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Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba

Fernando Álvarez de Toledo y Pimentel, 3rd Duke of Alba (29 October 1507 – 11 December 1582), known as the Grand Duke of Alba (Spanish: Gran Duque de Alba, Portuguese: Grão Duque de Alba) in Spain and Portugal and as the Iron Duke (Dutch: IJzeren Hertog or shortly 'Alva') in the Netherlands, was a Spanish noble, general and diplomat. Alba achieved notoriety for his actions during the Eighty Years' War in the Spanish Netherlands, where his prolonged military campaigns and harsh repression failed to suppress the Dutch revolt.

Fernando Álvarez de Toledo
Portrait by Antonis Mor
12th Constable of Portugal
In office
1581–1582
MonarchPhilip I of Portugal
Preceded byJohn, 6th Duke of Braganza
Succeeded byTeodósio II, 7th Duke of Braganza
1st Viceroy of Portugal and the Algarves
In office
18 July 1580 – 11 December 1582
MonarchPhilip I of Portugal
Preceded byNew title
Succeeded byArchduke Alberto of Austria
Governor of the Netherlands
In office
1567–1573
MonarchPhilip II of Spain
Preceded byMargaret of Austria
Succeeded byLuis de Requesens y Zúñiga
Viceroy of Naples
In office
1556–1558
MonarchCharles I of Spain
Preceded byBernardino de Mendoza
Succeeded byJuan Fernández Manrique de Lara
Governor of Milan
In office
1555–1556
MonarchCharles I of Spain
Preceded byFerdinando Gonzaga
Succeeded byCristoforo Madruzzo
Personal details
Born
Fernando Álvarez de Toledo y Pimentel

29 October 1507
Piedrahíta, Spain
Died11 December 1582(1582-12-11) (aged 75)
Lisbon, Portugal
SpouseMaría Enríquez de Toledo y Guzmán
ChildrenFernando de Toledo
García Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán
Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzman
Diego Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán
Beatriz Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán
Profession
  • Soldier
  • diplomat
  • statesman
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Spanish Crown
RankCaptain General
Battles/warsFour Years' War

Ottoman-Habsburg wars

Italian Wars

Schmalkaldic War

Dutch Revolt

War of the Portuguese Succession

Born into a prominent Castilian military family, Alba first distinguished himself in the 1535 conquest of Tunis during the Ottoman-Habsburg Wars as part of a long conflict for predominance over the western Mediterranean Sea. He then commanded the Spanish troops at the Battle of Mühlberg (1547), where the army of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V defeated the German Protestant princes in the Schmalkaldic War. Alba was the commander-in-chief of the Spanish-Habsburg army during the Italian War of 1551–1559, and became governor of Milan in 1555 and viceroy of Naples in 1556.

In 1567, King Philip II of Spain appointed Alba governor of the Netherlands and tasked him with the suppression of Dutch rebels. Alba instituted the Council of Troubles, which led to the condemnations of thousands and came to be known as the "Council of Blood". Militarily, Alba repeatedly defeated the troops of William of Orange during the first stages of the Eighty Years' War but failed to extinguish the rebellion, and in 1573 he was recalled to Spain. Alba's last military successes were in the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580, for which he was rewarded the titles viceroy and constable of Portugal. He held both titles until his death in Lisbon in 1582.

Early years Edit

 
Coat of arms of the 3rd Duke of Alba.

Fernando was born in Piedrahíta, Province of Ávila, on 29 October 1507. He was the son of García Álvarez de Toledo y Zúñiga, heir of Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Quiñones, II Duke of Alba de Tormes, and of Beatriz Pimentel, daughter of Rodrigo Alonso Pimentel, IV Count – I Duke of Benavente and his wife, María Pacheco. Fernando was orphaned at age three when his father, García, died during a campaign on the island of Djerba in Africa in 1510. At the age of six, Fernando accompanied his grandfather, the second Duke of Alba, on a military mission to capture Navarre.

His youth and education were typical for Castilian nobility of the age. He was educated at the ducal court of the House of Alba, located in the Castle Palace of Alba de Tormes, by two Italian preceptors, Bernardo Gentile – a Sicilian Benedictine – and Severo Marini and by the Spanish Renaissance poet and writer Juan Boscan. He was educated in Roman Catholicism and humanism. He mastered Latin and knew French, English and German.

In 1524, when he was seventeen, he joined the troops of Constable of Castile, Íñigo Fernández de Velasco, II Duke of Frías, during the capture of Fuenterrabía, then occupied by France and Navarre. For his role in the siege, Fernando was appointed governor of Fuenterrabía.

When his grandfather Fadrique died in 1531, the ducal title passed to Fernando as the firstborn son of Garcia. Throughout his adulthood, he served the Spanish monarchs Charles I and his successor Philip II.

Mayordomo mayor to the Spanish Kings Edit

In 1541 Fernando Álvarez de Toledo was named Mayordomo Mayor del Rey de España (High Steward to the King of Spain) by Charles I of Spain.[2] Alba kept this Office in court until the death of the monarch in 1556.

In 1546, Charles I invested Fernando, the Third Duke of Alba Grand Master as knight of the Illustrious Order of the Golden Fleece.

From 1548 King Charles intensified the preparations of Prince Philip as his successor in the Spanish Monarchy, and he named Duke of Alba mayordomo mayor of his son to prepare Philip for his new role. Fernando took Philip on a tour around Europe that lasted until 1551. Fernando accompanied Philip to England to attend his marriage to Mary Tudor. The Duke was one of fifteen grandees of Spain who attended the ceremony in the abbey of Winchester on 25 July 1554.

After the death of Charles, the new King Philip II maintained Fernando, Third Duke of Alba, as mayordomo mayor until the death of the Duke in 1582.

In 1563, King Philip II created the title Duke of Huéscar to be bestowed on the heir of the Dukes of Alba. Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo, son of Fernando became 1st Duke of Huéscar.

In 1566, Alba's son and heir, Fadrique, broke his promise of marriage to Magdalena de Guzman, lady of Queen Anne of Austria, which led to his arrest and imprisonment in the Castle of La Mota in Valladolid. The following year he was released so he could go to Flanders with his father to serve in the military. In 1578 Philip II ordered the case against Fadrique reopened. It was discovered that in order to avoid marriage, Fadrique had secretly married María de Toledo, daughter of García Álvarez de Toledo and Osorio, IV Marquess of Villafranca del Bierzo, using a permit issued for that purpose by his father the Duke of Alba. Fadrique was sent to prison, in the Castle of La Mota. Fernando, Duke of Alba was banished from the court for one year for "breaking the strict court protocol."[3] The Duke went into exile in Uceda, where his secretaries Fernando de Albornoz and Esteban Ibarra likewise spent their punishment.[4]

Military commands Edit

Against the Ottomans and French (1532–42) Edit

After Fernando had become the third Duke of Alba in 1532, Charles V sent him to Vienna to help defend the city against an Ottoman invasion army. No battle ensued as the Ottomans, having lost momentum due to time lost during the Siege of Güns, decided not to advance against Vienna and retreated from the field.

