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Fernando de Eça, 1st Alcaide-Mór of Vila Viçosa, in the service of the Duke of Braganza (c. 1410 – Barcelos, Martim, 15 August 1501 or bef. 1513), married to Joana de Saldanha (born c. 1410), and had issue, also had a son by an unknown wife, issue apparently extinct in male line.
Ferdinand of Portugal ( Portuguese: Fernando ), later of Eça or Eza ( c. 1378 – Eza ?), was the son of Portuguese Infant João, Duke of Valencia de Campos.
Ferdinand of Portugal (Portuguese: Fernando), later of Eça or Eza (c. 1378 – Eza?), was the son of Portuguese Infant João, Duke of Valencia de Campos. João, was a son of king Peter I of Portugal with powerful and literary famous for several centuries in several European languages, Galician lady Inés de Castro, "the Queen who ruled after ...
House of Braganza. The Portuguese House of Burgundy ( Portuguese: Casa de Borgonha) or the Afonsine dynasty ( Dinastia Afonsina) was a Portuguese dynasty that ruled the Kingdom of Portugal from its founding until the 1383–85 Portuguese Interregnum . The house was founded by Henry of Burgundy, who became Count of Portugal in 1096.
Fernando de Eça, 1st Alcaide-Mór of Vila Viçosa, in the service of the Duke of Braganza (c. 1410 – Barcelos, Martim, 15 August 1501 or bef. 1513), married to Joana de Saldanha (born c. 1410), and had issue, also had a son by an unknown wife, issue apparently extinct in male line.
Ferdinand I ( Portuguese: Fernando; [1] 31 October 1345 – 22 October 1383), sometimes called the Handsome ( o Formoso) or occasionally the Inconstant ( o Inconstante ), was the King of Portugal from 1367 until his death in 1383. He was also briefly made King of Galicia, in 1369 (a claim which he would maintain until 1373).
John of Portugal ( Portuguese: João [ʒuˈɐ̃w] ), occasionally surnamed Castro [2] (1352 – c. 1396 ), was the eldest surviving son of King Peter I of Portugal by his mistress Inês de Castro. He was a potential but unsuccessful contender for the Portuguese throne during the 1383–85 crisis of succession. Background
Infante Fernando of Portugal ( Portuguese pronunciation: [fɨɾˈnɐ̃du] ), or Ferdinand in English, was a Portuguese infante (prince), son of King Afonso II of Portugal and his wife Urraca of Castile, daughter of Alfonso VIII of Castile . Fernando was born in the summer of 1217 and was made Lord of Serpa and Lamego in 1223.
Ferdinand I, ninth king of Portugal (1367–83), whose reign was marked by three wars with Castile and by the growth of the Portuguese economy. The son of Peter I of Portugal, Ferdinand became a contender for the Castilian throne after the assassination (1369) of Peter the Cruel of Castile, thus.
Ferdinand ( Portuguese: Fernando, French and Dutch: Ferrand; 24 March 1188 – 27 July 1233) reigned as jure uxoris Count of Flanders and Hainaut from his marriage to Countess Joan, celebrated in Paris in 1212, until his death.