferdinand I in October 1383, King John I decided to imprison Alfonso in the castle of Almonacid since, having married a daughter of the deceased king, albeit illegitimate, Alfonso was a rival and could undermine his rights to the crown of Portugal as the husband of Beatrice, the late king's daughter with Leonor Teles. In July 1386, John I confiscated all of Alfonso's properties.[18] His imprisonment lasted eight years and only after the death of King John I in 1390 was it possible for Alfonso to regain his freedom and his possessions.[19]

During the reign of his nephew, Henry III of Castile, Alfonso continued to rebel against the crown. In 1394 the King laid siege to the city of Gijón. Isabel defended the city but finally surrendered. The King returned her son Henry who had been held hostage and ordered her to leave the kingdom and join her husband, Count Alfonso, who was in France at that time.[20]

Final years edit

Little is known about his final years except that he was made prisoner by order of the King in Saint-Jean-de-Luz but released shortly afterwards. It was rumored that in 1397 he was involved in a conspiracy with the King of Portugal against Henry III although this was never proven. He died around 1400[1] probably in Portugal or in Marans.[21]

Marriage and issue edit

His marriage with Isabel of Portugal was one of the stipulations of the Treaty of Santarém.[10] Isabel, a natural daughter of King Ferdinand I, was about nine years in 1373 when the treaty was signed. The betrothal was celebrated a month later in Santarém.[22] Unhappy with the arrangement, Alfonso fled to Avignon to try to convince Pope Gregory XI to intercede on his behalf and to cancel the wedding plans.[23] He had to desist, however, when his father the king threatened to confiscate all his properties. The marriage finally took place in 1377.[24] Although he obtained a divorce after his father's death, it was not effective since the marriage was consummated and the following children were born:[25]

From his affair with Inés de Soto de los Infantes of the Asturian lineage of the Miranda, he was the father of:

  • Juana Enríquez, also known as Juana de Lodeña or Lidueña, abbess at the convent of Saint Clarie in Toledo.[c]

He was also the father of the following children out of wedlock:

  • Juan Enríquez of Noreña, married to Beatrice, Lady of Mirabel.
  • Beatrice of Noreña, the wife of Rui Vaz Pereira.[34]
