County of Torrubia | |
---|---|
Creation date | August 29, 1694 |
Created by | Charles II of Spain |
Peerage | Spanish nobility |
First holder | García de Medrano y Mendizábal, I Count of Torrubia |
Last holder | María Cristina Caro Franck |
Present holder | Alonso Caro Aguirre |
Status | Active |
Former seat(s) | Castle Fortress of San Gregorio |
Motto | Ave Maria Gratia Plena Dominus Tecum |
The Count of Torrubia is a Spanish noble title created by Royal Decree of 23 November 1692, and granted by Royal Order on 29 August 1694, by King Charles II of Spain by Royal Decree in favor of García de Medrano y Mendizábal, Lord of San Gregorio, Knight of the Order of Calatrava.[1] The name of the title refers to Torrubia de Soria within the province of Soria, Spain.
The Counts of Torrubia became Grandees of Spain on succession to the County of Mollina, and rulers of the Marquessate of Villamayor and the Marquessate of Las Nieves.
Counts of Torrubia
- García de Medrano y Mendizábal, I Count of Torrubia,[2] lord of San Gregorio, son of García de Medrano y Álvarez de los Ríos and María Ignacia de Mendizábal. Without descendants. He was succeeded by his brother:
- Andrés de Medrano y Mendizábal[2] (Seville, 1654-Madrid, December 22, 1720), II Count of Torrubia, Lord of San Gregorio, He became a Knight of the Order of Calatrava in 1697 and was an art collector. Don Andres de Medrano married Maria Francisca de Angulo y Albizu, sister of María de las Nieves Angulo y Arbizu, I Marquesa de las Nieves, daughters of Juan de Angulo, Secretary of State of the Universal Dispatch, and Manuela de Albizu y Villamayor. He was succeeded by his son:
- José Juan de Medrano y Angulo (died in 1765), III Count of Torrubia,[2] IV Marquéss of Villamayor, barón of Purroy, Lord of San Gregorio, married to Isabel de Luján y Colón de Larreátegui, daughter of Juan Francisco de Luján, superintendent and magistrate of Madrid, and Josefa Colón. Isabel de Luján y Colon de Larreategui was a direct descendant of Cristopher Colombus.[3] José Juan de Medrano inherited the Marquisate of Villamayor from his grandmother Manuela de Albizu y Villamayor, wife of Juan de Angulo. He was succeeded by his son:
- Joaquín de Medrano y Luján[4] (died in 1799), IV Count of Torrubia, V Marquess of Villamayor, Lord of San Gregorio. He entered into three marriages: with María de la Esclavitud Piñeyro y Maldonado, daughter of the Marquesses of Bendaña; with Ana Pardo de Figueroa y Valladares, daughter of the third Marquesses of Figueroa; and with Ángela Antonia Bazán. Joaquín de Medrano's daughter María de la Concepción de Medrano, II Marchioness of Las Nieves (January 28, 1744 – January 1, 1798) inherited the Marquesate of Las Nieves from María de las Nieves Angulo y Arbizu, I Marchioness of las Nieves, great-aunt of María de la Concepción de Medrano. Joaquín was succeeded by his nephew:
- Francisco Chacón Manrique de Lara y Messía Medrano[5] (Málaga, September 1, 1748 – February 4, 1806), V Count of Torrubia, lord of San Gregorio, IV Count of Mollina, VI Marquéss of Villamayor, and a Grandee of Spain, a title granted on December 5, 1803. He was a field marshal of the Royal Armies in 1796 and participated in the War of the Oranges in which the fortress of Olivenza was captured from the Portuguese by Spain. He had no offspring and his titles were inherited by his brother:
- Fernando Chacón Manrique de Lara y Messía Medrano (died February 29, 1837), VI Count of Torrubia, lord of San Greogrio, VII Marquéss of Villamayor, IV Marquéss of las Nieves, Grandee of Spain and the VI Count of Mollina. In this last title, he was succeeded by his great-niece, Juana, the seventh Countess of Torrubia.