During this time, he was accompanied by the soldier-poet Garcilaso de la Vega throughout his travels in Europe. The special access that De La Vega had as a close companion to Alba, coupled with his skilled craft as a writer, allows the historian to delve into the deepest emotions expressed by the Duke of Alba through the poetry of De La Vega. Specifically concerning the ardegous travels while on a war-footing as well as the emotional longing that Alba expressed for his wife.[5]

The Duke's first military command to engage in battle was in the conquest of Tunis. In early June 1535 at Cagliari, he embarked with the military force commanded by the Marquess of Vasto. On 14 July, the fortress of La Goleta was seized, and a week later the army took the city of Tunis which was defended by Hayreddin Barbarossa. Thus Spain regained control over the western Mediterranean Sea.

In 1542, he led the Spanish troops against the French Army, ending the siege of Perpignan. The siege was a decisive victory for Alba and one of the worst defeats of Francis I during the French offensive of 1542.

In Germany (1546–47) Edit

In 1547, Charles I, in his capacity as Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor engaged with the Protestant forces in the Schmalkaldic War. The Duke of Alba was in charge of Tercios, the elite Spanish ground troops during the Battle of Mühlberg on the banks of the river Elbe. A flanking attack by Alba's Tercios was largely responsible for the imperial army's decisive victory against the Elector of Saxony.

In Milan and Naples (1555–59) Edit

 
The Duke of Alba in 1549 by Anthonis Mor

In later years, the focus of conflict between France and Spain had moved to the Italian peninsula. Alba was sent to Italy as commander in chief of the Spanish-Habsburg army in Italy, and became governor of Milan in 1555, and viceroy of Naples in 1556.

The newly appointed Pope Paul IV, an enemy of the Habsburgs, prompted King Henry II of France to expel the Spanish from Italy. Papal troops joined the French for this aim. In July 1556 the Pope declared Philip II was removed from the title King of Naples. Alba did not hesitate[6] and marched on Rome at the head of 12,000 Spanish soldiers. He financed the campaign, in part, by obtaining a loan of 430,000 ducats from Bona Sforza, dowager Queen of Poland; the loan became known as Neapolitan sums and was never repaid.[7] The Pope called for a truce, giving time for a French army commanded by Francis, Duke of Guise to march on Naples. The Spanish intercepted the French and defeated them in the Battle of San Quentin. Without French support, the papal troops were overwhelmed by the Spanish and the Duke of Alba entered Rome in September 1557. The pope had to sue for peace.[8]

In April 1559, Alba was one of the signatories of the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis which ended their war with France and released Spanish resources for maximising its economic exploitation of New Spain. The Italian peninsula entered a prolonged period of peace, sealed by marriage between the twice widowed Philip II and Isabel de Valois, daughter of Henry II of France. During the royal wedding, which was held in Paris, Alba acted as proxy for Philip.[9]

Governor of the Netherlands (1567–73) Edit

 
Engraving of the statue of Fernando Álvarez de Toledo in Antwerp by Jacques Jonghelinck. From Nederlantsche Oorloghen by Pieter Bor
 
Head of a bronze medal with the effigy and the cuirass of the Grand Alba bearing the Golden Fleece in commemoration of his triumphs in 1571 with the Latin legend «FERDIN[andus] • TOLET[anus] • ALBÆ • DUX • BELG • PRÆF[ectus]», which means, in English, "Fernando de Toledo Duke of Alba Governor of the Netherlands"
 
Back of the same medal with the Latin inscription «DEO et REGI VITÆ VSVS», which means, in English, "God and King are purposes of life"
 
Fernando Álvarez de Toledo by Willem Key (1568)

On December 26, 1566, Alba received the Golden Rose, the blessed sword and hat granted by Pope Pius V, through the papal brief Solent Romani Pontifices, in recognition of his singular efforts in favor of Catholicism and for being considered one of his champions.[10]

From August to October 1566, the "Iconoclasm" (Dutch: Beeldenstorm) took place in the Netherlands, during which Calvinist mobs attacked and destroyed numerous Catholic monasteries and churches, ransacking tombs and destroying statues. To tackle the civil and religious rebels, King Philip II sent Alba to Brussels on 22 August 1567, at the head of a powerful army. Upon arrival, he replaced Margaret of Parma, the sister of the Spanish king, as head of the civil jurisdiction. He decided that the local nobility was in open rebellion against the king and supported the new Protestant teachings, heresy in the Catholic view.

A few days later, on 5 September 1567, Alba established the "Council of Troubles", popularly known in the Netherlands as the "Court of Blood," to prosecute those responsible for the riots of 1566, especially those deemed heretics. Alba also targeted the local Catholic nobles who favoured dialogue and who opposed outside intervention. Two of the three heads of Flemish nobility, the Count of Egmont, a Catholic General for Philip II, who had led the cavalry that defeated the French at the Battle of San Quentin, and Philip de Montmorency, Count of Horn, were arrested and the court sentenced both counts to death. The Mayor of Antwerp, Anthony van Stralen, Lord of Merksem and Jan van Casembroot were other famous victims of the bloody repression, along with a large group of other apostates. Those condemned were executed on 5 June 1568 in the Town Hall Square in Brussels. Alba had little confidence in conventional Flemish justice, which he perceived as sympathetic to the defendants, and witnessed the executions in person. He would later become equally mistrustful of the local helpers of the Council of Troubles as possibly having their own agendas.

The maintenance of the troops in Flanders entailed substantial economic costs. The Duke imposed new taxes on the population and reformed its laws. Some cities, including Utrecht, refused to pay and declared a rebellion, which quickly spread throughout the Netherlands. William the Silent, the prince of Orange, enlisted the help of the French Huguenots and started to actively support the rebellion. William and the Huguenots took many Dutch cities. The Spanish troops advanced under banners with the Latin legend Pro lege, rege, et grege, which in English means For the law, the king, and the people [literally, the flock]. In 1572 the Spanish army carried out the Spanish Fury at Mechelen, retaking and sacking the city after the rebel garrison had left. From there, they retook Zutphen and Naarden. The Spanish Siege of Haarlem, characterized by brutality and savagery on both sides, culminated in the surrender of the city and the execution of all the garrison, estimated at 2,000 men. The subsequent Siege of Alkmaar was unsuccessful however. The first defeat in a full scale engagement for the Spanish troops during the Dutch revolt. The prolonged military campaigns and the harsh repression of the rebel citizenry earned the 3rd Duke of Alba the nickname "The Iron Duke" in the Netherlands,[11][12][13] and he became an important element of the anti-Spanish Black Legend.[14] His reputation was used for propaganda purposes by rebel statesman Philips of Marnix, Lord of Saint-Aldegonde to further strengthen anti-Spanish sentiments in the Netherlands.