  • Diego Enríquez of Noreña, married to Beatriz de Guzmán, the illegitimate daughter of Enrique Pérez de Guzmán, second Count of Niebla.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Chronicler de Rades y Andrada in his Crónica de las tres Órdenes y Cauallerias de Sanctiago, Calatraua y Alcántara (Chronicle of the Three Military Orders of Santiago, Calatrava and Alcántara) calls her Inés Díaz de la Vega, daughter of Diego Lasso de la Vega and Elvira de Salcedo.[3] In his last will, executed on 29 May 1374, King Henry calls her Elvira Íñiguez.[4] She appears with this name on 22 February 1375 in a charter relating to a claim by "Elvira Íñiguez de la Vega, mother of Alfonso, Count of Gijón, bastard son of the king".[5]
  2. ^ According to the 18th century Portuguese genealogist António Caetano de Sousa, this was in 1373.[7] Nevertheless, in a charter from the Monastery of San Vicente de Oviedo dated 1372, Alfonso was already signing as Count of Noreña.[8]
  3. ^ In 1489 the convent transferred to Diego de Miranda properties in Soto de los Infantes, Miranda, Salas, Grado, Navia, Cangas, Tineo, Allande and Babia, belonging to Juana. Author Margarita Cuartas Rivero quotes a document from the Archive of Valdecarzana dated 16 May 1489. Historian Balbina Martínez Caviró mistakenly asserted that Juana was the daughter of Alonso Enríquez and his wife Juana de Mendoza.[31] Margarita Cuartas Rivero and J.A. González Calle, however, have proven that the abbess was, in fact, the daughter of the count of Noreña,[32] a filiation also confirmed by historian Faustino Menéndez Pidal de Navascués who pointed out that the coat-of-arms engraved on Juana's tomb is identical to that of her father, Alfonso Enríquez, Count of Noreña.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Menéndez Pidal de Navascués 1982, p. 168.
  2. ^ Uría Maqua 1975, p. 179.
  3. ^ Rades y Andrada 1572, p. 31.
  4. ^ López de Ayala 1780, pp. 106–121.
  5. ^ Blanco García 1971, p. 743.
  6. ^ Uría Maqua 1975, p. 182.
  7. ^ Sousa 1755, p. 182.
  8. ^ Uría Maqua 1975, pp. 182–183.
  9. ^ Uría Maqua 1975, p. 178-179.
  10. ^ a b Rodrigues Oliveira 2010, p. 322.
  11. ^ Fernández Conde 1978, p. 114-115.
  12. ^ Carvallo 1988, p. 407.
  13. ^ Fernández Conde 1978, p. 115.
  14. ^ Fernández Conde 1978, p. 122, n. 103.
  15. ^ Fernández Conde 1978, pp. 114–115.
  16. ^ Lopes 1895–1897, pp. 155–156, Vol. I, Cap. LIII.
  17. ^ Carvallo 1988, p. 408.
  18. ^ Fernández Conde 1978, p. 124.
  19. ^ Carvallo 1988, p. 421.
  20. ^ Carvallo 1988, p. 424.
  21. ^ López de Ayala 1780, pp. 106–121, Vol. II.
  22. ^ Lopes 1895–1897, Vol. II, chapters LXXXIII and LXXXIV.
  23. ^ Braamcamp Freire 1921, p. 47.
  24. ^ Menéndez Pidal de Navascués 1982, p. 170.
  25. ^ Braamcamp Freire 1921, pp. 47–48.
  26. ^ a b Menéndez Pidal de Navascués 1982, p. 169.
  27. ^ a b c d e f Braamcamp Freire 1921, p. 48.
  28. ^ Sousa 1755, p. 84.
  29. ^ Sousa 1755, p. 98.
  30. ^ Sousa 1755, p. 656.
  31. ^ Martínez Caviró 1980, pp. 316-317 and 334.
  32. ^ González Calle 2011, pp. 143–144.
  33. ^ Menéndez Pidal de Navascués 1983, p. 313.
  34. ^ Sousa 1755, p. 586.

