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Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba

Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba (1 September 1453 – 2 December 1515) was a Spanish general and statesman who led successful military campaigns during the Conquest of Granada and the Italian Wars. His military victories and widespread popularity earned him the nickname "El Gran Capitán" ("The Great Captain"). He also negotiated the final surrender of Granada and later served as Viceroy of Naples. Fernández de Córdoba was a masterful military strategist and tactician.

El Gran Capitán
Posthumous portrait, 1877
Nickname(s)El Gran Capitán ("The Great Captain")
Born1 September 1453
Montilla, Spain
Died2 December 1515 (aged 62)
Granada, Spain
Allegiance Spain
Years of service1482–1504
RankGeneral
Battles/wars
Other workViceroy of Naples (1504–1507)

He was among the first Europeans to introduce the successful use of firearms on the battlefield and the first to reorganize the infantry to include pikes and firearms in effective defensive and offensive formations. The changes implemented by Fernández de Córdoba were instrumental in making the Spanish army the dominant force in Europe for more than a century and a half. For his extensive political and military success, he was made Duke of Santángelo (1497), Terranova (1502), Andría, Montalto and Sessa (1507).

Early life edit

Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba was born on 1 September 1453 at Montilla in the province of Córdoba. He was the younger son of Pedro Fernández de Córdoba, Count of Aguilar (himself the son of Pedro Fernández de Córdoba, 1390–1424 and of Leonor de Arellano) and of Elvira de Herrera (daughter of Pedro Núñez de Herrera y Guzmán, d. 1430, and of Blanca Enríquez de Mendoza). In 1455 when Gonzalo was two years old, his father died. His older brother, Alonso, inherited all of their father's estates, leaving Gonzalo to seek his own fortune. In 1467 Gonzalo was first attached to the household of Alfonso, Prince of Asturias, the half-brother of King Henry IV of Castile. After Alfonso's death in 1468 Gonzalo devoted himself to Alfonso's sister, Isabella of Castile.[1]

When King Henry IV died in 1474 Isabella proclaimed herself successor queen, disputing the right of Juana la Beltraneja (the king's 13-year-old daughter and her niece) to ascend the throne. During the ensuing civil war between the followers of Isabella and Juana, there was also conflict with Portugal since King Alfonso V of Portugal sided with his niece Juana. Gonzalo fought for Isabella under Alonso de Cárdenas, grand master of the Order of Santiago. In 1479 he fought in the final battle against the Portuguese leading 120 lancers. Cárdenas praised him for his service. When the war ended Isabella and her husband Ferdinand were the rulers of Castile and Aragon.[1][2]

Conquest of Granada edit

 
El Gran Capitán battling the Moors at the Siege of Montefrío by José de Madrazo, 1838

Once the Catholic Monarchs had consolidated their rule, they embarked in 1481 on a ten-year campaign to conquer Granada, the last remaining Muslim stronghold on the Iberian peninsula. Fernández de Córdoba was an active participant in the fighting and distinguished himself as a brave and competent military leader. He gained renown for participation in the sieges of several walled towns including Loja, Tajara, Illora, and Montefrío. At Montefrío he was reported to be the first attacker over the walls. In 1492, Fernández de Córdoba captured the city of Granada, bringing an end to the war. The skills of a military engineer and a guerilla fighter were equally useful. Because of his knowledge of Arabic and his familiarity with Boabdil, Gonzalo was chosen as one of the officers to arrange the surrender.[1][2][3]

For his service he was rewarded with an Order of Santiago, an encomienda, the manor of Órgiva in Granada as well as silk production rights in the region.[citation needed]

Italian campaigns edit

Gonzalo was an important military commander during the Italian Wars, holding command twice and earning the name "The Great Captain".