In spite of continuous military action, the political situation in the Netherlands had not turned in favour of the Spanish crown. After five years of repression, more than 5,000 executions[15] and numerous complaints to the Spanish court, Philip II decided to change policy and relieve the Duke. The monarch sent Luis de Requesens to replace him. De Requesens tried to appease the situation by giving concessions to the rebels. Alba returned to Spain in 1573.

Nevertheless, the Duke still had influence in the Royal Council. Alba belonged to the conservative Spanish faction called Albistas or imperialists. This faction included the Inquisitor General Fernando de Valdés y Salas, the House of Pimentel, the Duke de Alburquerque and other members of the House of Álvarez de Toledo. The Albistas advised the king to take a firm stand in the Netherlands. The Albistas' hardline position was hotly contested by the liberal Ebolistas or humanists, led by Ruy Gómez de Silva, prince of Éboli and his secretary Francisco de Eraso. After the death of the prince of Éboli in 1573, the royal secretary Antonio Pérez went on to lead the liberal faction and began his association with Ana de Mendoza de la Cerda, Princess of Éboli. Against the Albistas' urging, King Philip II himself publicly acknowledged that "it is not possible to carry Flanders forward by way of war."[16] Political concessions by Luis de Requesens failed to end the rebellion in the Netherlands and hostilities soon resumed. These failures of the Ebolistas to end the Dutch revolt raised the distrust of the king, and Philip II again granted the Duke of Alba an important position in court.

Portuguese succession (1580–82) Edit

After the death of King Sebastian of Portugal, who had no heirs, in the Battle of Alcácer Quibir in 1578, the crown fell to his great uncle Cardinal Henry I of Portugal.[17] The death of the latter, without any appointed heirs, led to the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580.[18]

One of the claimants to the throne, António, Prior of Crato, a bastard son of Infante Louis, Duke of Beja and only grandson through the male line of king Manuel I of Portugal, was proclaimed King in June 1580.[19][20]

Philip II, through his mother Isabella of Portugal also a grandson of Manuel I, did not recognize Antonio as king of Portugal. The king appointed Fernando, Duke of Alba, as captain general of his army.[21] The duke was 73 years old and ill at the time.[22] Fernando mustered his forces, estimated at 20,000 men,[23] in Badajoz, and in June 1580 crossed the Spanish-Portuguese border and moved to Lisbon. In late August he defeated a Portuguese army at the Battle of Alcântara and entered Lisbon. This cleared the way for Philip II who became Philip I of Portugal, and created a dynastic union spanning all of Iberia under the Spanish crown.[24]

King Philip II rewarded Fernando with the titles of 1st Viceroy of Portugal and Constable of Portugal on July 18, 1580. With these titles Fernando represented the Spanish monarch in Portugal and was second in hierarchy only after the king in Portugal. Fernando held both titles until his death in 1582.[25]

Marriage and children Edit

 
Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba, by Leone Leoni.

His first child, Fernando de Toledo (1527–1591), was an illegitimate son with a miller's daughter in the town of La Aldehuela.[26]

27 April 1529[27] the Duke married his cousin María Enríquez de Toledo y Guzmán (died 1583), daughter of Diego Enríquez de Guzmán, III Count of Alba de Liste, with whom he had four children.

  • García Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán (1530–1548)
  • Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzman, IV Duke of Alba (1537–1585)
  • Diego Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán (1541–1583), Count of Lerín and Constable of Navarre by his marriage, held on 24 March 1565, with Brianda Beaumont (1540–1588), daughter of Luis de Beaumont. He was succeeded by Antonio Álvarez de Toledo y Beaumont, V Duke of Alba de Tormes (1568–1639)
  • Beatriz Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán (died 1637), married Álvaro Pérez Osorio, V Marquess of Astorga.

Later years and death Edit

Alba died in Lisbon on 11 December 1582, at the age of seventy-five; he was given the last rites by the famous Luis de Granada.

His remains were transferred to Alba de Tormes, where he was buried in the convent of San Leonardo. In 1619 they were transferred to the Convento de San Esteban, Salamanca. In 1983 a mausoleum was erected over his grave, funded by the Provincial Deputation of Salamanca.[28][29]

Aceh War reference Edit

In 1904 there was in the Dutch press and House of Representatives an intensive debate on the conduct of Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van Daalen, a Dutch commander who during the then current Aceh War was charged with the killing of numerous civilians, including women and children, during the conquest of Aceh in northern Sumatra. Some of van Daalen's detractors compared his conduct with the atrocities committed by the Duke of Alba, still well remembered in Dutch historical memory.[30]

Ancestry Edit

García Álvarez de Toledo y Carrillo de Toledo
I Duke of Alba
Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Quiñones
II Duke of Alba
María Enriquez de Quiñones y Toledo
García Álvarez de Toledo y Zúñiga
Álvaro de Zúñiga y Guzmán
I Duke of Plasencia
Isabel de Zúñiga y Pimentel
Leonor Pimentel y Zúñiga
Fernando Álvarez de Toledo y Pimentel
III Duke of Alba
Alonso Pimentel y Enríquez
III Count of Benavente
Rodrigo Alonso Pimentel
I Duke of Benavente
María de Quiñones y Portugal
Beatriz Pimentel y Pacheco
Juan Pacheco, I Duke of Escalona
María Pacheco y Portocarrero
señora de Villacidaler
María Portocarrero Enríquez

