Diego Fernández (count Of Saldaña)
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Diego Fernández (count Of Saldaña)
Diego Fernández may refer to: *Diego Fernández of Oviedo (fl. 1020–c. 1046), Count of Asturias and father of Jimena Díaz, the wife of Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, el Cid *Diego Fernández de Ovando, Spanish military and nobleman, knight of the Order of Alcántara in 1338 * Diego Fernández de la Cueva, 1st Viscount of Huelma (died 1473), Spanish nobleman *Diego Fernández de Córdoba y Arellano, 1st Marquis of Comares (1463–1518), Governor of Oran and Mazalquivir and Viceroy of Navarre, * Diego Fernández de Palencia (c. 1520–c. 1581), Spanish adventurer and historian * Diego Fernández de Proaño, Spanish explorer and conquistador *Diego Fernández de Cáceres y Ovando (died 1487), Spanish military and nobleman * Diego Fernández de Córdoba, 1st Marquess of Guadalcázar (1578–1630), Viceroy of Mexico, 1612–1621, and Viceroy of Peru, 1622–1629 *Diego Fernández de Medrano y Zenizeros Diego Fernández de Medrano Zenizeros (in full, Spanish language, Spanish: ''Don Diego ...
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Diego Fernández Of Oviedo
Diego Fernández (''floruit, fl.'' 1020 – 1046), also known as Diego Fernández de Oviedo, was a member of one of the most noble lineages of the Kingdom of León as the son of Fernando Flaínez and Elvira Peláez, daughter of count Pelayo Rodríguez (count), Pelayo Rodríguez. He was the second cousin of King Ferdinand I of León, Ferdinand I since both shared the same great-grandfather, Count Fernando Bermúdez de Cea. Distinguished with the title of Count at an early age, Diego was the father of Jimena Díaz, wife of El Cid, Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar ''El Cid''. Marriages and issue Count Diego first married Elvira Ovéquiz, daughter of Count Oveco Sánchez and Countess Elo, who gave him two daughters: * Onneca ''Mayor'' Díaz the wife of Gundemaro Iohannes (Ibáñez) * Aurovita Díaz, married to Munio Godestéiz,most probably the Muño Gustioz mentioned in the ''Cantar de Mio Cid'' who would have been the brother-in-law of Jimena Díaz who fought along with ''El Cid'' and ...
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Diego Fernández De Ovando
''Fray'' Diego Fernández de Ovando was a Spanish military and nobleman. Life Diego Fernández de Ovando was a son of Fernando Fernández de Ovando, second son, and wife Francisca de Ulloa, and paternal grandson of Fernando Fernández de Ovando, 1st Count of Torrelaguna and 1st Count of Uceda, and wife Ora Blázquez Trillo, Lady of Talamanca. He was a Professed Knight of the Habit of Alcántara, Commander of Lares at the time of Master Master, master's or masters may refer to: Ranks or titles In education: *Master (college), head of a college *Master's degree, a postgraduate or sometimes undergraduate degree in the specified discipline *Schoolmaster or master, presiding office ... Don Nuno Chamiço elected in 1338. He had a natural son, Fernando Alfón de Ovando. Sources *Cunha, Fernando de Castro Pereira Mouzinho de Albuquerque e (1906-1998), ''Instrumentário Genealógico - Linhagens Milenárias''. MCMXCV, p. 401 {{DEFAULTSORT:Fernandez De Ovando, Diego Spanish un ...
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Diego Fernández De La Cueva, 1st Viscount Of Huelma
Diego Fernández de la Cueva, 1st Viscount of Huelma (died 26 November 1473) was a Spanish nobleman. Biography Diego Fernández de la Cueva was born in Úbeda, Andalusia, Crown of Castille. He was a merchant and banker of King Henry IV of Castile, who granted him the title of 1st Viscount of Huelma. He was related to or perhaps a descendant of Juan Sánchez de la Cueva, a nobleman from Úbeda, ''Regedor'' or ''Veinte y Quatro'' (''24'') of Úbeda in 1367, who rose pennant for the usurper Henry, Count of Trastamara, bribed by his generous promises. He was also a relative and a contemporary of another Diego de la Cueva, ''Alcalde'' of Caltinovo, married to María Cortés, whose daughter María Cortés married Rodrigo or Ruy Fernández de Monroy, paternal grandparents of Hernán Cortés. He married Maior Alfonso de Mercado from Úbeda and had three sons, including : *Beltrán de la Cueva (c. 1435-1492), close confidant of Enrique IV, first Duke of Alburquerque, first Count of Hue ...
