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  1. Juan de Castilla y Haro the One-eyed, 1322–1326 son of María Díaz I de Haro María Díaz I the Good , 1326–1333, (third tenure) After swearing the Oath to the Fueros under the Guernica tree, King Ferdinand II of Aragon receives the traditional homage of kissing of the hand from the Juntas Generales (General Assembly) of Biscay, July 30, 1476.

    Lordship of Biscay - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lordship_of_Biscay
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  3. Juan de Castilla y Haro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_de_Castilla_y_Haro

    Juan de Castilla y Haro, most commonly known as Juan el Tuerto (the one-eyed) (b. ? - d. - d. 31 October 1326, Toro ), was a Spanish noble of the House of Haro and of the royal line of the Kingdom of Castile descended from Alfonso X of Castile .

  4. Juan de Castilla y Haro - Wikiwand

    www.wikiwand.com/en/Juan_de_Castilla_y_Haro

    Juan de Castilla y Haro, most commonly known as Juan el Tuerto , was a Spanish noble of the House of Haro and of the royal line of the Kingdom of Castile descended from Alfonso X of Castile. He was the Lord of Cuéllar from 1319 to 1325[1] and the Lord of Biscay from 1322 until his assassination by order of King Alfonso XI of Castile in 1326.

  5. Lordship of Biscay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lordship_of_Biscay

    Juan de Castilla y Haro the One-eyed, 1322–1326 son of María Díaz I de Haro María Díaz I the Good , 1326–1333, (third tenure) After swearing the Oath to the Fueros under the Guernica tree, King Ferdinand II of Aragon receives the traditional homage of kissing of the hand from the Juntas Generales (General Assembly) of Biscay, July 30, 1476.

  6. Juan de Castilla y Haro — Google Arts & Culture

    artsandculture.google.com/entity/m0k3knl8?hl=en

    Juan de Castilla y Haro, most commonly known as Juan el Tuerto, was a Spanish noble of the House of Haro and of the royal line of the Kingdom of Castile de...

  7. Juan de Castilla | Real Academia de la Historia

    dbe.rah.es/biografias/15389/juan-de-castilla

    Infante de Castilla, conspirador y tutor real. Hijo de Alfonso X y de la reina Violante, casó en primeras nupcias con Margarita de Monferrato, enviudó y volvió a contraer matrimonio en 1287 con María López de Haro, heredera del señorío de Vizcaya. Fue un personaje de intensa vida política que protagonizó múltiples iniciativas ...

  8. Juan Yáñez "el Tuerto" de Castilla y Haro, Señor de Vizcaya

    www.geni.com/people/Juan-Yáñez-de-Castilla-y...

    Son of Juan el de Tarifa, señor de Valencia de Campos and María II la Buena Díaz de Haro, señora de Vizcaya Husband of Isabel de Portugal, senhora de Penela Father of María Díaz de Haro, señora de Vizcaya Brother of Lope de Castilla y Haro and Maria Díaz de Haro Half brother of Alfonso de Castilla, señor de Valencia de Campos

  9. Juan De Haro. (bef. 1264 - 1319) Juan De Haro. Born before Apr 1264 in Of, Sevilla, Castile. Ancestors. Son of Alfonso Fernández (Castilla) de Castilla and Yolanda Aragón. Brother of Martin (UNKNOWN) Unknown [half], Beatrice (Castilla) de Portugal [half], Urraca (UNKNOWN) Unknown [half], Fernando (Bourgogne) de la Cerda, Berenguela (UNKNOWN ...

  10. Juan de Haro - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

    es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_de_Haro

    Juan de Haro, apodado el Tuerto por haber perdido un ojo en una batalla junto a su padre, fue un noble castellano, primer señor de Cuéllar y XI señor de Vizcaya, alférez mayor de Castilla y adelantado mayor de la Frontera durante el reinado de Alfonso XI, del que fue cotutor durante su minoría de edad; Alfonso XI, sin embargo, ya adulto ...

  11. Juan de Castilla y Haro - Wikipedia

    wiki.alquds.edu/?query=Juan_de_Castilla_y_Haro

    Juan de Castilla y Haro, most commonly known as Juan el Tuerto (the one-eyed) (b. ? - d. - d. 31 October 1326, Toro ), was a Spanish noble of the House of Haro and of the royal line of the Kingdom of Castile descended from Alfonso X of Castile .