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Married: Inés de Ayala (d. June 3, 1403), [ 4 ] daughter of Fernán Pérez de Ayala and Elvira Álvarez de Ceballos, Mrs. Escalante , and sister of Pedro López de Ayala
PEDRO López de Ayala His ancestry is set out by Argote Molina [4] . Lord of Unza, Mena and Albudeite. Adelantado mayor of the kingdom of Murcia. Mistress (1) : INÉS de Azagra, daughter of ---.
Pedro had two illegitimate children by Mistress (1): INÉS de Azagra
Fernando & his wife had ELVIRA five children:
- i) PEDRO López de Ayala "the Chronicler" (Vitoria 1332-Calahorra 1407, bur Quijana, Torre de Ayala). Lord of Ayala and Salvatierra de Álava. Chancellor of Castile 1406-1407. M ost of King Juan I of Castile. Greater Merino from Guipúzcoa. Ensign Major of the Banda Bande 5 Sep 1371 to 21 Jul 1385. married LEONOR de Guzmán, daughter of PEDRO Suárez de Toledo Señor de Bolaños & his wife María Ramírez de Guzmán.
Pedro & his wife LEONOR had two children:
- (a) FERNÁN Pérez de Ayala (-17 Sep 1436). Lord of Ayala and Salvatierra de Álava. Ensign Major of the Banda 1402. married MARÍA Sarmiento Señora de Salinillas, daughter of DIEGO Gómez Sarmiento Señor de Salinas & his wife Leonor de Castilla (-1438).
COUNTS of SALVATIERRA and AYALA .
- (b) are.
- ii) INÉS Alfonso de Ayala married DIEGO Gómez de Ayala, are of ---.
Two children:
- (a) SANCHA de Ayala married WALTER Blount, are of ---.
- (b) TERESA de Ayala (-31 Aug 1424). Florez records a donation made to Santo Domingo el Real by " Doña Ines de Ayala " which names " Maria my fixed granddaughter of King D. Pedro ... of my fixed Doña Teresa, Prioress ... of the Sorores of Santo Domingo el Real ”, Dated 15 Jun 1395 [11] . Prioress of Santo Domingo el Real. An epitaph in Santo Domingo el Real records the death 31 Aug 1424 of " Doña Teresa de Ayala, Prioress of this Monastery, daughter of D. Diego Gomez de Ayala, Mayor of Toledo, and Doña Ines de Ayala " [12] . Mistress of: PEDRO I "el Cruel" King of Castile and León, are of ALFONSO XI "el Justo" King of Castile and Leon & his second wife Infanta dona Maria de Portugal (Burgos 30 Aug 1334-murdered Montiel 22 Mar 1369).
- iii) ELVIRA from Ayala, married PEDRO Suárez de Guzmán, son of PEDRO Suárez de Toledo & his wife María Ramírez de Guzmán.
- iv) LEONOR de Ayala, Lady of Torrejón de Velasco. Her marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 11 Sep 1441 which her daughter " Doña Maria de Ayala daughter of Fernán Álvarez de Toledo, lord of Hijares and of Mrs. Teresa de Ayala Mrs. de Pinto " issued relating to " her inheritance of Dosbarruelos, municipality of Toledo " [13] . married (1366) FERNANDO Álvarez de Toledo Lord of Valdecorneja, they are of --- GARCÍA Álvarez de Toledo & his wife Mencia de Meneses (-near Lisbon 1384).
- v) ALDONZA de Ayala " Pedro González de Mendoza lord of Hita y Buitrago, major butler of King Juan I and his wife Aldonza de Ayala " donated property to " his eldest son Diego Hurtado de Mendoza major admiral of Castilla " by charter dated 14 Nov 1376 [14] . married ([1360]%29 as his third wife, PEDRO González de Mendoza Señor de Hita, son of GONZALO Ibáñez de Mendoza & his wife Juana de Orozco (Guadalajara [1340] -killed in battle Aljubarrota 9 Sep 1385, bur San Francisco de Guadalajara ).
Tomb of Fernán Gómez - Tomb of Fernán Gómez
[Part of a series of posts and pages dedicated to Sancha de Ayala]
The palace of Diego Gómez, one of the magnificent Mudejar-Gothic palaces in the old heart of the city of Toledo, long ago became the Franciscan convent of Santa Isabel de los Reyes; but it has only recently (2005) become a “convent-museum” with increased public access. His daughter Sancha de Ayala has a certain genealogical cachet as a ‘gateway’ ancestor linking medieval Spanish ancestry to numerous Anglo-American descendants (along with Eleanor of Castile or the daughters of Pedro the Cruel, but not too many others). Daughter of a well-connected minor noble family caught in the web of civil strife in the reign of Pedro the Cruel, and further caught in the web of the English interventions in Spanish affairs, she went to England as lady-in-waiting to a queen-in-exile, Constance, wife of John of Gaunt, joining the minor English nobility with her marriage to Sir Walter Blount (a trusted follower of Gaunt, who had diplomatic and military experience in Spain).
