Correia family
The House of Correia (Portuguese: Casa de Correia) is a noble medieval family of Portuguese Christian conquerors of the Reconquista, being among the oldest extant Christian noble families in the world.
The origin of the Correia family is from the village of Salceda de Caselas, district of Tui, Pontevedra, Kingdom of Galicia.
The history of the family is inextricably bound with that of Portugal. Their ancestors arrived in Portugal in the early of 11th century, at service to Henry of Burgundy, Count of Portucale (1066 -1112).
This family line comes from Paio Ramiro, a noble medieval knight and his descendants had led militaries campaigns against the Moors in the Algarve, which culminated in the taking of Silves and was crucial to the final conquest of that region in 1249 during the reign of Sancho II.
The Portuguese surname Correia is of occupational origin. The name is derived from the Portuguese word correia meaning “a leather strap or belt,” (Latin corrigia “fastening,”from corrigere “to straighten or to correct”), applied as a metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller of leather belts and straps. The name is found throughout Portugal and also in the Galicia region of northwest Spain. A notable bearer of the name was António Correia, a Portuguese commander who in 1521 conquered Bahrain, beginning eighty years of Portuguese rule in the Persian Gulf state.
D. Paio Peres Correia, a notable medieval Portuguese Christian is the ancestor of Saint Nuno of Saint Mary (Holy Constable Dom Nuno Álvares Pereira) whose daughter Beatriz Pereira Alvim married D. Afonso the illegitimate son of King João I and of D. Inês Pires Esteves and future Duke of Braganza. This marriage will entail the House of Braganza and become the reigning house of Portugal in 1640 and which will be linked over the centuries until today with the royal houses and Catholic principalities in Europe and Brazil.
This article has not been added to any content categories. Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles. (March 2014) |