First Italian War edit

 
Italy in 1494, when Frederick IV of Naples took power as the second inheriting son of Ferdinand I of Naples

The Italian Wars began in 1494 when Charles VIII of France marched into Italy with 25,000 men to make good his claim to the Kingdom of Naples ruled by Ferdinand II, a cousin to Ferdinand of Aragon. The French easily overwhelmed the Neapolitan defenses and on 12 May 1495 Charles had himself crowned Emperor of Naples. The Catholic Monarchs were anxious to reverse French success in Naples and selected Fernández de Córdoba to lead an expeditionary force against Charles. Fernández de Córdoba landed in Naples shortly after Charles' coronation with a force of about 5,000 infantry and 600 light cavalry. Fearful of being trapped in Italy, Charles installed Gilbert de Bourbon as Viceroy of Naples and returned to France with about half of the French forces.[2][4]

Initially, the light infantry and cavalry under Fernández de Córdoba command were no match against the heavily-armed French. A lack of training and poor coordination between Spanish and Italian forces compounded the problem. In their first major engagement on 28 June 1495, Fernández de Córdoba was defeated at the Battle of Seminara against French forces led by Bernard Stewart d'Aubigny.[5][6] After the defeat, Fernández de Córdoba withdrew to implement a rigorous training program and reorganize his army. The Spanish employed effective guerrilla tactics, striking quickly to disrupt French supply lines and avoiding large-scale battles. Gradually Fernández de Córdoba regained a foothold in the country and then assaulted the French-occupied Italian cities. Within a year, Fernández de Córdoba achieved a decisive victory at Atella, capturing the French viceroy and expelling the remaining French forces from Naples. He also recovered the Roman port of Ostia and returned the captured territories to the Italians by 1498.[3]

Military restructuring edit

When Fernández de Córdoba returned to Spain he drew on the lessons from the Italian campaign to restructure the Spanish forces and military strategy. In the open field, the loose formation and short swords of the Spanish infantry were unable to withstand a charge of heavy cavalry and infantry armed with pikes. To overcome this weakness, Fernández de Córdoba introduced a new infantry formation armed with pikes and a heavy, shoulder-fired gun called an arquebus. To increase tactical flexibility he assigned different sections of his forces to specific roles, rather than using them as one general force. These new sections could maneuver more independently and act with greater flexibility.[3]

Second Italian War edit

After Louis XII succeeded Charles as king of France in 1498, he quickly declared his intention to re-invade Italy and once again seize Naples. To buy time, Spain negotiated the Treaty of Granada with France in 1500, agreeing to partition Naples between the two countries. Fernández de Córdoba returned to Italy leading a large force on the pretext of joining with France and Venice to attack the Ottomans in the Ionian Sea. For a time Fernández de Córdoba did fight the Turks, seizing the strongly held island of Cephalonia in December 1500 after a two-month siege.

 
Bronze bust of Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos

Fernández de Córdoba returned to Naples and after Frederick IV abdicated, the French and Spanish fought a guerilla war while negotiating the partition of the kingdom. Spain was outnumbered and besieged in Barletta by the French. Gonzalo refused to be drawn into a full-scale battle until he received sufficient reinforcements.

 
Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba gazes upon d'Armagnac's lifeless body at the Battle of Cerignola, by Casado del Alisal, 1866

When his army was adequately reinforced, Fernández de Córdoba engaged the French on 28 April 1503 at the Battle of Cerignola where 6,000 Spanish troops faced a French army of 10,000. Gonzalo formed his infantry into units called coronelías with pikemen tightly packed in the center and arquebusiers and swordsmen on the flanks. The French unsuccessfully attacked the front and were assailed by gunfire coming from the flanks. The French commander, the Louis d'Armagnac, Duke of Nemours, was killed early in the battle. After withstanding two French charges, Fernández de Córdoba, El Gran Capitán, went on the offensive and drove the French off the field. This was the first time in history that a battle had been won largely through the strength of firearms.