Notes Edit

  1. ^ ""Spain and Felipe II 1556-64"".
  2. ^ De Atienza y Navajas, Julio (barón de Cobos de Belchite). La obra de Julio de Atienza y Navajas, barón de Cobos de Belchite y marqués del Vado Glorioso en "Hidalguía". Instituto Salzar y castro. Madrid. Hidalguía. 1993. p. 196.[ISBN missing]
  3. ^ Spanish: Por romper el estricto protocolo de La Corte.
  4. ^ Documents about the causes that motivated the prission of D. Fadrique, son of the duke of Alba, and that the same time, the duke himself, op. cit., vol. VII, pp. 464–524, y vol. VIII, pp. 483–529.
  5. ^ Kamen, Henry (2017). Soldado de La España Imperial, El Duque de Alba. Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. pp. 34–38. ISBN 9788497343664.
  6. ^ Letter from the Duque of Alba to Paul IV, in the Colección de documentos inéditos para la historia de España, vol. II, pp. 437–446.
  7. ^ Setton, Kenneth Meyer (1984). The Papacy and the Levant, 1204–1571. American Philosophical Society. p. 656. ISBN 9780871691620.
  8. ^ Virreyes de Nápoles, op. cit., vol. XXIII, pp. 148–163.
  9. ^ "Los escritos de Herrera Casado. Artículos y comentarios sobre Guadalajara. Diciembre 2010. La boda de Felipe II en Guadalajara – 1560. (Herrera Casado's writings. Articles and opinions on Guadalajara. December 2010. The wedding of Felipe II in Guadalajara – 1560". www.herreracasado.com.
  10. ^ Sampedro Escolar, José Luis. La Casa de Alba. La Esfera de los Libros, S. L. Madrid. 2007. ISBN 978-84-9734-595-8. pp. 97/8.
  11. ^ Lindsay, Carol Ann (May 14, 2010). One Allied Sailor. Lulu.com. ISBN 9780557417803 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ Schefold, Bertram (March 31, 2016). Great Economic Thinkers from Antiquity to the Historical School: Translations from the series Klassiker der Nationalökonomie. Routledge. ISBN 9781317703723 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ "De leerschool: tijdschrift voor kweekelingen". J. van Noorduyn en Zoon. May 17, 1844 – via Google Books.
  14. ^ Behiels, Lieve. "El duque de Alba en la conciencia colectiva de los flamencos – Foro Hispánico. Revista Hispánica de los Países Bajos. 3 (1992) 31–43". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ Jonathan Israel, The Dutch Republic: its Rise, Greatness, and Fall 1477–1806 (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1995), pp. 159–160.
  16. ^ Spanish: No es posible llevar adelante lo de Flandes por la vía de la guerra.
  17. ^ De Baena Parada, Juan. Epítome de la vida, y hechos de don Sebastián Dezimo Sexto Rey de Portugal. 1692. pp. 113, 120.
  18. ^ Marqués de Pidal. Marqués de Miraflores. Salvá, Miguel. Colección de documentos inéditos para la historia de España. Academia de la Historia. Tomo XL. Madrid. 1862. p. 230.
  19. ^ Ferreira, António (16 December 1987). "Castro". UC Biblioteca Geral 1 – via Google Books.
  20. ^ Alden, Dauril (1996). The Making of an Enterprise: The Society of Jesus in Portugal, Its Empire, and Beyond, 1540–1750. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804722711 – via Google Books.
  21. ^ Disposition of Philip II about giving the duke the control of the army, op. cit., vol. XXXII, pp. 7–9.
  22. ^ Ruth MacKay, The Baker Who Pretended to Be King of Portugal, (University of Chicago Press, 2012), 49.
  23. ^ Ruth MacKay, The Baker Who Pretended to Be King of Portugal, 50.
  24. ^ John Huxtable Elliott. España en Europa: Estudios de historia comparada: escritos seleccionados. Universitat de València. 2002. pp. 79–80.
  25. ^ Belda Plans, Juan. Grandes personajes el Siglo de Oro español. Palabra. 2013. p. 29.
  26. ^ . Tercio. Archived from the original on September 15, 2013.
  27. ^ "Fernando Álvarez de Toledo | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  28. ^ Notice about the translación of the body of the Duke of Alba, op. cit., vol XXXV, p. 361.
  29. ^ Rosell, María del Mar. Traslado definitivo de los restos del gran duque de Alba a un mausoleo de Salamanca. El País. Edición impresa. 26 mar 1983. To the move attended, the duchess of Alba, Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart and her second housband, Jesús Aguirre y Ortiz de Zárate, their sons -the duque of Huéscar Carlos Fitz-James Stuart y Martínez de Irujo y Fernando, Cayetano y Eugenia Martínez de Irujo-, as well as other family members, of nobiliary houses, the mausolum author, the mayor of the Salamanca duchal villages, and other guests standt out the bishop of the diocece, Mauro Rubio, who presided over the solemn religious ceremony.
  30. ^ H.L. Zwitzer (1989). "DAALEN, Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van (1863-1930)". Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands (in Dutch). Retrieved 26 January 2022.

Bibliography Edit

  • Hobbs, Nicolas (2007). "Grandes de España" (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 October 2008.
  • Instituto de Salazar y Castro. Elenco de Grandezas y Titulos Nobiliarios Españoles (in Spanish). Periodic publication.
  • Falcó y Osorio, María del Rosario. Duquesa de Berwick y de Alba. Catálogo de las colecciones expuestas en las vitrinas del Palacio de Liria. Madrid. 1898.
  • Fernández Álvarez, Manuel. "El duque de hierro: Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, III de Alba". Colección Espasa Forum. Espasa Calpé. Madrid. 2007. ISBN 978-84-670-2625-2.
  • Kamen, Henry. The Duke of Alba. New Haven, Yale, 2004.
    • Kamen, Henry. El gran duque de Alba. Cuarta edición, cartoné. La Esfera de los Libros. Madrid. 2004/7. ISBN 978-84-9734-220-9.
  • Maltby, William S. Alba: A Biography of Fernando Alvarez de Toledo, Third Duke of Alba, 1507–1582. University of California Press. 1983. ISBN 0-520-04694-3.
    • Maltby, William S. El gran duque de Alba. Prólogo Jacobo Siruela, traducción Eva Rodríguez Halffter. Segunda edición. Ediciones Atalanta. Vilaür. 2007. ISBN 978-84-935313-8-6.
  • Junta de Castilla y León. Consejería de Educación y Cultura. Los Álvarez de Toledo Nobleza viva. María del Pilar García Pinacho. España. 1998. ISBN 84-7846-775-0.
  • Alba, General and Servant to the Crown. Edited by Maurits Ebben, Margriet Lacy-Bruijn and Rolof van Hövell tot Westerflier. Karwansaray. 2013. ISBN 978-94-90258-08-5.

