Dukes of Gandía

The hereditary Spanish title duke of Gandía (Valencian: Ducat de Gandia, IPA: [duˈkad de ganˈdi.a]) was created in 1485 by Ferdinand II of Aragon from the original Italian title "duke of Candia" (Italian Duca di Candia) belonging to the Italian Stato di Mare or Italian Kingdoms of the Mediterranean Sea; originally granted around 1206 to a Genoan marquis member of the House of Candia in addition to his fiefdom in the island of Crete when it fell into the hands of the Venetians at the time of the Fourth Crusade. This was the second creation (Ferdinand himself was the last of the dukes of the first creation). According to the Catholic Encyclopedia,[1] this was a purchase of a title by Pope Alexander VI for his son Pier Luigi (Pedro Luis).[2]

The dukedom went to Pier Luigi's brother (or half-brother, mothers unknown) Giovanni. He was assassinated, and his young son became Duke. The fourth duke was the religious figure Francesco Borgia. He became a Jesuit, but after the death of his wife with whom he had a large family; the eldest son Carlos, later viceroy of Portugal,[3] became the fifth duke. The sixth duke's younger son Gaspar de Borja y Velasco became a bishop and diplomat and cardinal.

Contents

Dukes of Gandía / Dukes of Candia

House of Candia

The first dukes of Gandía were of the House of Candia, from Switzerland, France and Italy. In 1204 the duchy was first created by the Venetians as the Duchy of Candia,[4] (Italian: Ducato di Candia, granted to the House of Candia[5] in reference to the island of Crete. This fief eventually became the Kingdom of Candia (Italian: Regno di Candia) until the Ottoman occupation of the island.

House of Borgia

In 1485 was re-created by Ferdinand II of Aragon and granted to the House of Borgia, of Spain and Italy.[6]

  1. Pier Luigi de Borgia (Pedro Luis de Borja), 1st duke
  2. Giovanni Borgia (Juan de Borja), 2nd duke
  3. Juan de Borja y Enríquez de Luna (1495–1543), 3rd duke
  4. Saint Francis Borgia, 4th duke
  5. Carlos de Borja y Aragón, 5th duke
  6. Francisco Tomás de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 6th duke
  7. Francisco Carlos de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 7th duke
  8. Francisco Diego Pascual de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 8th duke
  9. Francisco Carlos de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 9th duke
  10. Pascual Francisco de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 10th duke
  11. Luis Ignacio Francisco Juan de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 11th duke
  12. María Ana Antonia Luisa de Borja Aragón y Centelles, 12th duchess (d. 1748)

House of Glücksburg

In 1898 a joint OttomanGreek (Muslim–Christian) assembly was part-elected, part-appointed. However, this was not enough to satisfy Cretan nationalists, as such it was appointed a noble representative from the Græco-Danish House of Glücksburg.

Notes

  1. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia, "Pope Alexander VI".
  2. ^ The Borgia (Borja) were a Spanish family, but are more commonly known in English by the Italian versions of their names.
  3. ^ Borgia 2
  4. ^ The Archives of Venice; the microfilm acquisition from the Public Archives of Venice covering the period from 1217 to1898 of Cretan history
  5. ^ La Société académique de Savoie a publié à Chambéry des Mémoires sur la carrière politique et militaire de Savoie, 1828.
  6. ^ 6. Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1 "The Borgias". (Old Catholic Encyclopedia) New York, Robert Appleton Company (a.k.a. The Encyclopedia Press), 1907.
  7. ^ Bertin, Celia (1982). "Persecution, War, Exile". Marie Bonaparte: A Life. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. pp. 208,234,237,242. ISBN 0-15-157252-6.