- Juana Piñeyro de Echeverri Chacón y Pérez del Pulgar, VII Countess of Torrubia, the seventh Countess of Mollina, and VIII Marchioness of Villamayor, a Grandee of Spain. She was the daughter of Buenaventura Piñeyro de Ulloa and Manuel de Villena, the eighth Marquess of Bendaña [es], Count of Canillas,[6] and Baron of Molinet,[7] and his first wife, Isabel de Echeverri Chacón y Pérez del Pulgar, Countess of Villalcázar de Sirga.[8] She married on May 9, 1852, Fernando de Guillamas y Castañón, Count of Alcolea de Torote, the ninth Marquess of San Felices. She was succeeded by her daughter:
- Isabel Guillamas y Piñeyro (died in San Sebastián, June 27, 1932) VIII Countess of Torrubia and Marchioness of Villamayor.[9] Daughter of Fernando Ignacio José Joaquín de Guillamás y Castañón, IX Marqués de San Felices and Juana Piñeyro de Echeverri Chacón-Manrique de Lara y Pérez del Pulgar, VII Countess of Mollina.[10] She married Álvaro Caro y Széchényi and was succeeded by her son Álvaro.[11]
- Álvaro Caro y Guillamas, IX Count of Torrubia, IX Marquess of Villamayor, married the Cuban María Francisca Díaz de Tuesta y García.[12]
- Álvaro Caro Díaz de Tuesta, X Count of Torrubia, X Marquess of Villamayor.[13][14] Son of Álvaro Caro y Guillamas, IX Count of Torrubia. Without descendants. He was succeeded by his niece, daughter of his brother Luis Caro Díaz de Tuesta (died in Madrid, January 6, 1994).[15][16]
- María Cristina Caro Franck[17] (died in 2016) XI Countess of Torrubia.[18] The succession in the title has been claimed by Alonso Caro Aguirre[19] and by María Rosa Caro y Vázquez.[20] Doña Maria Cristina died on December 6, 2014, and, by Royal Letter of Succession issued on May 9, 2019, she was succeeded in the title by her cousin D. Alonso Caro y Aguirre VII Marquess of Berriz, who became the 12th Count of Torrubia.
- Alonso Caro Aguirre, XII Count of Torrubia,[17] VII Marquess of Berriz.[21] Don Alonso is the eldest son of D. Rafael Caro y Aznar (VI Marquis of Bérriz), in turn the first-born son of D. Juan Caro Guillas, second son of the Caro-Guillamas marriage.
History
The County of Torrubia de Soria is a Spanish noble title granted by Royal Decree on 29 August 1694, by King Charles II of Spain, to Don García de Medrano y Mendizábal, whose documents are held in the Archivo de Simancas.[22][23]
The Medrano family, Lords of many entailed towns and estates of the Medrano lineage in Soria and its region, are knights of great antiquity and nobility.[24]
A table of genealogy exists for the Counts of Torrubia, beginning with Doña Catalina Rodríguez de Medrano, married to Gregorio Gil de Cabanillas, who, as a widow, founded the San Gregorio entail on 23 July, 1394.[25] Her son García González de Medrano, father of Don Diego López de Medrano, became the lord of San Gregorio. It ends with her ninth grandson, José de Medrano y Angulo, the third Count of Torrubia, father of Joaquín de Medrano, 4th Count of Torrubia.[22]
Mayorazgo of San Gregorio
Catalina Rodríguez de Medrano, who married Gregorio Gil de Cabanillas and, as a widow, founded the mayorazgo of San Gregorio in Soria on 23 July 1394.[25] The family lineage continues into the early 15th century with Don Diego López Medrano, lord of San Gregorio and Cavañuelas, father of Diego López de Medrano, lord of San Gregorio and Cavañuelas, who obtained permission from King Henry IV of Castile on 29 July 29 1461, to build the Casa Fuerte de San Gregorio on the lands established by his great-grandmother in 1394.[26][27]
Alliances and additional titles
The Counts of Torrubia inherited the County of Mollina which came with the Grande de España, and later the Marquessate of Las Nieves, the Marquessate of Villamayor, and also united with the Dukes of Villahermosa, Dukes of Sotomayor, Dukes of Alba, and the Marquessate of Salamanca.