External links Edit

Government offices
Preceded by Governor of Milan
1555–1556
Succeeded by
Preceded by Viceroy of Naples
1556–1558
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of the Netherlands
1567–1573
Succeeded by
New title Viceroy of Portugal
1580–1582
Succeeded by
Preceded by Constable of Portugal
1581–1582
Succeeded by
Spanish nobility
Preceded by Duke of Alba
1531–1582
Succeeded by
Preceded by
García Álvarez de Toledo
Marquess of Coria
1510–1582

fernando, Álvarez, toledo, duke, alba, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, Álvarez, toledo, second, maternal, family, name, pimentel, fernando, Álvarez, toledo, pimentel, duke, alba, october, 1507, december, 1582, known, grand, duke, alba, spanish, . In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Alvarez de Toledo and the second or maternal family name is Pimentel Fernando Alvarez de Toledo y Pimentel 3rd Duke of Alba 29 October 1507 11 December 1582 known as the Grand Duke of Alba Spanish Gran Duque de Alba Portuguese Grao Duque de Alba in Spain and Portugal and as the Iron Duke Dutch IJzeren Hertog or shortly Alva in the Netherlands was a Spanish noble general and diplomat Alba achieved notoriety for his actions during the Eighty Years War in the Spanish Netherlands where his prolonged military campaigns and harsh repression failed to suppress the Dutch revolt The Most ExcellentFernando Alvarez de Toledo3rd Duke of Alba GEPortrait by Antonis Mor12th Constable of PortugalIn office 1581 1582MonarchPhilip I of PortugalPreceded byJohn 6th Duke of BraganzaSucceeded byTeodosio II 7th Duke of Braganza1st Viceroy of Portugal and the AlgarvesIn office 18 July 1580 11 December 1582MonarchPhilip I of PortugalPreceded byNew titleSucceeded byArchduke Alberto of AustriaGovernor of the NetherlandsIn office 1567 1573MonarchPhilip II of SpainPreceded byMargaret of AustriaSucceeded byLuis de Requesens y ZunigaViceroy of NaplesIn office 1556 1558MonarchCharles I of SpainPreceded byBernardino de MendozaSucceeded byJuan Fernandez Manrique de LaraGovernor of MilanIn office 1555 1556MonarchCharles I of SpainPreceded byFerdinando GonzagaSucceeded byCristoforo MadruzzoPersonal detailsBornFernando Alvarez de Toledo y Pimentel29 October 1507Piedrahita SpainDied11 December 1582 1582 12 11 aged 75 Lisbon PortugalSpouseMaria Enriquez de Toledo y GuzmanChildrenFernando de ToledoGarcia Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de GuzmanFadrique Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de GuzmanDiego Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de GuzmanBeatriz Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de GuzmanProfessionSoldierdiplomatstatesmanSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceSpanish CrownRankCaptain GeneralBattles warsFour Years War Siege of FuenterrabiaOttoman Habsburg wars Conquest of Tunis Algiers expedition 1541 Italian Wars Siege of Perpignan Spanish invasion of Rome 1 Schmalkaldic War Battle of Muhlberg Siege of WittenbergDutch Revolt Battle of Jemmingen Battle of Jodoigne Siege of MonsWar of the Portuguese Succession Battle of AlcantaraBorn into a prominent Castilian military family Alba first distinguished himself in the 1535 conquest of Tunis during the Ottoman Habsburg Wars as part of a long conflict for predominance over the western Mediterranean Sea He then commanded the Spanish troops at the Battle of Muhlberg 1547 where the army of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V defeated the German Protestant princes in the Schmalkaldic War Alba was the commander in chief of the Spanish Habsburg army during the Italian War of 1551 1559 and became governor of Milan in 1555 and viceroy of Naples in 1556 In 1567 King Philip II of Spain appointed Alba governor of the Netherlands and tasked him with the suppression of Dutch rebels Alba instituted the Council of Troubles which led to the condemnations of thousands and came to be known as the Council of Blood Militarily Alba repeatedly defeated the troops of William of Orange during the first stages of the Eighty Years War but failed to extinguish the rebellion and in 1573 he was recalled to Spain Alba s last military successes were in the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 for which he was rewarded the titles viceroy and constable of Portugal He held both titles until his death in Lisbon in 1582 Contents 1 Early years 2 Mayordomo mayor to the Spanish Kings 3 Military commands 3 1 Against the Ottomans and French 1532 42 3 2 In Germany 1546 47 3 3 In Milan and Naples 1555 59 3 4 Governor of the Netherlands 1567 73 3 5 Portuguese succession 1580 82 4 Marriage and children 5 Later years and death 6 Aceh War reference 7 Ancestry 8 Notes 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly years Edit nbsp Coat of arms of the 3rd Duke of Alba Fernando was born in Piedrahita Province of Avila on 29 October 1507 He was the son of Garcia Alvarez de Toledo y Zuniga heir of Fadrique Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de Quinones II Duke of Alba de Tormes and of Beatriz Pimentel daughter of Rodrigo Alonso Pimentel IV Count I Duke of Benavente and his wife Maria Pacheco Fernando was orphaned at age three when his father Garcia died during a campaign on the island of Djerba in Africa in 1510 At the age of six Fernando accompanied his grandfather the second Duke of Alba on a military mission to capture Navarre His youth and education were typical for Castilian nobility of the age He was educated at the ducal court of the House of Alba located in the Castle Palace of Alba de Tormes by two Italian preceptors Bernardo Gentile a Sicilian Benedictine and Severo Marini and by the Spanish Renaissance poet and writer Juan Boscan He was educated in Roman Catholicism and humanism He mastered Latin and knew French English and German In 1524 when he was seventeen he joined the troops of Constable of Castile Inigo Fernandez de Velasco II Duke of Frias during the capture of Fuenterrabia then occupied by France and Navarre For his role in the siege Fernando was appointed governor of Fuenterrabia When his grandfather Fadrique died in 1531 the ducal title passed to Fernando as the firstborn son of Garcia Throughout his adulthood he served the Spanish monarchs Charles I and his successor Philip II Mayordomo mayor to the Spanish Kings EditIn 1541 Fernando Alvarez de Toledo was named Mayordomo Mayor del Rey de Espana High Steward to the King of Spain by Charles I of Spain 2 Alba kept this Office in court until the death of the monarch in 1556 In 1546 Charles I invested Fernando the Third Duke of Alba Grand Master as knight of the Illustrious Order of the Golden Fleece From 1548 King Charles intensified the preparations of Prince Philip as his successor in the Spanish Monarchy and he named Duke of Alba mayordomo mayor of his son to prepare Philip for his new role Fernando took Philip on a tour around Europe that lasted until 1551 Fernando accompanied Philip to England to attend his marriage to Mary