Bibliography edit

  • Blanco García, Flor (1971). (PDF). Boletín de la Institución Fernán González (in Spanish). No. 177. Burgos: Institución Fernán González. pp. 732–745. ISSN 0211-8998. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-10-16.
  • Braamcamp Freire, Anselmo (1921). Livro primeiro dos Brasões de Sintra (in Portuguese). Coimbra: Imprenta da Universidade. OCLC 794223590.
  • Carvallo, Luis Alfonso (1988) [1695]. Antiguedades y cosas memorables del Principado de Asturias (in Spanish). Gijón: Silverio Cañada. Bibliotéca Histórica Asturiana. ISBN 84-7286-263-1.
  • Cuartas Rivero, Margarita (1983). Oviedo y el Principado de Asturias a fines de la edad media (in Spanish). Oviedo: Instituto de Estudios Asturianos (C.S.I.C.). ISBN 84-00-05447-4.
  • Fernández Conde, F. Javier (1978). Gutierre de Toledo, obispo de Oviedo (1377-1389) (in Spanish). Oviedo: Universidad de Oviedo. Departamento de Historia Medieval. ISBN 84-7009-063-1.
  • González Calle, Jesús Antonio (2011). . Territorio, Sociedad y Poder:revista de estudios medievales (in Spanish). No. 6. Oviedo: Trea y Universidad de Oviedo: Servicio de Publicaciones. pp. 121–152. ISSN 1886-1121. Archived from the original on 2020-07-29. Retrieved 2017-02-13.
  • Lopes, Fernão (1895–1897). Chronica de el-rei D. Fernando (in Portuguese). 3 volumes. Lisbon: Escriptorio. Serie: Bibliotheca de classicos portugueses (VI). OCLC 2634915.
  • Lopes, Fernão (1644). Chronica de el-rei D. Joam I de boa memoria (in Portuguese). Lisbon: António Álvarez Impressor delRey.
  • López de Ayala, Pedro (1780). Crónicas de los reyes de Castilla D. Pedro I, D. Enrique II, D. Juan I, D. Enrique III (in Spanish). Vol. II. Con las enmiendas de Jerónimo Zurita y las correcciones y notas de Eugenio de Llaguno y Amírola. Madrid: Imprenta de Don Antonio de Sancha. OCLC 312539457.
  • Martínez Caviró, Balbina (1980). Mudéjar toledano: palacios y conventos (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Madrid: Artes Gráficas VOCAL. ISBN 84-300-2910-9.
  • Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, Faustino (1983). "De la famosa aventura heráldica de unos leones africanos y otras historias (Las armas del duque de Medina Sidonia, don Enrique)". Hidalguía: La revista de genealogía, nobleza y armas (in Spanish). No. 178–179. Madrid: Ediciones Hidalguía. pp. 305–317. ISSN 0018-1285.
  • Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, Faustino (1982). Instituto Luis de Salazar y Castro (ed.). Heráldica medieval española: la Casa Real de León y Castilla (in Spanish). Vol. I. Madrid: Hidalguía. ISBN 8400051505.
  • Rades y Andrada, Francisco (1572). Chronica de las Órdenes y Cavallerias de Santiago, Calatrava y Alcántara (in Spanish). Toledo: Casa de Juan de Ayala. OCLC 55249328.
  • Rodrigues Oliveira, Ana (2010). Rainhas medievais de Portugal. Dezassete mulheres, duas dinastias, quatro séculos de História (in Portuguese). Lisbon: A esfera dos livros. ISBN 978-989-626-261-7.
  • Rodríguez Díaz, Elena E. (1995). El Libro de la Regla Colorada de la Catedral de Oviedo. Estudio y edición (in Spanish). Oviedo: Real Instituto de Estudios Asturianos. ISBN 84-920049-1-6.
  • Sousa, António Caetano de (1735). História Genealógica da Casa Real Portuguesa (PDF) (in Portuguese). Vol. I. Coimbra: Atlântida-Livraria Editora, Lda. OCLC 829426236.
  • Sousa, António Caetano de (1755). Memorias Históricas e Genealógicas dos Grandes de Portugal (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Na Regia Officina Sylviana e da Academia Real. ISBN 9781010861676. OCLC 558039884.
  • Uría Maqua, Juan (1975). "El conde don Alfonso" (PDF). Asturiensia medievalia (in Spanish). No. 2. Oviedo: Universidad de Oviedo, Departamento de Historia Medieval. pp. 177–238. ISSN 0301-889X.
  • Uría Maqua, Juan (1978). "Las Rebeliones del conde don Alfonso en Asturias (1368-1396)". Historia General de Asturias (in Spanish). Vol. II. Gijón: Silverio Cañada. ISBN 8472860493.
  • Uría Ríu, Juan (1951). "El matrimonio del conde D. Alfonso, bastardo de Enrique II y su anulación" (PDF). Archivum (in Spanish). No. 1. Oviedo: Universidad de Oviedo. Facultad de Filología. pp. 123–144. ISSN 0570-7218.