Fernández de Córdoba occupied the city of Naples and pushed the French forces back across the Garigliano River. Separated by the river, a stalemate ensued with neither side able to make progress. But Fernández de Córdoba strung together a pontoon bridge and stole across the river on the night of December 29, 1503. The French, commanded by Ludovico II of Saluzzo, had assumed the rain-swollen river was impassable and were taken by complete surprise. Fernández de Córdoba and his army decisively defeated the French with their formations of pikes and arquebuses. Fernández de Córdoba continued to pursue the French and captured the Italian city of Gaeta in January 1504. Unable to mount a defense after these losses, the French were allowed to evacuate Italy by sea and forced to sign the Treaty of Blois in 1505, relinquishing their hold on Naples.[3]

Viceroy of Naples edit

 
Statue of Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba in Madrid (Manuel Oms, 1883)

When the French were driven out of Naples, Fernández de Córdoba was made Duke of Terranova and appointed Viceroy of Naples in 1504. Later that same year Queen Isabel I of Castile died, depriving him of his most ardent supporter. Isabel's death also effectively pushed her husband, Ferdinand II of Aragon, out of power temporarily in Castile and forced him to defend his interests in Aragon. Naples was an Aragonese kingdom but Gonzalo was a Castilian and widely popular. As a result, Ferdinand suspected his loyalty and also felt that Gonzalo spent too freely from the treasury. In 1507 Ferdinand traveled to Naples, removed him from office and ordered him to return to Spain with a promise that he would be installed as master of the Order of Santiago, a powerful and prestigious position.[1][7]

Although Fernández de Córdoba was awarded the additional title, Duke of Sessa, he never received the promised appointment to lead the Santiago military order. Ferdinand continued to praise him but gave him nothing else to do; he eventually retired to one of his country estates. Fernández de Córdoba died of malaria on 2 December 1515 at his villa near Granada at age 62.[1]

Marriage and family edit

Fernández de Córdoba first married in 1474 to his cousin María de Sotomayor; about a year later she died giving birth to a stillborn son. On 14 February 1489 he married María Manrique de Lara y Figueroa (also known as María Manrique de Lara y Espinosa, d. 1527) from a powerful and wealthy noble family. His only surviving daughter, Elvira Fernández de Córdoba y Manrique, would inherit all his titles upon his death in 1515.[1]

Legacy edit

 
Coat of arms on the wall of the monastery church of San Jerónimo in Granada.

The "Gran Capitán" was a pioneer of modern warfare. He revolutionized 16th-century military strategy by integrating firearms into the Spanish infantry and directed the first battle in history won by gunpowder small arms (in this case, arquebuses), the Battle of Cerignola of 1503. He helped found the first modern standing army (the nearly invincible Spanish infantry which dominated European battlefields for most of the 16th and 17th centuries), and he pioneered combined arms warfare by combining the use of infantry, cavalry and artillery with naval support.

He left no sons, and was succeeded in his dukedoms by daughter Elvira Fernández de Córdoba y Manrique. His burial place in the Monastery of San Jerónimo in Granada, was built in Renaissance style. His remains were transferred there in 1552, together with some 700 war trophies (captured banners). His daughter, Elvira, and his wife, Maria, are also buried there, along with a number of other family members. Elvira died in 1524, and Maria died in 1527.

The tomb was desecrated by Napoleonic troops under the command of the Corsican General Sebastiani during the Peninsular War, in 1810/11. The remains of Fernández de Córdoba were illegally exhumed and mutilated, and the 700 banners were burned. Stone from the tower was used to build the Puente Verde bridge over the Genil. The monastery was fully restored at the end of the 19th century.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Purcell 1962
  2. ^ a b c Tucker 2015
  3. ^ a b c d Encyclopedia of World Biography 2000
  4. ^ Rubin 1991
  5. ^ Tucker 2015, p. 171.
  6. ^ Mallett & Shaw 2012, p. 32.
  7. ^ Lynch 1981

