Cristóvão de Moura, 1st Marquis of Castelo Rodrigo explained

Cristóvão de Moura
Office:Viceroy of Portugal
Term Start:29 January 1600
Term End:1603
Predecessor:The Duke of Lerma
Successor:Afonso de Castelo Branco
Office1:Viceroy of Portugal
Term Start1:1603
Term End1:1603
Monarch1:Philip II of Portugal
Predecessor1:Afonso de Castelo Branco
Successor1:Afonso de Castelo Branco
Office3:Viceroy of Portugal
Term Start3:February 1608
Term End3:1612
Monarch3:Philipe II of Portugal
Predecessor3:Pedro de Castilho
Successor3:Pedro de Castilho
Birth Date:1538
Birth Place:Lisbon, Portugal
Death Date:1613
Death Place:Madrid, Spain
Spouse:Margarida Corte-Real
Signature:Assinatura Cristóvão de Moura, Marquês de Castelo Rodrigo.svg

D. Cristóvão de Moura e Távora (1538 in Lisbon – 1613 in Madrid) was a Portuguese nobleman who led the Spanish party during the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580.

Biography

He was the son of D. Luís de Moura, Chief Equerry (estribeiro-mor) to Infante Duarte, and his wife, D. Brites de Távora, daughter of Cristóvão de Távora, 2nd Lord of the Majorat of Caparica, and his wife, Francisca de Sousa.[1]

Established in Spain since 1554, and famous for his intelligence, Cristóvão de Moura was put in charge of diplomacy among the Portuguese nobility by Philip II of Spain, fuelling the political rivalry between the Prior of Crato and the Duke of Braganza, and gathering sympathisers to the cause of the Spanish monarch among the crust of Portuguese society and government.[1]

After Philip II's accession to the Portuguese throne, Cristóvão de Moura was made part of the Council of Portugal, a five-member body that advised the sovereign on the government of the Kingdom of Portugal and its colonial empire. Among other privileges, the King rewarded his services with the post of Comptroller of the Exchequer (vedor da Fazenda) and, afterwards, granted him the title of 1st Count of Castelo Rodrigo (1594).[1]

The king's son and successor, Philip III of Spain, made him the first Marquis of Castelo Rodrigo (1600). This king abolished the Council and named Cristóvão de Moura Viceroy of Portugal. He went on to serve as Viceroy in three separate occasions: first from 29 January 1600 to 1603, again in 1603, and from February 1608 to 1612. The government of the Marquis of Castelo Rodrigo was not well-liked by the Portuguese; the higher taxes he introduced were a contributing factor for this.

Cristóvão de Moura married Margarida Corte-Real, heiress of the Captaincy of Angra, in Terceira Island, Azores, in 1581.[1] The marriage contract stipulated that their descendants would adopt the surname Corte-Real. The couple constructed the Corte Real palace in Lisbon.

Descendants

Of his wife, Margarida Corte-Real

Of Ana Afonso:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Martínez Hernández . Santiago . Governo, Política e Representações do Poder no Portugal Habsburgo e nos seus Territórios Ultramarinos (1581-1640) . pt . Government, Politics and Representations of Power in Habsburg Portugal and its Overseas Territories (1581-1640) . Centro de História de Além-Mar / Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa . 2011 . 79–93 . D. Cristóvão de Moura e a Casa dos Marqueses de Castelo Rodrigo. Proposta de Investigação e Linhas de Análise sobre a Figura do Grande Privado de D. Filipe I . https://www.academia.edu/2102920 . ((978-989-89491-04-3)) .