Tudor The Duke was one of fifteen grandees of Spain who attended the ceremony in the abbey of Winchester on 25 July 1554 After the death of Charles the new King Philip II maintained Fernando Third Duke of Alba as mayordomo mayor until the death of the Duke in 1582 In 1563 King Philip II created the title Duke of Huescar to be bestowed on the heir of the Dukes of Alba Fadrique Alvarez de Toledo son of Fernando became 1st Duke of Huescar In 1566 Alba s son and heir Fadrique broke his promise of marriage to Magdalena de Guzman lady of Queen Anne of Austria which led to his arrest and imprisonment in the Castle of La Mota in Valladolid The following year he was released so he could go to Flanders with his father to serve in the military In 1578 Philip II ordered the case against Fadrique reopened It was discovered that in order to avoid marriage Fadrique had secretly married Maria de Toledo daughter of Garcia Alvarez de Toledo and Osorio IV Marquess of Villafranca del Bierzo using a permit issued for that purpose by his father the Duke of Alba Fadrique was sent to prison in the Castle of La Mota Fernando Duke of Alba was banished from the court for one year for breaking the strict court protocol 3 The Duke went into exile in Uceda where his secretaries Fernando de Albornoz and Esteban Ibarra likewise spent their punishment 4 Military commands EditAgainst the Ottomans and French 1532 42 Edit After Fernando had become the third Duke of Alba in 1532 Charles V sent him to Vienna to help defend the city against an Ottoman invasion army No battle ensued as the Ottomans having lost momentum due to time lost during the Siege of Guns decided not to advance against Vienna and retreated from the field During this time he was accompanied by the soldier poet Garcilaso de la Vega throughout his travels in Europe The special access that De La Vega had as a close companion to Alba coupled with his skilled craft as a writer allows the historian to delve into the deepest emotions expressed by the Duke of Alba through the poetry of De La Vega Specifically concerning the ardegous travels while on a war footing as well as the emotional longing that Alba expressed for his wife 5 The Duke s first military command to engage in battle was in the conquest of Tunis In early June 1535 at Cagliari he embarked with the military force commanded by the Marquess of Vasto On 14 July the fortress of La Goleta was seized and a week later the army took the city of Tunis which was defended by Hayreddin Barbarossa Thus Spain regained control over the western Mediterranean Sea In 1542 he led the Spanish troops against the French Army ending the siege of Perpignan The siege was a decisive victory for Alba and one of the worst defeats of Francis I during the French offensive of 1542 In Germany 1546 47 Edit In 1547 Charles I in his capacity as Charles V Holy Roman Emperor engaged with the Protestant forces in the Schmalkaldic War The Duke of Alba was in charge of Tercios the elite Spanish ground troops during the Battle of Muhlberg on the banks of the river Elbe A flanking attack by Alba s Tercios was largely responsible for the imperial army s decisive victory against the Elector of Saxony In Milan and Naples 1555 59 Edit nbsp The Duke of Alba in 1549 by Anthonis MorIn later years the focus of conflict between France and Spain had moved to the Italian peninsula Alba was sent to Italy as commander in chief of the Spanish Habsburg army in Italy and became governor of Milan in 1555 and viceroy of Naples in 1556 The newly appointed Pope Paul IV an enemy of the Habsburgs prompted King Henry II of France to expel the Spanish from Italy Papal troops joined the French for this aim In July 1556 the Pope declared Philip II was removed from the title King of Naples Alba did not hesitate 6 and marched on Rome at the head of 12 000 Spanish soldiers He financed the campaign in part by obtaining a loan of 430 000 ducats from Bona Sforza dowager Queen of Poland the loan became known as Neapolitan sums and was never repaid 7 The Pope called for a truce giving time for a French army commanded by Francis Duke of Guise to march on Naples The Spanish intercepted the French and defeated them in the Battle of San Quentin Without French support the papal troops were overwhelmed by the Spanish and the Duke of Alba entered Rome in September 1557 The pope had to sue for peace 8 In April 1559 Alba was one of the signatories of the Treaty of Cateau Cambresis which ended their war with France and released Spanish resources for maximising its economic exploitation of New Spain The Italian peninsula entered a prolonged period of peace sealed by marriage between the twice widowed Philip II and Isabel de Valois daughter of Henry II of France During the royal wedding which was held in Paris Alba acted as proxy for Philip 9 Governor of the Netherlands 1567 73 Edit nbsp Engraving of the statue of Fernando Alvarez de Toledo in Antwerp by Jacques Jonghelinck From Nederlantsche Oorloghen by Pieter Bor nbsp Head of a bronze medal with the effigy and the cuirass of the Grand Alba bearing the Golden Fleece in commemoration of his triumphs in 1571 with the Latin legend FERDIN andus TOLET anus ALBAE DUX BELG PRAEF ectus which means in English Fernando de Toledo Duke of Alba Governor of the Netherlands nbsp Back of the same medal with the Latin inscription DEO et REGI VITAE VSVS which means in English God and King are purposes of life nbsp Fernando Alvarez de Toledo by Willem Key 1568 On December 26 1566 Alba received the Golden Rose the blessed sword and hat granted by Pope Pius V through the papal brief Solent Romani Pontifices in recognition of his singular efforts in favor of Catholicism and for being considered one of his champions 10 From August to October 1566 the Iconoclasm Dutch Beeldenstorm took place in the Netherlands during which Calvinist mobs attacked and destroyed numerous Catholic monasteries and churches ransacking tombs and destroying statues To tackle the civil and religious rebels King Philip II sent Alba to Brussels on 22 August 1567 at the head of a powerful army Upon arrival he replaced Margaret of Parma the sister of the Spanish king as head of the civil jurisdiction He decided that the local nobility was in open rebellion against the king and supported the new Protestant teachings heresy in the Catholic view A few days later on 5 September 1567 Alba established the Council of Troubles popularly known in the Netherlands as the Court of Blood to prosecute those responsible for the riots of 1566 especially those deemed heretics Alba also targeted the local Catholic nobles who favoured dialogue and who opposed outside intervention Two of the three heads of Flemish nobility the Count of Egmont a Catholic General for Philip II who had led the cavalry that defeated the French at the Battle of San Quentin and Philip de Montmorency Count of Horn were arrested and the court sentenced both counts to death The Mayor of Antwerp Anthony van Stralen Lord of