Count of Villaverde

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Countship of Villaverde
Coat of arms of the Counts of Villaverde
Creation date15 May 1602
Created byPhilip III
PeeragePeerage of Spain
First holderLope de Guzmán y Portocarrero, 1st Count of Villaverde
Last holderJose Maria Ramirez de Haro y Ulloa, 15th Count of Villaverde
Present holderVacant
Heir presumptiveVictor García García[1]
Former seat(s)Dehesa de Villaverde (Orgáz)

Count of Villaverde de Madrid (Spanish: Conde de Villaverde de Madrid),[2] commonly known as Count of Villaverde is a hereditary title in the Peerage of Spain, granted in 1602 by Philip III to Lope de Guzmán y Portocarrero.[3][4]

On January 10, 1958, it received the current name of "Villaverde County of Madrid", replacing the primitive and original "Villaverde County", being therefore, this new title successor and continuation of the original one.

Counts of Villaverde (1602)[edit]

  • Lope de Guzmán y Portocarrero (d. 1624),[5] I Count of Villaverde[6] and lord of Villaverde.
In 1561 he married Francisca Niño de Guevara, [7] daughter of Rodrigo Niño de Zapata, knight and thirteen of the Order of Santiago, and Teresa de Guzmán , and sister of the first earl of Añover.[8] His son succeeded him:
  • Tello de Guzmán y Guevara, II Count of Villaverde.[9]
He contracted a first marriage with Francisca Portocarrero. No descendants. He remarried Ana María de Zúñiga, daughter of Pedro de Zúñiga, II Marquis of Aguilafuente, and Ana Ana Enríquez de Cabrera.[9] His daughter succeeded him from his second marriage:
  • Magdalena Francisca de Guzmán y Guevara, III Countess of Villaverde.[10]
She first married Diego de Pimentel y Zúñiga (d. 1624), knight of the Order of Alcántara and commander of Mayorga in the order, son of Juan Alonso-Pimentel and Enríquez de Herrera, V Duke of Benavente, etc. and his second wife, Mencía de Zúñiga Mendoza y Requesséns, widow of the III Marquis of los Vélez.[11] He contracted a second marriage with Miguel Gerónimo Pérez de Guzmán, knight of Calatrava, son of Alonso Pérez de Guzmán el Bueno y Zúñiga, VII Duke of Medina de Sidonia, and his wife Ana Magdalena Gómez de Silva y Mendoza.[12] Succeeded him his daughter from the first marriage:
  • Mencía de Guzmán y Pimentel (d. 1668), IV Countess of Villaverde since January 18, 1658.[13]
Married Luis de Guzmán y Ponce de León (1603-1668), son of Rodrigo Ponce de León y Figueroa, III Duke of Arcos.[14] His daughter succeeded him:
  • María de Atocha de Guzmán y Ponce de León (d. October 6, 1687), V Countess of Villaverde.[15]
Being his first wife, she married Gaspar de la Cerda Sandoval y Silva (1653-1697), VIII Count of Galve, XLI Governor and XXXV Viceroy of Mexico.[16] Without offspring, it happened:
  • Bartolomé González de Andía-Irarrázabal y Howard (d. Mantua, October 27, 1734), VI Count of Villaverde,[17] IV Viscount of Santa Clara de Avedillo, IV Marquis of Valparaíso and XII Lord of Higares.[17] He was the son of Sebastián González de Andía-Irarrázabal and Enríquez de Toledo, II Viscount of Santa Clara de Avedillo, 2nd Marquis of Valparaíso and 11th Lord of Higares —son of Francisco de Andía Irarrazábal y Zárate, 1st Marquis of Valparaiso, and Blanca Enríquez Álvarez de Toledo y Guzmán—, and his wife, lady' ' Frances Howard.[17]
No offspring, his nephew succeeded: [18]
  • Juan José de Andía Irarrázabal, VII Count of Villaverde.[19] Happened:
  • Antonio María Pantoja y Bellvís de Moncada (Seville, February 14, 1719-Madrid, February 7, 1778), VIII Count of Villaverde,[20][21] V Marquis of Valencina, VIII Count of Torrejón, Grandee of Spain, [22] XIX Lord of Mocejón and Benacazón and Lieutenant Major of Toledo. He was the son of Félix Francisco Pantoja Portocarrero Carvajal, IV Marquis of Valencina and VII Count of Torrejón, and Josefa María Bellvís de Moncada Exarch Córdoba Torres and Portugal.[23]
He married firstly on June 12, 1741, in Madrid, with María Francisca Abarca de Bolea y Pons de Mendoza (1722-1770), daughter of the IX count of Aranda, and secondly married on December 10, 1770 with María Manuela de Córdoba y Pimentel, VI Marchioness of Fuentes, V Countess of Torralva, V Countess of Talhara, etc.[24] With no surviving offspring, his sister succeeded:
  • María Blasa Pantoja Portocarrero Bellvís y Moncada (Seville, February 6, 1714-Madrid, December 15, 1793), IX Countess of Villaverde, [25] IX Countess of Torrejón, Grandee of Spain, VI Marchioness of Valencina and Lady of Mocejón y Benacazón.[25]
He married on June 13, 1736, in Toledo, with her second cousin, Rodrigo Ant

References[edit]

  1. ^ https://www.newtral.es/titulos-nobiliarios-solicitudes-2022/20220926/
  2. ^ d'), Laure Junot Abrantès (duchesse (1833). Memoirs of the Duchess D'Abrantès: (Madame Junot). H. Colburn and R. Bentley.
  3. ^ Foy, Général de Division Comte Maximilien (2013-02-18). History of the War in the Peninsula, under Napoleon -: to which is prefixed a view of the political and military state of the four belligerent powers. Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78289-003-4.
  4. ^ Real Asociación de Hidalgos de España, Elenco de Grandezas y Títulos Nobiliarios Españoles, Ediciones Hidalguía, Vol. 50 (Madrid, 2018), p. 333
  5. ^ Cuesta Nieto 2015, p. 99.
  6. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, p. 596, n . 345.
  7. ^ Cuesta Nieto 2015, p. 96.
  8. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, p. 596, b. 345.
  9. ^ a b Soler Salcedo 2020, p. 130.
  10. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, pp. 130, 145 and 369.
  11. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, pp. 130 and 145.
  12. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, pp. 130 and 369.
  13. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, pp. 109 and 145.
  14. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, p. 109.
  15. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, pp. 109 and 294.
  16. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, pp. 294.
  17. ^ a b c Soler Salcedo 2020, p. 51.
  18. ^ Cuesta Nieto 2015, p. 98.
  19. ^ Cuesta Nieto 2015, p. 98 and n. 42.
  20. ^ Soler Salcedo 2020, p. 428.
  21. ^ Mayoralgo y Lodo & Gómez de Olea y Bustinza 1998–1999, p. 219.
  22. ^ Mayoralgo y Lodo & Gómez de Olea y Bustinza 1998–1999, pp. 219–220.
  23. ^ Mayoralgo y Lodo & Gómez de Olea y Bustinza 1998–1999, pp. 217.
  24. ^ Mayoralgo y Lodo & Gómez de Olea y Bustinza 1998–1999, p. 221.
  25. ^ a b Mayoralgo y Lodo & Gómez de Olea y Bustinza 1998–1999, p. 223.

Bibliography[edit]