alfonso, enríquez, count, gijón, noreña, alfonso, enríquez, gijón, 1355, marans, portugal, 1400, count, noreña, gijón, lord, several, places, eldest, king, henry, castile, elvira, Íñiguez, born, before, king, marriage, most, powerful, feudal, lords, asturias, . Alfonso Enriquez Gijon 1355 Marans or Portugal c 1400 1 Count of Norena and of Gijon and lord of several places was the eldest son of King Henry II of Castile and Elvira Iniguez born before the king s marriage 2 a As one of the most powerful feudal lords in Asturias where he owned many properties he attempted to declare the independence of this region from his brother King John I and then from his nephew King Henry III of Castile He and his Portuguese wife Isabel of Portugal a natural daughter of King Ferdinand I are the ancestors of the Noronha lineage in Portugal Contents 1 Early years 2 Uprisings against his brother John I and nephew Henry III of Castile 3 Final years 4 Marriage and issue 5 Notes 6 References 7 BibliographyEarly years editAlfonso was raised close to his father during his youth A year before his reign as king of Castile and Leon Henry II gave Alfonso the lordship of Norena and as such he appears confirming a charter in November 1368 He was knighted by his father in Santiago de Compostela in the spring of 1372 and it was probably at that time that he received the titles of Count of Norena and of Gijon 6 b He also received the properties that his father had inherited from his godfather and tutor Rodrigo Alvarez in Leon 9 In Asturias these included the strategic counties of Norena and Gijon plus Ribadesella Villaviciosa Nava Laviana Cudillero Luarca and Pravia In Leon he also owned the two Babias and Arguellos both territories on the border with Asturias thanks to which he was able to move from one region to another without having to abandon his domains His first military experience was during the second Fernandine war in 1372 1373 where he succeeded in quashing the rebellions in Viana do Bolo and Cascais The war came to an end with the signing of the Treaty of Santarem on 19 March 1373 One of the stipulations of the treaty was the marriage of Alfonso Enriquez with Isabel of Portugal 10 a natural daughter of King Ferdinand I who at that time was about nine years old Uprisings against his brother John I and nephew Henry III of Castile editAlfonso s father King Henry II died in May 1379 and was succeeded by his first born son who reigned as John I of Castile In the spring of 1381 King John I was preparing to go to war with Portugal His half brother Alfonso Enriquez knowing that all the soldiers from Asturias were away from the region offered England an ally of Portugal the harbor of Gijon Upon hearing this King John I imprisoned his brother and confiscated his properties Alfonso was only able to recover his territories in Asturias and Leon including the County of Norena thanks to the intervention of the Bishop of Oviedo and after paying homage to his brother in Oviedo Cathedral 11 12 The Count of Norena however prepared a new uprising His brother King John entrusted him with a diplomatic mission for negotiations with Portugal and in early 1382 Alfonso with his brother s permission went to Braganza but instead of defending Castile he hid his intentions and tried to secure England s support for Portugal 13 The Castilian monarch in reprisal confiscated Alfonso s properties in Asturias and in the mountains of Leon In 1383 King John I discovered that his brother Alfonso had entered into new agreements with the King of Portugal The king rushed to Asturias and subdued the entire region except for the port city of Gijon where his rebellious brother had sought refuge At the end the King forgave his brother on 18 July 1383 after having imprisoned him in La Puebla de Montalban under the custody of Pedro Tenorio the archbishop of Toledo 14 In September of that year after the Courts of Segovia the King donated all of Count Alfonso s properties in Asturias to Gutierre de Toledo bishop of Oviedo including the county of Norena 15 16 17 As compensation King John I granted Alfonso the title of Count of Valencia de Don Juan a territory that was more accessible and controllable The King also granted his son Henry the title of Prince of Asturias with all the lordships thereby linking this difficult to reach territory the ideal setting for conspiracies and uprisings due to its isolation and terrain to the crown Shortly afterwards following the death of King Ferdinand I in October 1383 King John I decided to imprison Alfonso in the castle of Almonacid since having married a daughter of the deceased king albeit illegitimate Alfonso was a rival and could undermine his rights to the crown of Portugal as the husband of Beatrice the late king s daughter with