Juan Pacheco

Cross of the Order of Santiago.

Juan Fernández Pacheco y Téllez Girón (1419 in Belmonte 1 October 1474 in Trujillo), was a Castilian noble of Portuguese descent[1] who rose to power in the last years of the reign of Juan II of Castile and came to dominate the government of Castile during the reign of his son and successor Henry IV of Castile. His titles included, among others, Marquess of Villena, Duke of Escalona and Master of the Order of Santiago.

Biography

Juan Pacheco was the son of Alfonso Téllez Girón y Vázquez de Acuña, and María Pacheco (the daughter of Juan Fernández Pacheco, first lord of Belmonte, and Agnes Téllez de Meneses). The family, of Portuguese nobility, had been exiled to Castile after the battle of Aljubarrota (1385), and counted, among its main possessions in Belmonte, the Alcázar, built by Prince Don Juan Manuel, and later the castle of Belmonte, built by Pacheco in 1456 after becoming Marquess of Villena. The close relationship of the Pacheco family and the Castilian crown is evidenced, for example, in the fact that Pacheco's childhood playmate was Henry IV of Castile. In his youth, he served as a page to Àlvaro de Luna, who later brought him to court to serve Prince Henry.

Pacheco became the prince's confidant, and this friendship would continue when his master became king Henry IV of Castile. Pacheco intervened in major political decisions. In January 1442, aged 22, he had reached the office of chamberlain of the prince, the highest position in the house of the heir after the steward, a dignity still in the hands of the constable Álvaro de Luna. That same year he joined the lordship of Moguer via his marriage to María Portocarrero, who had an important legacy, which was later lost. Pacheco later strove to recover it.

Pacheco was appointed Marquess of Villena, the first title of marquess conferred by a Castilian monarch, in 1445 after the first Battle of Olmedo. He negotiated the title of Master of the Order of Calatrava for his brother, Pedro Girón. In the conflict that arose soon after between King John II of Castile and Prince Henry, Pacheco mediated on behalf of the prince, taking Álvaro de Luna as a mediator for the king. The agreement would benefit both mediators.

Other titles earned by Pacheco would include Adelantado of Castile from 1451 to 1456, and of Merino Mayor of Asturias from 1461 to 1462. He was also made Master of the Order of Santiago in 1467 by Prince Alfonso,[2] who had been proclaimed king by some Castilian nobles in the Farce of Ávila.

In 1463, in Bayonne, Pacheco offered his services to France. With this alliance, France encircled its enemy, the kingdom of Aragón. In gratitude, Louis XI promised the hand of his daughter, Joanna, to the youngest son of Pacheco, Pedro de Portocarrero. The Aragonese king's reaction was to win the friendship of Castile and void the Castilian-French alliance, promising his son Fernando to Pacheco's daughter, Beatriz.

In 1466, Pacheco's nephew, Rodrigo Téllez Girón, was elected Master of the Order of Calatrava. Being a minor, Pacheco would be his tutor, giving him the post of coadjutor of the order in 1469. As such, he would have the same powers as the masters had, except in spiritual matters, which should be delegated to persons belonging to the order. Writers of the period claimed he was Master of Calatrava, in addition to Master of Santiago.[2]

In 1469, Princess Isabella, half-sister of Henry IV, married Ferdinand of Aragón, against the will of the king and overriding prior diplomatic agreements, starting thus the War of the Castilian Succession, in which Pacheco supported Princess Juana, Henry IV's daughter. Pacheco died on 1 October 1474, in Santa Cruz, near Trujillo, shortly before the death of King Henry IV.

Nuptials and offspring

Pacheco married three times. His first wife was Angelina de Luna, cousin of the constable Álvaro de Luna. The marriage was nullified in 1442.[3] Soon after, he married María Enríquez Portocarrero (d. 1470), daughter of Pedro (Martín Fernández) Portocarrero y Cabeza de Vaca, the fifth Lord of Moguer, and Beatriz Enriquez, daughter of Alonso de Mendoza and Juana Enríquez. The canonical marriage was valid until 1456, when Pope Callistus III authorized the marriage by the church and the legitimation of children born up to that date.[3]

The children of this marriage were:[4]

After the death of María Enríquez, Juan Pacheco married María de Velasco, daughter of Pedro Fernández de Velasco y Manrique de Lara, and Mencia de Mendoza y Figueroa. A daughter was born of this marriage:

Preceded by
Alfonso of Castile

Grand Master of the Order of Santiago

14671474
Succeeded by
Alonso de Cárdenas
Preceded by
Ruy Díaz de Mendoza
Grand Master of the King's House
14541472
Succeeded by
Diego López de Pacheco y Portocarrero

See also

Notes

  1. The fact of Portuguese descent evidently explains why Pacheco's surnames do not follow the Spanish order of surnames, i.e. father's surname(s) first and mother's surname(s) second.
  2. 1 2 Ciudad Ruiz, Manuel. "El maestrazgo de Don Rodrigo Téllez Girón" (2000), in La España Medieval (23); ISSN 0214-3038, pp. 321–365, see page 328
  3. 1 2 FRANCO SILVA, Alfonso, "Juan Pacheco: De doncel del príncipe de Asturias a Marqués de Villena (1440–1445)" (2009), Anuario de Estudios Medievales, 39/2; ISSN 0066-5061, pp. 723–75.
  4. 1 2 BERWICK, and Duchess of Alba, "Catálogo de las colecciones expuestas en las vitrinas del Palacio de Liria" (1898)
  5. Archivo Histórico Nacional, Sección Nobleza, Osuna, C.117, 3.6: capitulaciones matrimoniales de varios hijos de Juan Ponce de León. Rodrigo, marqués de Cádiz con Beatriz Pacheco, hija de Juan Pacheco marqués de Villena, 21 de noviembre de 1460.

Bibliography

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