Eduardo de Figueroa, 8th Count of Yebes

Eduardo de Figueroa y Alonso-Martínez, 8th Count of Yebes (20 September 1899 – 11 July 1984) was a Spanish aristocrat, architect, politician and writer. He was a member of parliament for Barbastro, fellow of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and president of the National Board of Trophy Hunting Homologation.[1]


The Count of Yebes

MP
Born(1899-09-20)20 September 1899
Madrid, Spain
Died11 July 1984(1984-07-11) (aged 84)
Madrid, Spain
Spouse(s)
    Carmen Muñoz y Roca-Tallada
    (
    m. 1922)
    Children2
    Parents
    • Alvaro de Figueroa y Torres, 1st Count of Romanones (father)
    • Casilda Alonso-Martínez y Martín (mother)

    Early life

    He was born in Madrid as the sixth child of Alvaro de Figueroa y Torres, 1st Count of Romanones, who was Prime Minister of Spain, and his wife Casilda Alonso-Martínez y Martín, the daughter of Manuel Alonso Martínez.[1] He had six siblings: Casilda, Luis, Álvaro, Carlos, José and Agustín. His brother Álvaro was Mayor of Madrid between 1921 and 1922, José won a silver medal in polo at the 1920 Summer Olympics and Agustín was a successful movie director, and the father-in-law of singer Raphael.

    Hunting

    Yebes has gone down as one of the most well-known hunters of the 20th century.[2] His book Veinte Años de Caza Mayor (Twenty Years of Big Game Hunting) was prologued by Ortega y Gasset and is still considered one of the gems of hunting literature.[3] He was described as "tough and wiry and willing to work for his trophy despite being a nobleman".[4]

    Amongst his achievements are harvesting the current world record giant sable antelope in Angola in 1949, currently on show at the Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales.[4][5][1] He was also the first to document the existence of the Iberian ibex in the Penibaetic System.[6]

    Yebes was a passionate roe deer hunter since his finca, El Robledo, had a plentiful population.

    He was made Honorific President of the Royal Hunting Federation of Spain and founded the National Board of Trophy Hunting Homologation with fellow hunters in 1950, a body of which he was the first president.[1]

    He died in Madrid in July 1984.[7]

    Pictured in the middle of the back row, with a cigar. General Primo de Rivera and Alfonso XIII lead the way, Club Puerta de Hierro, 1928

    Issue

    On the 3rd of July 1922, he married Carmen Muñoz y Roca-Tallada at San Fermín de los Navarros in Madrid. They had two children:

    • Mercedes de Figueroa y Muñoz (b. 1924)
    • María del Carmen de Figueroa y Muñoz, 9th Countess of Yebes (b. 1929)

    Titles and styles

    Titles

    Styles

    Selected works

    • 20 Años de Caza Mayor, Plus Ultra, Madrid, 1948.
    gollark: Now, yes, you can say "but programmers should just be perfect all the time and not make mistakes", but that is very stupid because people make mistakes and good tools make those more obvious/make it harder to.
    gollark: C's lack of safety got us Heartbleed, quite notably, and a ridiculously large amount of other bugs.
    gollark: C has its place, but its place really should be much smaller.
    gollark: C bad for many tasks
    gollark: Did you know that the "wish for infinite genies" thing was actually thought up and spread by genies so they could escape their imprisonment?

    References

    Bibliography

    • Priego, Count of (2017). Cazadores Españoles del Siglo XX. Turner Publicaciones. ISBN 978-84-16714-29-2.
    • Walker, John Frederick (2004). A Certain Curve of Horn: The Hundred-Year Quest for the Giant Sable Antelope of Angola. Grove Press. ISBN 978-08-02140-68-5.
    Spanish nobility
    Preceded by
    Alvaro de Figueroa y Torres
    Count of Yebes
    1922  1984
    Succeeded by
    Carmen de Figueroa y Muñoz


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