Sancha’s life prior to her migration to England is difficult to flesh out for those who have little familiarity with Spain (or Spanish) or medieval lives more generally. But she is relatively unusual—and unusually accessible—because her paternal and maternal family houses are preserved in essentially medieval condition; they would be recognizable to her if she were to visit them now. Her mother’s ancestral compound we’ll look at later—it is a castle in the countryside of Alava, near Bilbao. Her father’s palace is in the heart of the old city of Toledo. Here is one of the exterior doors, built by Sancha’s brother Pedro Suárez de Toledo (and bearing his—and her—paternal and maternal arms):
Diego Gómez de Toledo (¿?—c.1374), noble castellano del siglo XIV, I señor de Casarrubios del Monte y de Valdepusa, es conocido por su importante descendencia.
Hijo de Gómez Pérez de Toledo y de Teresa García de Toledo, fue notario mayor y alcalde mayor del reino de Toledo. En 1352, el rey Pedro I de Castilla, notificó a los alcaldes y al alguacil de Casarrubios del Monte que había concedido a Diego Gómez de Toledo la villa de Aguilar y de Monturque que había estado en poder de Alfonso Fernández Coronel, a quien el rey confiscó acusándole de traición.1
Contrajo matrimonio con Inés de Ayala, señora de Malpica, hija de Fernán Pérez de Ayala y de Elvira Álvarez de Ceballos señora de Escalante, y hermana de Pedro López de Ayala. Diego e Inés fueron padres de:
Gómez De Toledo, Diego. Lord Of Casarrubios Del Monte, Valdepusa And Dhaka . Toledo, 1320 – 1375. Major Notary of the kingdom during the reigns of Peter I and Henri II and mayor of Toledo.
Son of Gómez Pérez, senior dispenser of King Peter I and senior Sheriff of Toledo. Its ancestry constitutes an important lineage of Knights Mozarabs Toledanos, whose members had occupied the cusp of the courteous offices since the minority of Alfonso XI. He reinforced the family lineage by marrying Inés de Ayala, the sister of Royal Chancellor and writer Pedro López de Ayala.
His political career began at the hands of his uncles, senior officers of the Court of Infante Don Pedro. He Was Armed Knight of the Order of the Band in 1348. In 1352 He was the leader of the squires of the King's body. He Was A major notary of the Kingdom of Toledo and mayor of Toledo until his death.
From the beginning of the reign of Peter I until 1366 he was faithful to the King, intervening with him in many moments of Castilian history. In his capacity as a notary, he gave faith in the Castilian Courts, already from the Valladolid of 1351. As vassal and Warrior, he accompanied his relatives to the King in the "sight of Tejadillo", a meeting in which a faction of the nobility demanded royal reconciliation with the lawful wife, Blanca de Borbón. Being the leader of the squires of the King's body, he participated in the arrest of the noble Alfonso Fernandez Coronel, who was entrusted in his Villa de Aguilar, who was accused of treason and execution. The property of this noble was distributed among the Royals, and Diego Gomez was the lordship of Casarrubios del Monte.
He also took part in the so-called "War of The Two Pedros", which pitted Peter i With PETER IV The ceremonious Of Aragon, receiving as a reward the Lordship Of Valdepusa.
Son of Gómez Pérez de Toledo and Teresa García de Toledo, and a descendant of the Mozarabic noble families of the city of Toledo, [ 1 ] he was a senior notary and mayor of the kingdom of Toledo . In 1352, King Pedro I of Castile , whose "guardian of his body", [ 2 ] notified the mayors and the bailiff of Casarrubios del Monte that he had granted Diego Gómez de Toledo the town of Aguilar y Monturque that it had been in the power of Alfonso Fernández Coronel , whom the king confiscated, accusing him of treason. [ 3 ]In that same year he donated the place of Casarrubios del Monte that had also belonged to Alfonso Fernández Coronel. [ 2 ] The king also granted him the place of Arroyomolinos and the jurisdiction of Valdepusa. [ 4 ]
In 1366, he changed sides and stopped supporting King Pedro, probably due to the grievances suffered by his family, and allowed Enrique de Trastamara to enter Toledo, who later confirmed all his assets and granted him what had belonged to his uncle Gutierre Fernández de Toledo. [ 4 ] In 1374, King Henry II confirmed to his widow and children all the royal grants he had received
1332 |
1332
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Toledo, Castille La Mancha, Spain
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1352 |
1352
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Of, Toledo, New Castile, Spain
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1356 |
1356
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Toledo, Castilla La Nueva, España (Spain)
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1358 |
1358
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Of, Toledo, New Castile, Spain
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1360 |
June 1, 1360
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Toledo, (Present Provincia de Toledo), Comuna de La Mancha (Present Castilla-La Mancha), La Corona de Castilla (Spain)
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1364 |
1364
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Toledo, Toledo, New Castile, Spain
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1366 |
1366
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Of, Toledo, New Castile, Spain
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1368 |
1368
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of, Toledo, New Castile, Spain
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1374 |
1374
Age 42
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Casarrubios del Monte, Toledo, Castile-La Mancha, Spain
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