García de Medrano y Castejon
Garcia de Medrano y Castejon was the owner of the Casa Fuerte de San Gregorio and lord of San Gregorio, he married Maria de los Rios y Mendoza (b. September 27, 1561). This marriage was the root and origin of one of the most widespread families of legal professionals serving the monarchy during the 17th and 18th centuries.[28]
García de Medrano y Alvarez de los Rios
Garcia de Medrano y Alvarez de los Rios was the father of the 1st Count of Torrubia. He was the regent of the Kingdom of Navarre and Seville, professor at the University of Salamanca, Lord of the House of Medrano and fortress of San Gregorio and of the Council of Castile and Chamber of the King, who married doña María Ignacia de Mendizábal y Uribe, a native of Granada (daughter of Greg de Mendizábal, a native of Oñate, Knight of the Order of Santiago and of the Royal Council of Castile, and doña Teresa de Uribe, a native of Lequeitio, Vizcaya).
García de Medrano y Mendizábal, 1st Count of Torrubia
García José Francisco de Medrano y Mendizábal was born in Madrid on September 7, 1652, and died on March 3, 1695.[29] He was a Knight of the Order of Calatrava, lord of San Gregorio, rector of the University of Salamanca (1668-1669), alcalde of hijosdalgo in Valladolid (1675), oidor of Valladolid (1680), alcalde of Casa y Corte (1684), and a member of the Council of Orders (1690). He is the first born son and heir of the regent Garcia de Medrano y Alvarez de los Rios, and held the title of first Count of Torrubia.[22]
He was perpetual regidor of the city of Soria, and procurator of Cortes for the city of Soria (1660). He entered the major college of the archbishop of Salamanca in 1671. He became rector of the University of Salamanca after his brother Domingo de Medrano. He was granted the title of Count of Torrubia shortly before his death on November 23, 1692, made official on August 29, 1694. He was the 4th nephew of the famous Luisa de Medrano. As he died without any descendants, he was succeeded by his brother, Andrés de Medrano y Mendizábal, in 1695.[30][29]
Andrés de Medrano y Mendizábal, 2nd Count of Torrubia
Andrés de Medrano y Mendizábal[31] (1654–1720) of Seville, later residing in Madrid, was granted knighthood in the Order of Calatrava in 1690. He had a distinguished career serving King Charles II, holding positions such as Secretary of State and member of the Council of Castile. In 1695, he inherited the title of Conde de Torrubia from his brother, Don García de Medrano. In 1693, he married Francisca de Angulo y Arbizu, daughter of Don Juan de Angulo, a knight of Santiago. Like his father García de Medrano y Álvarez de los Ríos, he became counselor and collegiate of San Bartolomé at the University of Salamanca. Andrés became the chief judge of Vizcaya and then an oidor in Valladolid, before being promoted to a supernumerary position in the Council of Finance. Andrés was later appointed as a councilor of the Royal Council of Castile and served in this position until his retirement. He was then granted a place in the Council of Castile, where he remained until his death.
