Álvaro Gil Cabral

Álvaro Gil Cabral (c.1335-?) was a Portuguese nobleman, Lord of Belmonte,[1] and Azurara. He served as Alcaide of Guarda, Portugal between 1383–1399.[2]

Álvaro Gil Cabral
Senhor of Azurara and Belmonte
Coat of Arms belonging to Cabral lineage
Born14th century
Kingdom of Portugal
Died14th century
Coimbra, Portugal
Noble familyCabraes
ReligionRoman Catholic
OccupationPolitician

Biography

Álvaro was born in the Iberian Peninsula, son of Gil Cabral, a nobleman who was bishop of Guarda. He was married to Catarina Anes de Loureiro, daughter of João Anes Loureiro and Catarina Dias de Figueiredo,[3] a noble lady, descendant of Rui Vasques Pereira.[4]

Cabral was related to the discoverer of the Azores, he was the maternal grandfather of Gonçalo Velho Cabral. And he was the paternal great-grandfather of the discoverer of Brazil, Pedro Álvares Cabral.[5]

Álvaro Gil Cabral participated actively in Portuguese politics, being vassal of Ferdinand I and John I.[6] He took part in the Battle of Aljubarrota, against the troops of John I of Castile.[7]

gollark: Simply use `eval`. This is very secure.
gollark: If you just split it into multiple files, that does basically nothing for the important things, the interdependencies between each part.
gollark: Organization is not autonomously attained via file restructuring.
gollark: I disagree.
gollark: Æ.

References

  1. Onde nasceu Pedro Alvares Cabral?. Amândio Marques.
  2. Archivo heraldico-genealogico contendo noticias historicoheraldicas. Augusto Romano Sanches de Baena e Farinha de Almeida Sanches de Baena (Visconde de). 1872. p. 47. Alvaro Gil Cabral senhor de Azurara.
  3. Edição comemorativa do cinqüentenário do Instituto Genealógico Brasileiro, 1939-1989. Instituto Genealógico Brasileiro.
  4. Quatrocentos anos de vida bandeirante:. Instituto Genealógico Brasileiro.
  5. Pedro Alvares Cabral. Metzner Leone.
  6. DiÁlogos. Ivonilton Alves Fontan.
  7. Boletim da Direcção Geral dos Edifícios e Monumentos Nacionais, Issues 127-129. República Portuguesa, Ministério das Obras Públicas e Comunicações.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.