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Diego Fernández De Córdoba Y Arellano, 1st Marquis Of Comares
Diego Fernández de Córdoba y Arellano, 1st Marquis of Comares, (1463 – Oran, now in Algeria, 1518), invested 1st Marquis of Comares in 1512, was Governor of Oran and Mazalquivir, 1509–1512 and 1516–1518, and first Viceroy of Navarre, 1512–1515. He was the son of Martín Fernández de Córdoba y de Sotomayor, born circa 1420, 4th Sieur of Chillon, province of Ciudad Real, 10th Sieur of Espejo, Córdoba, Espejo, 5th Sieur of Lucena, Córdoba, Lucena and Leonor de Arellano y Fernandez de Cordoba, (1446–1531). His maternal uncle was the famous army commander Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, (1453–1515). He married, circa 1480, Juana Pacheco y Portocarrero, a daughter of Juan Pacheco 1st Duke of Escalona (1419–1474), a notorious political troublemaker and his first wife, Lady Maria Portocarrero y Enriquez-Mendoza, (circa 1430 - 1470), 6th Lady of Moguer from a powerful shipowners family. In 1482 he played an important role in the conquest of the fortress of Alhama de ...
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Diego Fernández De Palencia
Diego Fernández de Palencia (), called El Palentino, was a Spanish adventurer and historian of the 16th century. Born at Palencia, he was educated for the church, but about 1545 he embarked for Peru, where he served in the royal army under Alonzo de Alvarado. Andres Hurtado de Mendoza, marquess of Cañete, who became viceroy of Peru in 1555, bestowed on Fernandez the office of chronicler of Peru; and in this capacity he wrote a narrative of the insurrection of Francisco Hernandez Giron, of the rebellion of Gonzalo Pizarro, and of the administration of Pedro de la Gasca. The whole work, under the title ''Primera y segunda parte de la Historia del Piru'', was published at Seville in 1571 and was dedicated to King Philip II. It is written in a clear and intelligible style, and with more art than is usual in the compositions of the time. It gives copious details, and, as he had access to the correspondence and official documents of the Spanish leaders, it is, although necessarily ...
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Diego Fernández De Proaño
Diego Fernández de Proaño was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who served with Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán in the exploration of New Galicia New Galicia or West Galicia ( or ''Galicja Zachodnia''; or ''Westgalizien'') was an administrative region of the Habsburg monarchy, constituted from the territory annexed in the course of the Third Partition of Poland in 1795. The Austrian .... He was named Justice Major of the city of San Miguel de Culiacán by Guzmán and was later accused of abusing his power to enslave hundreds of local indigenous inhabitants in direct violation of orders from the newly established province's governor. He was the son of Juan de Proaño and of Ana de Cervantes. References *Carl Laurence Duaine, With All Arms A Study of a Kindred Group *Manuel Orozco y Berra, Historia de la Dominacion Española en México {{DEFAULTSORT:Fernandez de Proano, Diego Spanish conquistadors Colonial Mexico 16th-century Spanish explorers ...
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Diego Fernández De Cáceres Y Ovando
Diego Fernández de Cáceres y Ovando (– Monleón, aft. February 2, 1487) was a Spanish military and nobleman. Life Diego Fernández de Cáceres y Ovando was a son of Fernán Blázquez de Cáceres y Mogollón, who granted a will at Cáceres in 1443, and wife Leonor Alfón de Ovando, daughter of Fernando Alfón de Ovando and wife Teresa Alfón (seventh grandparents in male line of the conqueror of the castle of Brindis, Italian city and sea port in the Adriatic, formerly called ''Brundisium'' and currently Brindisi, Francisco José de Ovando, 1st Marquis of Brindisi, and his brother Alonso Pablo de Ovando y Solís Rol de La Cerda, 2nd Marqués de Brindis), and paternal grandson of Fernán Blázquez de Cáceres and wife Juana González. He was the 1st Lord of the Manor House del Alcázar Viejo, which place was granted ''de jure'' by Henry IV of Castile by Royal Cedule of July 16, 1473, ''famous Captain'' of the aforementioned King and of the Catholic Monarchs since 1475, '' ...