Andrés de Medrano y Mendizábal owned a portrait of King Charles II, and of the regent, Mariana of Austria (d. 1696). His collection was made up almost entirely of religious paintings, including a picture by Mateo Cerezo of the miraculous statue of Christ from Burgos. Details of his art collection, including portraits of King Charles II and Mariana of Austria, along with religious paintings predominately featuring works by Mateo Cerezo and Luca Giordano, are documented in an estate partition dated August 12, 1724, in Madrid. Notable pieces include a Nativity of Christ by Luca Giordano and an unfinished work by El Greco. It is speculated that some of the older works by El Greco and copies after Titian and Jusepe de Ribera may have been inherited rather than acquired directly by Medrano himself.[32]
José Juan de Medrano y Angulo, 3rd Count of Torrubia
José Juan de Medrano y Angulo (died in 1765), III Count of Torrubia, IV Marquéss of Villamayor, barón of Purroy, Lord of San Gregorio. José is the 7th-grandson of Don Diego de Medrano, alcaide of Medinaceli, who died before 1482.[33] José married Isabel de Luján y Colón de Larreátegui, daughter of Juan Francisco de Luján, superintendent and magistrate of Madrid, and Josefa Colón.[22] Isabel de Luján y Colon de Larreategui was a direct descendant of Cristopher Colombus.[3] José Juan de Medrano inherited the Marquisate of Villamayor from his grandmother Manuela de Albizu y Villamayor, wife of Juan de Angulo. He was succeeded by his son:
Joaquín de Medrano y Luján, 4th Count of Torrubia
Joaquín José María de Medrano y Luján[34] (died in 1799), IV Count of Torrubia, V Marquess of Villamayor, Lord of San Gregorio. He entered into four marriages: with María de la Esclavitud Piñeyro y Maldonado, daughter of the Marquesses of Bendaña; with Ana Pardo de Figueroa y Valladares, daughter of the third Marquesses of Figueroa: with Ángela Antonia de Bazán: and finally with María de las Mercedes Tecla Lorieri.[35]
Joaquín de Medrano's daughter Doña María de la Concepción de Medrano, II Marchioness of Las Nieves (January 28, 1744 – January 1, 1798) inherited the Marquesate of Las Nieves from María de las Nieves Angulo y Arbizu. Joaquín was succeeded by his nephew.
After the death of Joaquín de Medrano, IV Count of Torrubia in the year 1799, he left behind a three year old daughter with his third wife Ana Pardo de Figueroa y Valladares. His daughter María del Pilar de Medrano Lorieri Pardo de Figueroa y Zabala passed away at the age of three in 1800, and the title of Mollina passed to the son of his aunt Manuela de Medrano y Angulo, daughter of Andrés de Medrano, II Count of Torrubia and the first cousin of Joaquín de Medrano y Luján, IV Count of Torrubia.
D. José de Chacón y Medrano (b. Málaga 20 March 1727), son of Doña Manuela de Medrano y Angulo and maternal grandson of the II Count of Torrubia, married Doña María de Mesía y Carvajal on 27 April 1743, in Úbeda. D. José passed away in the year 1784. From this marriage, the following two individuals inherited the title of Count of Torrubia:
Francisco Chacón Manrique de Lara Mesía Medrano, 5th Count of Torrubia
Francisco Chacón Manrique de Lara Mesía Medrano who, already the V Count of Torrubia, obtained in 1803 the Grandee of Spain attached to the County of Mollina which he also held as the V in line. He passed away in the month of April 1814.
Fernando Chacón Manrique de Lara Messia Medrano, 6th Count of Torrubia
Fernando Chacón Manrique de Lara Messia Medrano, VI Count of Torrubia, VI Count of Mollina, VII Marquéss of Villamayor, IV Marquéss of las Nieves, Knight of Santiago, was baptized in Málaga on May 19, 1755. He passed away without descendants on February 27, 1837. The Marquisate of Las Nieves groups together 9 of the Municipalities of Málaga Province. The municipalities which comprise the Marquisate of Las Nieves are: Alozaina, Casarabonela, El Burgo, Guaro, Istán, Monda, Ojén, Tolox and Yunquera. On August 12, 1847, his great-grandniece succeeded him.
A third daughter of the marriage between José Chacón y Medrano and María Mesía y Carvajal was Isabel. Isabel Chacón y Mesía was born on December 31, 1746. She married Juan Felipe Echeverri y Vargas, Count of Villalcázar de Sirga, and their son was José Echeverri y Chacón, born in 1767 and deceased on December 12, 1826.