References edit

  • Downey, Kirstin (2014). Isabella : the warrior queen. New York: Nan A. Talese/Doubleday. ISBN 978-0385534116.
  • Gerli, E. Michael (2003). "Fernández de Córdoba, Gonzalo". Medieval Iberia: An Encyclopedia. Routledge.
  • Lynch, John (1981). Spain Under the Hapsburgs, Volume One (2nd ed.). New York University Press.
  • Mallett, Michael; Shaw, Christine (2012). The Italian Wars, 1494–1559. Pearson Education Limited.
  • Purcell, Mary (1962). The Great Captain: Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
  • Rubin, Nancy (1991). Isabella of Castile: The First Renaissance Queen. St. Martin's Press.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2015). "Córdoba, Gonzalo Fernández, Conde de (1453–1515)". 500 Great Military Leaders. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. pp. 170–172.
  • "Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba". Encyclopedia of World Biography. Gale. 2000.
  • Prescott, William, and Albert D. McJoynt. The Art of War in Spain. London: Greenhill Books, 1995.
  • Hannay, David McDowall (1911). "Córdoba, Gonzalo Fernandez de" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 139–140.

Spanish

  • Rafael Arce Jiménez y Lourdes Belmonte Sánchez: El Gran Capitán: repertorio bibliográfico, Biblioteca Manuel Ruiz Luque, 2000, ISBN 848961945X
  • José Enrique Ruiz-Domènec: El Gran Capitán. Retrato de una época, 2002, ISBN 8483074605
  • Duro, Cesáreo Fernández. Armada Española, desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y Aragón. Madrid: Museo Naval, 1972
  • Martín Gómez, Antonio L. El Gran Capitán: Las Campañas del Duque de Terranova y Santángelo. Madrid, Spain: Almena, 2000.
  • Ruiz Domènec, José Enrique. El Gran Capitán, Retrato de una época. Madrid, Spain: Ediciones Peninsula, 2002.
Spanish nobility
New title
New creation by
Isabella I and Ferdinand V
Duke of Santángelo
10 March 1497 – 2 December 1515
Succeeded byas duchess
Duke of Terranova
1502 – 2 December 1515
New title
New creation by
Ferdinand II of Aragon
Duke of Andría
1507 – 2 December 1515
Duke of Montalto
1507 – 2 December 1515
Duke of Sessa
1507 – 2 December 1515

