Fernando González de Traba

Fernando González de Traba or Fernão Gonçalves (fl. 1159–1165) was a Galician magnate and the head of the House of Traba in the Kingdom of León during the reign of Ferdinand II. He was the eldest son of Gonzalo Fernández de Traba and Elvira Rodríguez. He was the alférez of the realm from April 1159 until at least 31 July 1160. He was recognised as a count (Latin comes), the highest noble rank in the kingdom, by 13 January 1160 in Galicia, but the royal chancery did not so style him until 13 February 1161. He held the tenencias which his father had held: Aranga (1160–61), Traba (1160–61), Monterroso (1160–63), and Trastámara (1161–65), even holding all four simultaneously (at least from 2 June to 20 September 1161). He supported with donations the Cistercian monasteries of Sobrado (1162) and Monfero (1163). Fernando signed his last known charter on 26 December 1165. There exists a charter mistakenly dated 6 January 1165 by which his brother, Gómez González de Traba, made a donation to Jubia for the sake of his soul.[1] He had no known wife or children.

Notes

  1. It reads: ob remedium anime patris mei et fratris mei iam defuncti comitis Fernandi Gundisaluit ("for the remedy of the souls of my father and brother, the already deceased count Fernando González").
gollark: I basically just want to receive packets from ff02::aeae port 44718 on all interfaces and send them too, and I can't tell what operations that maps to.
gollark: It does seem like the primitives are very irritating to make this multicasting thing work properly with.
gollark: The standard library ones are nicer, except the particular way they're structured appears to not actually work for this.
gollark: The particularly annoying part is that the lower-level stuff seems to error in incomprehensible and weird ways.
gollark: These Rust bindings seem to effectively just be direct wrappers for the actual socket APIs, which are unpleasant to use.

References

  • This article is based on Simon Barton (1997), The Aristocracy in Twelfth-century León and Castile (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), especially p. 238, which contains a brief curriculum vitae.
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