Merksem and Jan van Casembroot were other famous victims of the bloody repression along with a large group of other apostates Those condemned were executed on 5 June 1568 in the Town Hall Square in Brussels Alba had little confidence in conventional Flemish justice which he perceived as sympathetic to the defendants and witnessed the executions in person He would later become equally mistrustful of the local helpers of the Council of Troubles as possibly having their own agendas The maintenance of the troops in Flanders entailed substantial economic costs The Duke imposed new taxes on the population and reformed its laws Some cities including Utrecht refused to pay and declared a rebellion which quickly spread throughout the Netherlands William the Silent the prince of Orange enlisted the help of the French Huguenots and started to actively support the rebellion William and the Huguenots took many Dutch cities The Spanish troops advanced under banners with the Latin legend Pro lege rege et grege which in English means For the law the king and the people literally the flock In 1572 the Spanish army carried out the Spanish Fury at Mechelen retaking and sacking the city after the rebel garrison had left From there they retook Zutphen and Naarden The Spanish Siege of Haarlem characterized by brutality and savagery on both sides culminated in the surrender of the city and the execution of all the garrison estimated at 2 000 men The subsequent Siege of Alkmaar was unsuccessful however The first defeat in a full scale engagement for the Spanish troops during the Dutch revolt The prolonged military campaigns and the harsh repression of the rebel citizenry earned the 3rd Duke of Alba the nickname The Iron Duke in the Netherlands 11 12 13 and he became an important element of the anti Spanish Black Legend 14 His reputation was used for propaganda purposes by rebel statesman Philips of Marnix Lord of Saint Aldegonde to further strengthen anti Spanish sentiments in the Netherlands In spite of continuous military action the political situation in the Netherlands had not turned in favour of the Spanish crown After five years of repression more than 5 000 executions 15 and numerous complaints to the Spanish court Philip II decided to change policy and relieve the Duke The monarch sent Luis de Requesens to replace him De Requesens tried to appease the situation by giving concessions to the rebels Alba returned to Spain in 1573 Nevertheless the Duke still had influence in the Royal Council Alba belonged to the conservative Spanish faction called Albistas or imperialists This faction included the Inquisitor General Fernando de Valdes y Salas the House of Pimentel the Duke de Alburquerque and other members of the House of Alvarez de Toledo The Albistas advised the king to take a firm stand in the Netherlands The Albistas hardline position was hotly contested by the liberal Ebolistas or humanists led by Ruy Gomez de Silva prince of Eboli and his secretary Francisco de Eraso After the death of the prince of Eboli in 1573 the royal secretary Antonio Perez went on to lead the liberal faction and began his association with Ana de Mendoza de la Cerda Princess of Eboli Against the Albistas urging King Philip II himself publicly acknowledged that it is not possible to carry Flanders forward by way of war 16 Political concessions by Luis de Requesens failed to end the rebellion in the Netherlands and hostilities soon resumed These failures of the Ebolistas to end the Dutch revolt raised the distrust of the king and Philip II again granted the Duke of Alba an important position in court Portuguese succession 1580 82 Edit After the death of King Sebastian of Portugal who had no heirs in the Battle of Alcacer Quibir in 1578 the crown fell to his great uncle Cardinal Henry I of Portugal 17 The death of the latter without any appointed heirs led to the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 18 One of the claimants to the throne Antonio Prior of Crato a bastard son of Infante Louis Duke of Beja and only grandson through the male line of king Manuel I of Portugal was proclaimed King in June 1580 19 20 Philip II through his mother Isabella of Portugal also a grandson of Manuel I did not recognize Antonio as king of Portugal The king appointed Fernando Duke of Alba as captain general of his army 21 The duke was 73 years old and ill at the time 22 Fernando mustered his forces estimated at 20 000 men 23 in Badajoz and in June 1580 crossed the Spanish Portuguese border and moved to Lisbon In late August he defeated a Portuguese army at the Battle of Alcantara and entered Lisbon This cleared the way for Philip II who became Philip I of Portugal and created a dynastic union spanning all of Iberia under the Spanish crown 24 King Philip II rewarded Fernando with the titles of 1st Viceroy of Portugal and Constable of Portugal on July 18 1580 With these titles Fernando represented the Spanish monarch in Portugal and was second in hierarchy only after the king in Portugal Fernando held both titles until his death in 1582 25 Marriage and children Edit nbsp Fernando Alvarez de Toledo 3rd Duke of Alba by Leone Leoni His first child Fernando de Toledo 1527 1591 was an illegitimate son with a miller s daughter in the town of La Aldehuela 26 27 April 1529 27 the Duke married his cousin Maria Enriquez de Toledo y Guzman died 1583 daughter of Diego Enriquez de Guzman III Count of Alba de Liste with whom he had four children Garcia Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de Guzman 1530 1548 Fadrique Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de Guzman IV Duke of Alba 1537 1585 Diego Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de Guzman 1541 1583 Count of Lerin and Constable of Navarre by his marriage held on 24 March 1565 with Brianda Beaumont 1540 1588 daughter of Luis de Beaumont He was succeeded by Antonio Alvarez de Toledo y Beaumont V Duke of Alba de Tormes 1568 1639 Beatriz Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de Guzman died 1637 married Alvaro Perez Osorio V Marquess of Astorga Later years and death EditAlba died in Lisbon on 11 December 1582 at the age of seventy five he was given the last rites by the famous Luis de Granada His remains were transferred to Alba de Tormes where he was buried in the convent of San Leonardo In 1619 they were transferred to the Convento de San Esteban Salamanca In 1983 a mausoleum was erected over his grave funded by the Provincial Deputation of Salamanca 28 29 Aceh War reference EditIn 1904 there was in the Dutch press and House of Representatives an intensive debate on the conduct of Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van Daalen a Dutch commander who during the then current Aceh War was charged with the killing of numerous civilians including women and children during the conquest of Aceh in northern Sumatra Some of van Daalen s detractors compared his conduct with the atrocities committed by the Duke of Alba still well