gonzalo, fernández, córdoba, other, uses, disambiguation, september, 1453, december, 1515, spanish, general, statesman, successful, military, campaigns, during, conquest, granada, italian, wars, military, victories, widespread, popularity, earned, nickname, gr. For other uses see Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba disambiguation Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba 1 September 1453 2 December 1515 was a Spanish general and statesman who led successful military campaigns during the Conquest of Granada and the Italian Wars His military victories and widespread popularity earned him the nickname El Gran Capitan The Great Captain He also negotiated the final surrender of Granada and later served as Viceroy of Naples Fernandez de Cordoba was a masterful military strategist and tactician El Gran CapitanPosthumous portrait 1877Nickname s El Gran Capitan The Great Captain Born1 September 1453Montilla SpainDied2 December 1515 aged 62 Granada SpainAllegianceSpainYears of service1482 1504RankGeneralBattles warsWar of the Castilian Succession Granada War 1st Italian War Seminara 1495 Atella 1496 Ostia 1497 3rd Turkish Venetian War Kefalonia 1500 2nd Italian War Ruvo 1503 Cerignola 1503 Garigliano 1503 Other workViceroy of Naples 1504 1507 He was among the first Europeans to introduce the successful use of firearms on the battlefield and the first to reorganize the infantry to include pikes and firearms in effective defensive and offensive formations The changes implemented by Fernandez de Cordoba were instrumental in making the Spanish army the dominant force in Europe for more than a century and a half For his extensive political and military success he was made Duke of Santangelo 1497 Terranova 1502 Andria Montalto and Sessa 1507 Contents 1 Early life 2 Conquest of Granada 3 Italian campaigns 3 1 First Italian War 3 2 Military restructuring 3 3 Second Italian War 4 Viceroy of Naples 5 Marriage and family 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesEarly life editGonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba was born on 1 September 1453 at Montilla in the province of Cordoba He was the younger son of Pedro Fernandez de Cordoba Count of Aguilar himself the son of Pedro Fernandez de Cordoba 1390 1424 and of Leonor de Arellano and of Elvira de Herrera daughter of Pedro Nunez de Herrera y Guzman d 1430 and of Blanca Enriquez de Mendoza In 1455 when Gonzalo was two years old his father died His older brother Alonso inherited all of their father s estates leaving Gonzalo to seek his own fortune In 1467 Gonzalo was first attached to the household of Alfonso Prince of Asturias the half brother of King Henry IV of Castile After Alfonso s death in 1468 Gonzalo devoted himself to Alfonso s sister Isabella of Castile 1 When King Henry IV died in 1474 Isabella proclaimed herself successor queen disputing the right of Juana la Beltraneja the king s 13 year old daughter and her niece to ascend the throne During the ensuing civil war between the followers of Isabella and Juana there was also conflict with Portugal since King Alfonso V of Portugal sided with his niece Juana Gonzalo fought for Isabella under Alonso de Cardenas grand master of the Order of Santiago In 1479 he fought in the final battle against the Portuguese leading 120 lancers Cardenas praised him for his service When the war ended Isabella and her husband Ferdinand were the rulers of Castile and Aragon 1 2 Conquest of Granada edit nbsp El Gran Capitan battling the Moors at the Siege of Montefrio by Jose de Madrazo 1838Once the Catholic Monarchs had consolidated their rule they embarked in 1481 on a ten year campaign to conquer Granada the last remaining Muslim stronghold on the Iberian peninsula Fernandez de Cordoba was an active participant in the fighting and distinguished himself as a brave and competent military leader He gained renown for participation in the sieges of several walled towns including Loja Tajara Illora and Montefrio At Montefrio he was reported to be the first attacker over the walls In 1492 Fernandez de Cordoba captured the city of Granada bringing an end to the war The skills of a military engineer and a guerilla fighter were equally useful Because of his knowledge of Arabic and his familiarity with Boabdil Gonzalo was chosen as one of the officers to arrange the surrender 1 2 3 For his service he was rewarded with an Order of Santiago an encomienda the manor of orgiva in Granada as well as silk production rights in the region citation needed Italian campaigns editGonzalo was an important military commander during the Italian Wars holding command twice and earning the name The Great Captain First Italian War edit nbsp Italy in 1494 when Frederick IV of Naples took power as the second inheriting son of Ferdinand I of NaplesThe Italian Wars began in 1494 when Charles VIII of France marched into Italy with 25 000 men to make good his claim to the Kingdom of Naples ruled by Ferdinand II a cousin to Ferdinand of Aragon The French easily overwhelmed the Neapolitan defenses and on 12 May 1495 Charles had himself crowned Emperor of Naples The Catholic Monarchs were