References
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- ^ a b Nieto and Cortadellas , Rafael (1952). The descendants of Christopher Columbus. Havana: Pan American Colombist Society. pp. 240-242.
- ^ "Historia del Colegio Viejo de S. Barholomè, Mayor de la Celebre Universidad de Salamanca: Que Contiene las Vidas de los Cinco Eminentissimos, ... Las Entradas de los que desde el año de 1640. Hasta el de 1768. Han sido elegido en el Mayor de San Bartholomè". 1768.
- ^ "Francisco Chacón Manrique de Lara y Messía | Real Academia de la Historia".
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- ^ https://www.bcn.cl/obtienearchivo?id=documentos/10221.1/55919/1/89982.pdf
- ^ "Alvaro Caro y Díaz de Tuesta, X Marqués de Villamayor". geni_family_tree. 2022-04-29. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
- ^ https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/1963/11/07/pdfs/A15745-15745.pdf
- ^ "ABC MADRID 10-01-1994 página 100 - Archivo ABC". 27 August 2019.
- ^ "Luis Caro y Díaz de Tuesta". geni_family_tree. 2016-12-05. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
- ^ a b Edit (2016-12-01). "TÍTULOS NOBILIARIOS EN EL BOLETÍN OFICIAL DEL ESTADO". Diputación de la Grandeza y Títulos del Reino (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-08-05.
- ^ https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/1999/03/10/pdfs/A09688-09688.pdf
- ^ "BOE-B-2016-67221 Anuncio de la Subsecretaría (División de Derechos de Gracia y otros Derechos), sobre solicitud de sucesión en el título de Conde de Torrubia".
- ^ "BOE-B-2017-15585 Anuncio de la Subsecretaría (División de Derechos de Gracia y otros Derechos), sobre solicitud de sucesión en el título de Conde de Torrubia".
- ^ "BOE-A-2019-4474 Orden JUS/341/2019, de 14 de marzo, por la que se manda expedir, sin perjuicio de tercero de mejor derecho, Real Carta de Sucesión en el título de Conde de Torrubia a favor de don Alonso Caro Aguirre".
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- ^ "Torrubia". soria-goig.com. Retrieved 2024-08-05.
- ^ The Pérez de Araciel de Alfaro By Manuel Luis Ruiz de Bucesta y Álvarez Member and Founding Partner of the ARGH Vice Director of the Asturian Academy of Heraldry and Genealogy Correspondent of the Belgian-Spanish Academy of History Pages. 50-51 https://dialnet.unirioja.es/descarga/articulo/3991718.pdf
- ^ a b "Tabla genealógica de la familia de Medrano, señores de las Amayuelas. [Manuscrito]". www.europeana.eu. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
- ^ Casa Fuerte de San Gregorio
- ^ Church of San Gregorio
- ^ "García de Medrano y Castejón | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
- ^ a b "García José Francisco de Medrano y Mendizábal | Real Academia de la Historia".
- ^ Succession of the Counts of Torrubia https://pares.mcu.es/ParesBusquedas20/catalogo/description/2964925
- ^ "Andrés de Medrano y Mendizábal | Real Academia de la Historia".
- ^ Burke, Marcus B.; Cherry, Peter (January 1997). Collections of Painting in Madrid, 1601–1755 (Parts 1 and 2). Getty Publications. ISBN 978-0-89236-496-1.
- ^ "Tabla genealógica de la familia de Medrano, vecina de Soria. [Manuscrito]". www.europeana.eu. Retrieved 2024-08-05.
- ^ "Historia del Colegio Viejo de S. Barholomè, Mayor de la Celebre Universidad de Salamanca: Que Contiene las Vidas de los Cinco Eminentissimos, ... Las Entradas de los que desde el año de 1640. Hasta el de 1768. Han sido elegido en el Mayor de San Bartholomè". 1768.
- ^ IV Count of Torrubia https://www.boe.es/gazeta/dias/1865/01/29/pdfs/GMD-1865-29.pdf