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Diego Fernández De Córdoba, 1st Marquess Of Guadalcázar
Diego Fernández de Córdoba y López de las Roelas, 1st Marquess of Guadalcázar (9 February 1578 – 6 October 1630), was Viceroy of Mexico from October 18, 1612, to March 14, 1621, and Viceroy of Peru from July 25, 1622, to January 14, 1629. Early life He was born in Seville. In 1598, aged 20, he was in Central Europe as an ambassador with a mandate to travel and bring back to Spain the 13- to 14-year-old orphaned bride Margaret of Austria (daughter of Archduke Charles II of Austria and Maria Anna of Bavaria), the first, and only wife of king Philip III of Spain, being awarded the title of Marquess of Guadalcázar, in 1609. Viceroy of New Spain Fernández de Córdoba was named viceroy of New Spain by King Philip III of Spain, for whom he had served as lord of the bedchamber. Early in his mandate in New Spain, he sent Captain Diego Martínez de Hurdaide to suppress an uprising of the Tehuecos, an ethnic subgroup of the Cahuitas of Sinaloa. Martínez de Hurdáiz was s ...
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Diego Fernández De Medrano Y Zenizeros
Diego Fernández de Medrano Zenizeros (in full, Spanish language, Spanish: ''Don Diego Fernández de Medrano Zenizeros, señor de la Villa de Sojuela, del Solar y Divisa de Valdeosera, de la Torre y de la Casa de la Vega en Rioja, etc.'') was a 17th-century Spanish Clergy, cleric, Spanish nobility, nobleman, and author, recognized for his Politics, political treatise, panegyric writings and his service to the Hispanic Monarchy (political entity), Spanish Crown. A presbyter and lord of multiple noble estates—including the ''divisa'' and solar de Valdeosera and town of Sojuela, de la Torre and House of Lasso de la Vega, House de La Vega in La Rioja, and the Palace of Entrena—he held a prominent place within the religious, and intellectual landscape of his time. He served as a chaplain for both Luis Méndez de Haro, Luis Méndez de Haro, 2nd Duke of Olivares, and Pedro Coloma, Secretary of State for the Spanish Crown. He served two terms as the Chief Magistrate and Mayor of Valdeo ...
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Diego Fernández (harpsichord Maker)
Diego Fernández (1703–1775) was as an Andalucian musical instrument maker at the Spanish court in Madrid. He is known to have supplied harpsichords to Domenico Scarlatti and several of his pupils at court. He built instruments in the Iberian style, somewhat resembling Italian instruments, typically involving Pythagorean string scales and 2×8 foot choirs, but with construction elements more reminiscent of northern building styles, including heavier casing. He is, however, known to have supplied the famous castrato singer Farinelli with a four choir, five register, double manual harpsichord, operated using pedals and made at the behest of Queen Maria Barbara. Koster J., Towards an optimal instrument: Domenico Scarlatti and the new wave of Iberian harpsichord making, Early Music (2007) 35 (4): 575-604. doi: 10.1093/em/cam092 See also *List of historical harpsichord makers This page presents a graphical timelines, listing historical makers of the harpsichord and related instrum ...
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Diego Fernández De Cevallos
Diego Fernández de Cevallos Ramos (; born 16 March 1941) is a Mexican lawyer and politician affiliated with the conservative National Action Party (PAN). He was a presidential candidate in the 1994 election and President of the Mexican Senate. Life and career Fernández de Cevallos was born in Mexico City, the son of José Fernández de Cevallos Martínez and Beatriz Ramos Íñigo. He received a bachelor's degree in law from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and took several courses in economics at the Ibero-American University, where he also worked as a professor of criminal and commercial law. He joined the conservative National Action Party (PAN) in 1959 and led its parliamentary group in the Chamber of Deputies (during the 55th legislature) and in the Senate (2003–06). In 1994 he ran for president representing his party and lost against the PRI candidate, Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León. Outside politics, Fernández de Cevallos runs an influential ...
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Diego Fernández (director)
Diego Fernández may refer to: *Diego Fernández of Oviedo (fl. 1020–c. 1046), Count of Asturias and father of Jimena Díaz, the wife of Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, el Cid *Diego Fernández de Ovando, Spanish military and nobleman, knight of the Order of Alcántara in 1338 *Diego Fernández de la Cueva, 1st Viscount of Huelma (died 1473), Spanish nobleman *Diego Fernández de Córdoba y Arellano, 1st Marquis of Comares (1463–1518), Governor of Oran and Mazalquivir and Viceroy of Navarre, *Diego Fernández de Palencia (c. 1520–c. 1581), Spanish adventurer and historian *Diego Fernández de Proaño, Spanish explorer and conquistador *Diego Fernández de Cáceres y Ovando (died 1487), Spanish military and nobleman *Diego Fernández de Córdoba, 1st Marquess of Guadalcázar (1578–1630), Viceroy of Mexico, 1612–1621, and Viceroy of Peru, 1622–1629 *Diego Fernández de Medrano y Zenizeros (fl. C.17th), Spanish cleric, nobleman, and author *Diego Fernández (harpsichord maker) (1703 ...
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