Leonor Teles In July 1386 John I confiscated all of Alfonso s properties 18 His imprisonment lasted eight years and only after the death of King John I in 1390 was it possible for Alfonso to regain his freedom and his possessions 19 During the reign of his nephew Henry III of Castile Alfonso continued to rebel against the crown In 1394 the King laid siege to the city of Gijon Isabel defended the city but finally surrendered The King returned her son Henry who had been held hostage and ordered her to leave the kingdom and join her husband Count Alfonso who was in France at that time 20 Final years editLittle is known about his final years except that he was made prisoner by order of the King in Saint Jean de Luz but released shortly afterwards It was rumored that in 1397 he was involved in a conspiracy with the King of Portugal against Henry III although this was never proven He died around 1400 1 probably in Portugal or in Marans 21 Marriage and issue editHis marriage with Isabel of Portugal was one of the stipulations of the Treaty of Santarem 10 Isabel a natural daughter of King Ferdinand I was about nine years in 1373 when the treaty was signed The betrothal was celebrated a month later in Santarem 22 Unhappy with the arrangement Alfonso fled to Avignon to try to convince Pope Gregory XI to intercede on his behalf and to cancel the wedding plans 23 He had to desist however when his father the king threatened to confiscate all his properties The marriage finally took place in 1377 24 Although he obtained a divorce after his father s death it was not effective since the marriage was consummated and the following children were born 25 Pedro de Noronha 1379 20 August 1452 Archbishop of Lisbon 1424 1452 26 27 28 father of Joao Pedro and Fernando de Noronha Fernando de Noronha second count of Vila Real by his marriage to Beatrice de Meneses second countess of Vila Real daughter and heiress of Pedro de Menezes 27 29 Sancho de Noronha first Count of Odemira 26 27 comendador mayor of the Order of Santiago alcalde mor of Estremoz and Elvas Lord of Vimieiro Mortagua Aveiro and other territories 30 married to Mecia de Sousa Henrique de Noronha captain in Ceuta without legitimate male issue 27 Joao de Noronha 27 participated in the siege of Balaguer and was knighted by Infante Duarte in the siege of Ceuta where he was injured He died from his wounds shortly afterwards without having left any offspring Constance of Noronha the second wife of Afonso Duke of Braganza 27 without issue From his affair with Ines de Soto de los Infantes of the Asturian lineage of the Miranda he was the father of Juana Enriquez also known as Juana de Lodena or Liduena abbess at the convent of Saint Clarie in Toledo c He was also the father of the following children out of wedlock Juan Enriquez of Norena married to Beatrice Lady of Mirabel Beatrice of Norena the wife of Rui Vaz Pereira 34 Diego Enriquez of Norena married to Beatriz de Guzman the illegitimate daughter of Enrique Perez de Guzman second Count of Niebla Notes edit Chronicler de Rades y Andrada in his Cronica de las tres ordenes y Cauallerias de Sanctiago Calatraua y Alcantara Chronicle of the Three Military Orders of Santiago Calatrava and Alcantara calls her Ines Diaz de la Vega daughter of Diego Lasso de la Vega and Elvira de Salcedo 3 In his last will executed on 29 May 1374 King Henry calls her Elvira Iniguez 4 She appears with this name on 22 February 1375 in a charter relating to a claim by Elvira Iniguez de la Vega mother of Alfonso Count of Gijon bastard son of the king 5 According to the 18th century Portuguese genealogist Antonio Caetano de Sousa this was in 1373 7 Nevertheless in a charter from the Monastery of San Vicente de Oviedo dated 1372 Alfonso was already signing as Count of Norena 8 In 1489 the convent transferred to Diego de Miranda properties in Soto de los Infantes Miranda Salas Grado Navia Cangas Tineo Allande and Babia belonging to Juana Author Margarita Cuartas Rivero quotes a document from the Archive of Valdecarzana dated 16 May 1489 Historian Balbina Martinez Caviro mistakenly asserted that Juana was the daughter of Alonso Enriquez and his wife Juana de Mendoza 31 Margarita Cuartas Rivero and J A Gonzalez Calle however have proven that the abbess was in fact the daughter of the count of Norena 32 a filiation also confirmed by historian Faustino Menendez Pidal de Navascues who pointed out that the coat of arms engraved on Juana s tomb is identical to that of her father Alfonso Enriquez Count of Norena 33 References edit a b Menendez Pidal de Navascues 1982 p 168 Uria Maqua 1975 p 179 Rades y Andrada 1572 p 31 Lopez de Ayala 1780 pp 106 121 Blanco Garcia 1971 p 743 Uria Maqua 1975 p 182 Sousa 1755 p 182 Uria Maqua 1975 pp 182 183 Uria Maqua 1975 p 178 