anxious to reverse French success in Naples and selected Fernandez de Cordoba to lead an expeditionary force against Charles Fernandez de Cordoba landed in Naples shortly after Charles coronation with a force of about 5 000 infantry and 600 light cavalry Fearful of being trapped in Italy Charles installed Gilbert de Bourbon as Viceroy of Naples and returned to France with about half of the French forces 2 4 Initially the light infantry and cavalry under Fernandez de Cordoba command were no match against the heavily armed French A lack of training and poor coordination between Spanish and Italian forces compounded the problem In their first major engagement on 28 June 1495 Fernandez de Cordoba was defeated at the Battle of Seminara against French forces led by Bernard Stewart d Aubigny 5 6 After the defeat Fernandez de Cordoba withdrew to implement a rigorous training program and reorganize his army The Spanish employed effective guerrilla tactics striking quickly to disrupt French supply lines and avoiding large scale battles Gradually Fernandez de Cordoba regained a foothold in the country and then assaulted the French occupied Italian cities Within a year Fernandez de Cordoba achieved a decisive victory at Atella capturing the French viceroy and expelling the remaining French forces from Naples He also recovered the Roman port of Ostia and returned the captured territories to the Italians by 1498 3 Military restructuring edit When Fernandez de Cordoba returned to Spain he drew on the lessons from the Italian campaign to restructure the Spanish forces and military strategy In the open field the loose formation and short swords of the Spanish infantry were unable to withstand a charge of heavy cavalry and infantry armed with pikes To overcome this weakness Fernandez de Cordoba introduced a new infantry formation armed with pikes and a heavy shoulder fired gun called an arquebus To increase tactical flexibility he assigned different sections of his forces to specific roles rather than using them as one general force These new sections could maneuver more independently and act with greater flexibility 3 Second Italian War edit After Louis XII succeeded Charles as king of France in 1498 he quickly declared his intention to re invade Italy and once again seize Naples To buy time Spain negotiated the Treaty of Granada with France in 1500 agreeing to partition Naples between the two countries Fernandez de Cordoba returned to Italy leading a large force on the pretext of joining with France and Venice to attack the Ottomans in the Ionian Sea For a time Fernandez de Cordoba did fight the Turks seizing the strongly held island of Cephalonia in December 1500 after a two month siege nbsp Bronze bust of Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba Alcazar de los Reyes CristianosFernandez de Cordoba returned to Naples and after Frederick IV abdicated the French and Spanish fought a guerilla war while negotiating the partition of the kingdom Spain was outnumbered and besieged in Barletta by the French Gonzalo refused to be drawn into a full scale battle until he received sufficient reinforcements nbsp Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba gazes upon d Armagnac s lifeless body at the Battle of Cerignola by Casado del Alisal 1866When his army was adequately reinforced Fernandez de Cordoba engaged the French on 28 April 1503 at the Battle of Cerignola where 6 000 Spanish troops faced a French army of 10 000 Gonzalo formed his infantry into units called coronelias with pikemen tightly packed in the center and arquebusiers and swordsmen on the flanks The French unsuccessfully attacked the front and were assailed by gunfire coming from the flanks The French commander the Louis d Armagnac Duke of Nemours was killed early in the battle After withstanding two French charges Fernandez de Cordoba El Gran Capitan went on the offensive and drove the French off the field This was the first time in history that a battle had been won largely through the strength of firearms Fernandez de Cordoba occupied the city of Naples and pushed the French forces back across the Garigliano River Separated by the river a stalemate ensued with neither side able to make progress But Fernandez de Cordoba strung together a pontoon bridge and stole across the river on the night of December 29 1503 The French commanded by Ludovico II of Saluzzo had assumed the rain swollen river was impassable and were taken by complete surprise Fernandez de Cordoba and his army decisively defeated the French with their formations of pikes and arquebuses Fernandez de Cordoba continued to pursue the French and captured the Italian city of Gaeta in January 1504 Unable to mount a defense after these losses the French were allowed to evacuate Italy by sea and forced to sign the Treaty of Blois in 1505 relinquishing their hold on Naples 3 Viceroy of Naples edit nbsp Statue of Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba in Madrid Manuel Oms 1883 When the French were driven out of Naples Fernandez de Cordoba was made Duke of Terranova and appointed Viceroy of Naples in 1504 Later that same year Queen Isabel I of