Bernardino Fernández de Velasco, 6th Duke of Frías
Bernardino Fernández de Velasco, 6th Duke of Frias, Grandee of Spain,[1] (c. 1610 – 1652), was a Spanish nobleman and diplomat.
Biography
Bernardino Fernández de Velasco was the oldest son of Juan Fernández de Velasco and of María Angela de Aragón y Guzmán. He inherited the title of Constable of Castile and like his father, Bernardino was Governor of the Duchy of Milan between 1647 and 1648. He was also Viceroy of Aragon between 1645 and 1647. King John IV of Portugal was his nephew.
Descendants
In 1629, the Duke married Isabel María de Guzmán, with whom had four children. He married for a second time with María Enríquez Sarmiento de Mendoza, but they had no issue.
By Isabel María de Guzmán:
- Íñigo Melchor de Velasco, 7th Duke of Frías
- Juana de Velasco y Tovar, was married three times, with:
- Enrique Felípez de Guzmán, 1st Marquis of Mayrena, 2nd Duque of Sanlúcar de Barrameda
- Alonso Melchor Téllez-Girón y Pacheco
- Juan Enríquez de Borja, 7th Marquis of Alcañices
- Francisco de Velasco, 5th Marquis of Berlanga
- Andrea de Velasco, was married twice, with:
He got also at least another notorious bastard child, attributed however by some historians to his eldest son Iñigo, but quite probably, because of the time spans, perhaps his male son, namely:
- Francisco Fernández de Velasco y Tovar, marquis of Carvajal, (Madrid, Spain, 1646 - ????, 1716), military Governor of Ceuta and Cádiz, as well as fighting in Portugal and in Flanders, and in 1697 in Catalunya against the French troops commanded by Louis Joseph de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme, (1654 – 11 June 1712), acting later, too, in Barcelona during the War of the Spanish Succession, 1701–1714, against the Catalan groups supporting the Austrian pretender to the vacant Spanish Crown, later Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, (1685–1740).
French Influence in Europe since the Middle Ages, had made a common feature, the privilege of ruling kingdoms as a duty for adult males exclusively, with perhaps some exceptions in some of the medieval Spanish kingdoms in exceptional circumstances, (Aragon till the 13th century, Navarre till the ends of the 16th century and Castile till the middle of the 16th century). In spite of this, after a great deal of bloodshed, Habsburg Charles VI daughter was Maria Theresa (German: Maria Theresia Walburga Amalia Christina, 13 May 1717 – 29 November 1780), the only female sole ruler of the Habsburg dominions and the last of the House of Habsburg. She was the sovereign of Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bohemia, Mantua, Milan, Lodomeria and Galitzia, the Austrian Netherlands, and Parma. By marriage, she was, too, Duchess of Lorraine, Grand Duchess of Tuscany, German Queen and Holy Roman Empress. This power patterns of highly prepared women acceptance as rulers, would be also accepted in Russia after the first third of the 18th-century.
Additional information
Notes
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Sources
- Castro Pereira Mouzinho de Albuquerque e Cunha, Fernando de (1995). Instrumentário Genealógico - Linhagens Milenárias (in Portuguese). pp. 329–30.
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(help) - 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.
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(help) - "Genealogia" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 15 October 2008. [dead link]