Pilar azlor de aragón
azlor de aragón family
He contracted a second marriage on April 17, 1597 with Luisa de Alagón y Luna (d. January 23, 1633),[1] sister of Gabriel Blasco de Alagón, iv Count of Sástago and Catalina Martínez de Luna, daughter of the i Count of Morata de Jalón, who died in 1633. He was succeeded, from his second marriage, by his son Martín de Aragón y Alagón as 2nd Count of Luna, who had no descendants. In the duchy of Villahermosa, he was succeeded by his niece, daughter of his brother Fernando;[1].
She married in Madrid on April 6, 1610, to her second cousin, Carlos de Borja y Aragón,[12][1] president of the Supreme Council of Portugal and State Councilor of Philip IV[12] (d. July 27, 1647).[1] He was succeeded by his son:[1]
He married on 25 February 1629 his cousin Juana Luisa de Aragón y Alagón (d. 30 July 1652),[1] iii Countess of Luna, daughter of the sixth Duke Francisco, who had been vetoed for succession disavowed by the crown. She was thus niece of the seventh duchess, also her mother-in-law, the daughter of the fifth duke, mother of her husband Ferdinand Emmanuel. She was succeeded by her son:
wikipedia
He contracted a second marriage on April 17, 1597 with Luisa de Alagón y Luna (d. January 23, 1633),[1] sister of Gabriel Blasco de Alagón, iv Count of Sástago and Catalina Martínez de Luna, daughter of the i Count of Morata de Jalón, who died in 1633. He was succeeded, from his second marriage, by his son Martín de Aragón y Alagón as 2nd Count of Luna, who had no descendants. In the duchy of Villahermosa, he was succeeded by his niece, daughter of his brother Fernando;[1].
She married in Madrid on April 6, 1610, to her second cousin, Carlos de Borja y Aragón,[12][1] president of the Supreme Council of Portugal and State Councilor of Philip IV[12] (d. July 27, 1647).[1] He was succeeded by his son:[1]
He married on 25 February 1629 his cousin Juana Luisa de Aragón y Alagón (d. 30 July 1652),[1] iii Countess of Luna, daughter of the sixth Duke Francisco, who had been vetoed for succession disavowed by the crown. She was thus niece of the seventh duchess, also her mother-in-law, the daughter of the fifth duke, mother of her husband Ferdinand Emmanuel. She was succeeded by her son:
duque de béjar
Duque de Villahermosa es un título hereditario en el escalafón de España, acompañado de la dignidad de Grandeza y concedido en 1476 por Juan II a Alfonso de Aragón, hermanastro de Fernando II[2].
La fortuna de la familia ducal creció a mediados del siglo XV, después de que Pedrola se convirtiera en la capital aragonesa en el momento en que las fincas de la familia Azlor de Aragón y Villahermosa eran controladas por Alfonso de Aragón y de Escobar, hijo ilegítimo del rey Juan II de Aragón.
Esta familia noble fue propietaria del Palacio de Villahermosa en Madrid, un edificio neoclásico en la esquina del Paseo del Prado con la calle de San Jerónimo, desde el siglo XVIII hasta el siglo XX. Reformado por Rafael Moneo a finales de la década de 1980, el antiguo palacio ducal alberga actualmente el Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza de Madrid[3].
greats of spain
The Duke of Luna was closely linked to various socio-cultural entities in Aragon. He was an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Nobles and Fine Arts of San Luis de Zaragoza, a merit patron of the Goya Foundation in Aragon and a member of the Royal Cavalry of Zaragoza, as well as a Knight of the Military Order of Santiago and Grand Cross of Carlos III, among other distinctions.
In the palace of Villahermosa, Miguel de Cervantes placed a scene from Don Quixote, as Javier de Urzaiz y Azlor himself recalled when in 2004 he hosted the Aragonese Commission for the IV Centenary of Don Quixote. The third centenary of Cervantes’ work was celebrated in 1909 in the same palace.
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