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Inês was the natural daughter of Pedro Fernández de Castro, Lord of Lemos and Sarria, and his noble Portuguese mistress Aldonça Lourenço de Valadares. [1] Her family descended both from the Galician and Portuguese nobilities. She was also well connected to the Castilian royal family, by illegitimate descent.
Inês de Castro, (born 1323?—died Jan. 7, 1355, Coimbra, Port.), mistress, before his accession, of Peter (Pedro) I of Portugal. She was famous because of her tragic death, which was related by such writers and poets as Luís de Camões, Luís Vélez de Guevara, and Henri de Montherlant.
Titled Agnes de Castro, its plot had already wandered a fair way from the original, introducing new characters as part of a complex plot that becomes about the perils of female rivalry and...
Inês’ tragic story has been immortalized in several plays and poems in Portuguese, Spanish, and French including The Lusíadas by renowned Portuguese poet Luís de Camões. There have also been...
Inês de Castro: The tragic love story of a posthumous queen If you're into tragic romances such as 'Romeo and Juliet,' then you're in for a treat. The love affair between Inês de Castro and...
Inês de Castro[ nota 1] ( Reino da Galiza, ca. 1320 / 1325 — Coimbra, 7 de janeiro de 1355) foi uma nobre galega, rainha póstuma de Portugal, amada pelo futuro rei D. Pedro I de Portugal, de quem teve quatro filhos. Foi executada por ordem do pai deste, o rei D. Afonso IV . Biografia
Inés de Castro ( Galicia, c. 1320 - Coímbra, 7 de enero de 1355 ). Noble gallega, perteneciente a la poderosa Casa de Castro, emparentada con los primeros reyes de Castilla, hija de Pedro Fernández de Castro «el de la Guerra», primer señor jurisdiccional de Monforte de Lemos y de Aldonza Lorenzo de Valladares.
The tomb of Ines de Castro at the Monastery of Alcobaca. The passionate but ill-fated love affair of Pedro, crown prince of Portugal, and his wife’s lady-in-waiting is the stuff of both bodice ...
Inês Pérez de Castro (ca. 1320-1355) was the daughter of the powerful Pedro Fernandes de Castro, an illegitimate grandson of King Sancho IV of Castile. She arrived in Portugal in 1340 as a lady-in-waiting to her cousin, Infanta Constança of Castile, who was to marry the heir to the Portuguese throne, Dom Pedro (son of King Dom Afonso IV).
One of the most well-known Portuguese tales is a love story about King Pedro of Portugal and Inês de Castro. Their relationship did not end as they would have wanted, with Inês being killed by royal minions, but in this case, what life took apart, death put back together. Here is the story of how King Pedro’s and Inês’s tombs were made.