Castile died depriving him of his most ardent supporter Isabel s death also effectively pushed her husband Ferdinand II of Aragon out of power temporarily in Castile and forced him to defend his interests in Aragon Naples was an Aragonese kingdom but Gonzalo was a Castilian and widely popular As a result Ferdinand suspected his loyalty and also felt that Gonzalo spent too freely from the treasury In 1507 Ferdinand traveled to Naples removed him from office and ordered him to return to Spain with a promise that he would be installed as master of the Order of Santiago a powerful and prestigious position 1 7 Although Fernandez de Cordoba was awarded the additional title Duke of Sessa he never received the promised appointment to lead the Santiago military order Ferdinand continued to praise him but gave him nothing else to do he eventually retired to one of his country estates Fernandez de Cordoba died of malaria on 2 December 1515 at his villa near Granada at age 62 1 Marriage and family editFernandez de Cordoba first married in 1474 to his cousin Maria de Sotomayor about a year later she died giving birth to a stillborn son On 14 February 1489 he married Maria Manrique de Lara y Figueroa also known as Maria Manrique de Lara y Espinosa d 1527 from a powerful and wealthy noble family His only surviving daughter Elvira Fernandez de Cordoba y Manrique would inherit all his titles upon his death in 1515 1 Legacy edit nbsp Coat of arms on the wall of the monastery church of San Jeronimo in Granada The Gran Capitan was a pioneer of modern warfare He revolutionized 16th century military strategy by integrating firearms into the Spanish infantry and directed the first battle in history won by gunpowder small arms in this case arquebuses the Battle of Cerignola of 1503 He helped found the first modern standing army the nearly invincible Spanish infantry which dominated European battlefields for most of the 16th and 17th centuries and he pioneered combined arms warfare by combining the use of infantry cavalry and artillery with naval support He left no sons and was succeeded in his dukedoms by daughter Elvira Fernandez de Cordoba y Manrique His burial place in the Monastery of San Jeronimo in Granada was built in Renaissance style His remains were transferred there in 1552 together with some 700 war trophies captured banners His daughter Elvira and his wife Maria are also buried there along with a number of other family members Elvira died in 1524 and Maria died in 1527 The tomb was desecrated by Napoleonic troops under the command of the Corsican General Sebastiani during the Peninsular War in 1810 11 The remains of Fernandez de Cordoba were illegally exhumed and mutilated and the 700 banners were burned Stone from the tower was used to build the Puente Verde bridge over the Genil The monastery was fully restored at the end of the 19th century See also editTercioNotes edit a b c d e f Purcell 1962 a b c Tucker 2015 a b c d Encyclopedia of World Biography 2000 Rubin 1991 Tucker 2015 p 171 Mallett amp Shaw 2012 p 32 Lynch 1981References editDowney Kirstin 2014 Isabella the warrior queen New York Nan A Talese Doubleday ISBN 978 0385534116 Gerli E Michael 2003 Fernandez de Cordoba Gonzalo Medieval Iberia An Encyclopedia Routledge Lynch John 1981 Spain Under the Hapsburgs Volume One 2nd ed New York University Press Mallett Michael Shaw Christine 2012 The Italian Wars 1494 1559 Pearson Education Limited Purcell Mary 1962 The Great Captain Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba Garden City NY Doubleday Rubin Nancy 1991 Isabella of Castile The First Renaissance Queen St Martin s Press Tucker Spencer C 2015 Cordoba Gonzalo Fernandez Conde de 1453 1515 500 Great Military Leaders Vol 1 ABC CLIO pp 170 172 Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba Encyclopedia of World Biography Gale 2000 Prescott William and Albert D McJoynt The Art of War in Spain London Greenhill Books 1995 Hannay David McDowall 1911 Cordoba Gonzalo Fernandez de In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 139 140 Spanish Rafael Arce Jimenez y Lourdes Belmonte Sanchez El Gran Capitan repertorio bibliografico Biblioteca Manuel Ruiz Luque 2000 ISBN 848961945X Jose Enrique Ruiz Domenec El Gran Capitan Retrato de una epoca 2002 ISBN 8483074605 Duro Cesareo Fernandez Armada Espanola desde la union de los reinos de Castilla y Aragon Madrid Museo Naval 1972 Martin Gomez Antonio L El Gran Capitan Las Campanas del Duque de Terranova y Santangelo Madrid Spain Almena 2000 Ruiz Domenec Jose Enrique El Gran Capitan Retrato de una epoca Madrid Spain Ediciones Peninsula 2002 Spanish nobilityNew titleNew creation byIsabella I and Ferdinand V Duke of Santangelo10 March 1497 2 December 1515 Succeeded byElvira Fernandez de Cordobay Manriqueas duchessDuke of Terranova1502 2 December 1515New titleNew creation byFerdinand II of Aragon Duke of Andria1507 2 December 1515Duke of Montalto1507 2 December 1515Duke of Sessa1507 2 December 1515 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba amp oldid 1189501853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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