179 a b Rodrigues Oliveira 2010 p 322 Fernandez Conde 1978 p 114 115 Carvallo 1988 p 407 Fernandez Conde 1978 p 115 Fernandez Conde 1978 p 122 n 103 Fernandez Conde 1978 pp 114 115 Lopes 1895 1897 pp 155 156 Vol I Cap LIII Carvallo 1988 p 408 Fernandez Conde 1978 p 124 Carvallo 1988 p 421 Carvallo 1988 p 424 Lopez de Ayala 1780 pp 106 121 Vol II Lopes 1895 1897 Vol II chapters LXXXIII and LXXXIV Braamcamp Freire 1921 p 47 Menendez Pidal de Navascues 1982 p 170 Braamcamp Freire 1921 pp 47 48 a b Menendez Pidal de Navascues 1982 p 169 a b c d e f Braamcamp Freire 1921 p 48 Sousa 1755 p 84 Sousa 1755 p 98 Sousa 1755 p 656 Martinez Caviro 1980 pp 316 317 and 334 Gonzalez Calle 2011 pp 143 144 Menendez Pidal de Navascues 1983 p 313 Sousa 1755 p 586 Bibliography editBlanco Garcia Flor 1971 Catalogacion de documentos medievales de La Rioja Burgalesa PDF Boletin de la Institucion Fernan Gonzalez in Spanish No 177 Burgos Institucion Fernan Gonzalez pp 732 745 ISSN 0211 8998 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 10 16 Braamcamp Freire Anselmo 1921 Livro primeiro dos Brasoes de Sintra in Portuguese Coimbra Imprenta da Universidade OCLC 794223590 Carvallo Luis Alfonso 1988 1695 Antiguedades y cosas memorables del Principado de Asturias in Spanish Gijon Silverio Canada Biblioteca Historica Asturiana ISBN 84 7286 263 1 Cuartas Rivero Margarita 1983 Oviedo y el Principado de Asturias a fines de la edad media in Spanish Oviedo Instituto de Estudios Asturianos C S I C ISBN 84 00 05447 4 Fernandez Conde F Javier 1978 Gutierre de Toledo obispo de Oviedo 1377 1389 in Spanish Oviedo Universidad de Oviedo Departamento de Historia Medieval ISBN 84 7009 063 1 Gonzalez Calle Jesus Antonio 2011 Mujeres en la nobleza bajomedieval asturiana algunas biografias relevantes Territorio Sociedad y Poder revista de estudios medievales in Spanish No 6 Oviedo Trea y Universidad de Oviedo Servicio de Publicaciones pp 121 152 ISSN 1886 1121 Archived from the original on 2020 07 29 Retrieved 2017 02 13 Lopes Fernao 1895 1897 Chronica de el rei D Fernando in Portuguese 3 volumes Lisbon Escriptorio Serie Bibliotheca de classicos portugueses VI OCLC 2634915 Lopes Fernao 1644 Chronica de el rei D Joam I de boa memoria in Portuguese Lisbon Antonio Alvarez Impressor delRey Lopez de Ayala Pedro 1780 Cronicas de los reyes de Castilla D Pedro I D Enrique II D Juan I D Enrique III in Spanish Vol II Con las enmiendas de Jeronimo Zurita y las correcciones y notas de Eugenio de Llaguno y Amirola Madrid Imprenta de Don Antonio de Sancha OCLC 312539457 Martinez Caviro Balbina 1980 Mudejar toledano palacios y conventos in Spanish 1st ed Madrid Artes Graficas VOCAL ISBN 84 300 2910 9 Menendez Pidal de Navascues Faustino 1983 De la famosa aventura heraldica de unos leones africanos y otras historias Las armas del duque de Medina Sidonia don Enrique Hidalguia La revista de genealogia nobleza y armas in Spanish No 178 179 Madrid Ediciones Hidalguia pp 305 317 ISSN 0018 1285 Menendez Pidal de Navascues Faustino 1982 Instituto Luis de Salazar y Castro ed Heraldica medieval espanola la Casa Real de Leon y Castilla in Spanish Vol I Madrid Hidalguia ISBN 8400051505 Rades y Andrada Francisco 1572 Chronica de las ordenes y Cavallerias de Santiago Calatrava y Alcantara in Spanish Toledo Casa de Juan de Ayala OCLC 55249328 Rodrigues Oliveira Ana 2010 Rainhas medievais de Portugal Dezassete mulheres duas dinastias quatro seculos de Historia in Portuguese Lisbon A esfera dos livros ISBN 978 989 626 261 7 Rodriguez Diaz Elena E 1995 El Libro de la Regla Colorada de la Catedral de Oviedo Estudio y edicion in Spanish Oviedo Real Instituto de Estudios Asturianos ISBN 84 920049 1 6 Sousa Antonio Caetano de 1735 Historia Genealogica da Casa Real Portuguesa PDF in Portuguese Vol I Coimbra Atlantida Livraria Editora Lda OCLC 829426236 Sousa Antonio Caetano de 1755 Memorias Historicas e Genealogicas dos Grandes de Portugal in Portuguese Lisbon Na Regia Officina Sylviana e da Academia Real ISBN 9781010861676 OCLC 558039884 Uria Maqua Juan 1975 El conde don Alfonso PDF Asturiensia medievalia in Spanish No 2 Oviedo Universidad de Oviedo Departamento de Historia Medieval pp 177 238 ISSN 0301 889X Uria Maqua Juan 1978 Las Rebeliones del conde don Alfonso en Asturias 1368 1396 Historia General de Asturias in Spanish Vol II Gijon Silverio Canada ISBN 8472860493 Uria Riu Juan 1951 El matrimonio del conde D Alfonso bastardo de Enrique II y su anulacion PDF Archivum in Spanish No 1 Oviedo Universidad de Oviedo Facultad de Filologia pp 123 144 ISSN 0570 7218 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfonso Enriquez Count of Gijon and Norena amp oldid 1213871648, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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