remembered in Dutch historical memory 30 Ancestry EditGarcia Alvarez de Toledo y Carrillo de ToledoI Duke of AlbaFadrique Alvarez de Toledo y Enriquez de QuinonesII Duke of AlbaMaria Enriquez de Quinones y ToledoGarcia Alvarez de Toledo y ZunigaAlvaro de Zuniga y GuzmanI Duke of PlasenciaIsabel de Zuniga y PimentelLeonor Pimentel y ZunigaFernando Alvarez de Toledo y PimentelIII Duke of AlbaAlonso Pimentel y EnriquezIII Count of BenaventeRodrigo Alonso Pimentel I Duke of BenaventeMaria de Quinones y PortugalBeatriz Pimentel y PachecoJuan Pacheco I Duke of EscalonaMaria Pacheco y Portocarrerosenora de VillacidalerMaria Portocarrero EnriquezNotes Edit Spain and Felipe II 1556 64 De Atienza y Navajas Julio baron de Cobos de Belchite La obra de Julio de Atienza y Navajas baron de Cobos de Belchite y marques del Vado Glorioso en Hidalguia Instituto Salzar y castro Madrid Hidalguia 1993 p 196 ISBN missing Spanish Por romper el estricto protocolo de La Corte Documents about the causes that motivated the prission of D Fadrique son of the duke of Alba and that the same time the duke himself op cit vol VII pp 464 524 y vol VIII pp 483 529 Kamen Henry 2017 Soldado de La Espana Imperial El Duque de Alba Madrid La Esfera de los Libros pp 34 38 ISBN 9788497343664 Letter from the Duque of Alba to Paul IV in the Coleccion de documentos ineditos para la historia de Espana vol II pp 437 446 Setton Kenneth Meyer 1984 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 American Philosophical Society p 656 ISBN 9780871691620 Virreyes de Napoles op cit vol XXIII pp 148 163 Los escritos de Herrera Casado Articulos y comentarios sobre Guadalajara Diciembre 2010 La boda de Felipe II en Guadalajara 1560 Herrera Casado s writings Articles and opinions on Guadalajara December 2010 The wedding of Felipe II in Guadalajara 1560 www herreracasado com Sampedro Escolar Jose Luis La Casa de Alba La Esfera de los Libros S L Madrid 2007 ISBN 978 84 9734 595 8 pp 97 8 Lindsay Carol Ann May 14 2010 One Allied Sailor Lulu com ISBN 9780557417803 via Google Books Schefold Bertram March 31 2016 Great Economic Thinkers from Antiquity to the Historical School Translations from the series Klassiker der Nationalokonomie Routledge ISBN 9781317703723 via Google Books De leerschool tijdschrift voor kweekelingen J van Noorduyn en Zoon May 17 1844 via Google Books Behiels Lieve El duque de Alba en la conciencia colectiva de los flamencos Foro Hispanico Revista Hispanica de los Paises Bajos 3 1992 31 43 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jonathan Israel The Dutch Republic its Rise Greatness and Fall 1477 1806 Oxford Clarendon Press 1995 pp 159 160 Spanish No es posible llevar adelante lo de Flandes por la via de la guerra De Baena Parada Juan Epitome de la vida y hechos de don Sebastian Dezimo Sexto Rey de Portugal 1692 pp 113 120 Marques de Pidal Marques de Miraflores Salva Miguel Coleccion de documentos ineditos para la historia de Espana Academia de la Historia Tomo XL Madrid 1862 p 230 Ferreira Antonio 16 December 1987 Castro UC Biblioteca Geral 1 via Google Books Alden Dauril 1996 The Making of an Enterprise The Society of Jesus in Portugal Its Empire and Beyond 1540 1750 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804722711 via Google Books Disposition of Philip II about giving the duke the control of the army op cit vol XXXII pp 7 9 Ruth MacKay The Baker Who Pretended to Be King of Portugal University of Chicago Press 2012 49 Ruth MacKay The Baker Who Pretended to Be King of Portugal 50 John Huxtable Elliott Espana en Europa Estudios de historia comparada escritos seleccionados Universitat de Valencia 2002 pp 79 80 Belda Plans Juan Grandes personajes el Siglo de Oro espanol Palabra 2013 p 29 Tercio Tercio Archived from the original on September 15 2013 Fernando Alvarez de Toledo Real Academia de la Historia dbe rah es Retrieved 2023 01 10 Notice about the translacion of the body of the Duke of Alba op cit vol XXXV p 361 Rosell Maria del Mar Traslado definitivo de los restos del gran duque de Alba a un mausoleo de Salamanca El Pais Edicion impresa 26 mar 1983 To the move attended the duchess of Alba Cayetana Fitz James Stuart and her second housband Jesus Aguirre y Ortiz de Zarate their sons the duque of Huescar Carlos Fitz James Stuart y Martinez de Irujo y Fernando Cayetano y Eugenia Martinez de Irujo as well as other family members of nobiliary houses the mausolum author the mayor of the Salamanca duchal villages and other guests standt out the bishop of the diocece Mauro Rubio who presided over the solemn religious ceremony H L Zwitzer 1989 DAALEN Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van 1863 1930 Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands in Dutch Retrieved 26 January 2022 Bibliography Edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Alva Fernando Alvarez de Toledo Hobbs Nicolas 2007 Grandes de Espana in Spanish Retrieved 15 October 2008 Instituto de Salazar y Castro Elenco de Grandezas y Titulos Nobiliarios Espanoles in Spanish Periodic publication Falco y Osorio Maria del Rosario Duquesa de Berwick y de Alba Catalogo de las colecciones expuestas en las vitrinas del Palacio de Liria Madrid 1898 Fernandez Alvarez Manuel El duque de hierro Fernando Alvarez de Toledo III de Alba Coleccion Espasa Forum Espasa Calpe Madrid 2007 ISBN 978 84 670 2625 2 Kamen Henry The Duke of Alba New Haven Yale 2004 Kamen Henry El gran duque de Alba Cuarta edicion cartone La Esfera de los Libros Madrid 2004 7 ISBN 978 84 9734 220 9 Maltby William S Alba A Biography of Fernando Alvarez de Toledo Third Duke of Alba 1507 1582 University of California Press 1983 ISBN 0 520 04694 3 Maltby William S El gran duque de Alba Prologo Jacobo Siruela traduccion Eva Rodriguez Halffter Segunda edicion Ediciones Atalanta Vilaur 2007 ISBN 978 84 935313 8 6 Junta de Castilla y Leon Consejeria de Educacion y Cultura Los Alvarez de Toledo Nobleza viva Maria del Pilar Garcia Pinacho Espana 1998 ISBN 84 7846 775 0 Alba General and Servant to the Crown Edited by Maurits Ebben Margriet Lacy Bruijn and Rolof van Hovell tot Westerflier Karwansaray 2013 ISBN 978 94 90258 08 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fernando Alvarez de Toledo 3rd Duke of Alba Government officesPreceded byFerdinando Gonzaga Governor of Milan1555 1556 Succeeded byCristoforo MadruzzoPreceded byBernardino de Mendoza Viceroy of Naples1556 1558 Succeeded byFadrique Alvarez de ToledoPreceded byMargaret of Parma Governor of the Netherlands1567 1573 Succeeded byLuis de Requesens y ZunigaNew title Viceroy of Portugal1580 1582 Succeeded byAlbert of AustriaPreceded byJoao de Braganca Constable of Portugal1581 1582 Succeeded byTeodosio de BragancaSpanish nobilityPreceded byFadrique Alvarez de Toledo Duke of Alba1531 1582 Succeeded byFadrique Alvarez de ToledoPreceded byGarcia Alvarez de Toledo Marquess of Coria1510 1582 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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