Beltrán de la Cueva, 1st Duke of Alburquerque

Beltrán de la Cueva
Duke of Alburquerque
Bornc.1443
Úbeda, Andalusia, Crown of Castille, Iberian Peninsula
DiedNovember 1, 1492(1492-11-01) (aged 48–49)
Cuéllar, Spain

Beltrán de la Cueva y Alfonso de Mercado, 1st Duke of Alburquerque (c. 1443 – 1 November[1] 1492) was a Spanish nobleman who is said to have fathered Joanna, the daughter of Henry IV of Castile's[2] wife Joan of Portugal. His alleged daughter, called "la Beltraneja", was deprived of the crown of Castile because of the uncertainty regarding her parentage.

Early life

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Henry IV, in his second year as king, travelled to Úbeda and stayed with Beltrán's father, Diego Fernández de la Cueva, 1st Viscount of Huelma. When he left this house, he took Diego's second oldest son, Beltrán, with him to stay at Court to show his gratitude to Diego. (Diego offered Beltrán after Enrique asked for Diego's oldest son, whom Diego wanted to keep close by).

He married as his first wife Teresa de Molina de Quesada, of Úbeda, daughter of Francisco Cazorla de Quesada and wife Guiomar Mayor de Molina y Vera, without issue.

Beltrán soon became the King's favourite and married Cardinal Mendoza's niece, Doña Mencía Hurtado de Mendoza y Luna, daughter of Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 1st Duke of the Infantado.

Royal affairs

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Beltrán de la Cueva is, however, best known for allegedly having an affair with Henry's second wife, Joan of Portugal. It was rumoured that Henry's only child, Joanna was fathered by Beltrán and not by the King himself, who may have been impotent. This rumour led to a four-year War of the Castilian Succession, which was won by Isabella I, Henry's half-sister. It is unlikely that an agreement as to Joanna's probable paternity will ever be reached by historians, as there is not enough evidence to support either possible father with certainty. Most of the extant contemporary sources about Henry's potency are suspect, as the royal chronicles of his reign were either written or revised under the influence of Isabella, whose personal interest in the succession caused her to take great pains to insist on Joanna's illegitimacy. Much of Isabella's attention to Henry, in fact, was spent on harming his reputation in order to cement the legitimacy of her own reign. The question of Joanna's paternity has, as a result, fascinated historians for centuries: if Joanna was not in fact Beltran's daughter, and was actually legitimate, Isabella's tremendously influential reign would have been an illegal usurpation.

Royal chronicler Alfonso de Palencia, known for his particularly venomous attitude toward Henry, made many allusions in his writings that can be interpreted as accusations concerning Beltran's sexuality. Palencia and other avid anti-Henryites often accused the two of pursuing a homosexual relationship, though it is not clear to what extent these accusations were based on fact, or whether they were a form of anti-Henry, pro-rebellion, pro-Isabelline propaganda.

Height of power

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Beltran was Henry IV's most-cherished favourite. Throughout his time in court, Henry showered him with gifts—land, money, offices—of such magnitude that many nobles of higher background took offense. He was a Grand Master of the Order of Santiago and Chamberlain-Major. In 1462, the King granted him the title of Count of Ledesma. In 1463, Henry was forced to dismiss Beltrán from the court. As compensation, Henry made him Duke of Alburquerque and Grandee of Spain, by a letter issued at Segovia on 16 November or 26 November 1464. Henry also created him Lord of Cuéllar, Roa, Atienza, Torregalindo, Codecera, etc.

In 1467, he fought in the Second Battle of Olmedo against the faction who had claimed to depose Henry in favor of his brother Prince Alfonso. As a reward, he was also created Count of Huelma by Henry on 20 August 1474. Henry died in December, and this latest title was confirmed by the new Queen Isabella I of Castile and her consort Ferdinand II of Aragon on 20 April 1475. In the War of the Castilian Succession, Beltran supported Isabella against his presumed daughter Joan.

He also distinguished himself in 1491 in the conquest of Granada along with his son Don Francisco.

Beltrán de la Cueva died in 1492 and was buried at the Convent of San Francisco de Cuéllar.

Marriage and Children

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He married in Guadalajara in 1462 Mencía de Mendoza y Luna, daughter of Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 1st Duke of the Infantado, and his first wife Brianda de Mendoza y Luna.​ The children of this marriage were:

  • Francisco Fernández de la Cueva (1467–1526), succeeded his father.
  • Antonio de la Cueva y Mendoza,​ married Elvira de Ayala.​
  • Íñigo de la Cueva y Mendoza,​ first an ecclesiastic and then a military man, who married his niece Ana de la Cueva y Mendoza.
  • Mayor de la Cueva y Mendoza, married to Pedro de Navarra y Lacarra, Grand Marshal of the Kingdom of Navarre.
  • Brianda de la Cueva y Luna, married Fernando Gómez Dávila, lord of Navamorcuende, Villatoro and Cardiel.
  • Mencía de la Cueva [3].

After Mencía de Mendoza died in 1476 [3], he married in the same year to Mencía Enríquez de Toledo, daughter of García Álvarez de Toledo, 1st Duke of Alba, and María Enríquez. They had one son:

  • García de la Cueva y Toledo, died a few months after birth [4].

He remarried in 1482 to María de Velasco y Mendoza, widow of Juan Pacheco, and daughter of Pedro Fernández de Velasco, 2nd Count of Haro. The children of this marriage were:

  • Cristóbal de la Cueva y Velasco, lord of Roa,​ who married Leonor de Velasco y Carrillo, 3rd Countess of Siruela. Had issue.
  • Pedro de la Cueva y Velasco,​ lord of Torregalindo [5].

In addition, he had at least two other natural children:

  • Juan de la Cueva y Santiago, with Beatriz de Santiago, his vassal and resident of Cuéllar.
  • Bernaldino de la Cueva, with Isabel la Serrana, also a resident of Cuéllar [6].

He is also believed to be the natural father of Juana la Beltraneja, daughter of Juana de Portugal.
According to Portuguese sources, he was also the father of Manuel Beltrán (Manuel Beltrão in Portuguese): married to Francisca da Mota, with descendants in Portugal [7].

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ According to the inscription at his tomb in the Convent of San Francisco de Cuéllar.
  2. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Spain" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 549.
  3. ^ a b Carceller Cerviño 2006, p. 638.
  4. ^ Carceller Cerviño 2006, pp. 651–652.
  5. ^ Carceller Cerviño 2006, p. 663-664.
  6. ^ Carceller Cerviño 2006, p. 672.
  7. ^ Felgueiras Gaio, Manuel José da Costa, Nobiliário de Famílias de Portugal, Carvalhos de Basto, 2.ª Edição, Braga, 1989, vol. III, p. 36 (Beltrões)

Sources

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Spanish nobility
New title Duke of Alburquerque
1464–1492
Succeeded by
Count of Ledesma
1462–1492
Preceded by Count of Huelma
1474–1492
Preceded by
Grand Master of the Order of Santiago

1462–1463
Succeeded by