Pedro González de Mendoza

Pedro González de Mendoza (3 May 1428 – 11 January 1495)[1] was a Spanish cardinal, statesman and lawyer. He served on the council of King Henry IV of Castile and in 1467 fought for him at the Second Battle of Olmedo. In 1468 he was named bishop of Sigüenza and in 1473 he became cardinal and archbishop of Seville and appointed chancellor of Castile.


Pedro González de Mendoza
Cardinal, Archbishop of Toledo
Primate of Spain
Portrait of Cardinal Mendoza by Juan Rodríguez de Segovia (c. 1484).
ChurchRoman Catholic
ArchdioceseToledo
Appointed13 November 1482
Term ended11 January 1495
PredecessorAlfonso Carrillo de Acuña
SuccessorFrancisco Jiménez de Cisneros
Other post(s)Titular Patriarch of Alexandria (1482–95)
Cardinal-Priest of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme (1478–95)
Bishop of Sigüenza (1467–95)
Previous post(s)Archbishop of Seville
(1474–82)
Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria in Domnica (1473–78)
Bishop of Calahorra y La Calzada (1453–67)
Orders
Consecration21 July 1454
Created cardinal7 May 1473
by Pope Sixtus IV
RankCardinal-Priest
Personal details
Born3 May 1428
Died11 January 1495 (aged 66)
Guadalajara, Crown of Castile
ParentsÍñigo López de Mendoza
Catalina Suarez de Figueroa

In the subsequent succession dispute, Mendoza supported Isabel's right to succeed her brother, Enrique IV, and participated in the battle of Toro, where the forces of Ferdinand and Isabella defeated the supporters of Juana la Beltraneja. Mendoza's Castilian chancellorship was reconfirmed by Isabel, and in 1482 he became cardinal-archbishop of Toledo and Primate of Spain. He presided over the royal council for 20 years and his influence was such that he was called "the Third King" during the reign of Isabel and Ferdinand.[2]

Biography

edit

Pedro González de Mendoza was born on 3 May 1428 at Guadalajara in New Castile.[1] He was the fifth son of Íñigo López de Mendoza and Catalina Suarez de Figueroa. The Mendoza family was the most powerful noble family in Spain at the time.[2]

González de Mendoza remained in Guadalajara until 1442 when he was sent to Toledo to continue his education under the auspices of Archbishop Gutierre Álvarez de Toledo. In Toledo he studied rhetoric, history and Latin. While still a teenager he was granted several ecclesiastical benefices, including the parish of Santa María in the town of Hita and the archdeacon of Guadalajara. When the archbishop died in 1446, he moved to the University of Salamanca, where he studied civil and canon law and earned doctorates in both by 1452.[3]

In 1452 he joined the court of Juan II of Castile as a member of the Royal Chapel. As a result of his influential family and status as chaplain to the king, Mendoza was soon appointed to his first bishopric: in 1453 he was selected by Juan II to become Bishop of Calahorra. The pope later confirmed his election and Mendoza was consecrated in 1454 by Alfonso Carrillo de Acuña, the Archbishop of Toledo.[3]

As Bishop of Calahorra he was also señor, or civil and military ruler, of the town and its dependent district. In his secular capacity he led the levies of Calahorra in the civil wars of the reign of Henry IV. He fought for the king at the second battle of Olmedo on 20 August 1467 and was wounded in the arm.[citation needed]

During these years he became attached to Mencia de Lemos, a Portuguese lady-in-waiting of the Consort queen. They had two sons, Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar Mendoza, who was once selected to be the husband of Lucrezia Borgia, and Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 1st Count of Melito who became the grandfather of the princess of Eboli of the reign of Philip II of Spain (see Antonio Perez).[citation needed]

By Inés de Tovar, a lady of a Valladolid family, he had a third son (Juan Hurtado de Mendoza y Tovar) who afterwards emigrated to France.[citation needed]

In 1467 Pedro became Bishop of Sigüenza.[4] In 1473 he was created cardinal, was promoted to the Archdiocese of Seville and named chancellor of Castile. During the last years of the reign of King Henry IV. he was the partisan of the Princess Isabella, afterwards queen, while his eldest brother Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 2nd marquis of Santillana, remained however faithful to king Henry IV of Castile, till his death in December 1474.[citation needed]

Pedro, the cadet brother, fought for her at the Battle of Toro on 1 March 1476, when King Henry IV had died already. He had a prominent part in placing her on the throne; and served her indefatigably in her efforts to suppress the disorderly nobles of Castile. In 1482 he became Archbishop of Toledo.[citation needed]

When his oldest brother and head of the whole family, Diego, swore allegiance to Princess Isabella after Henry's death in December 1474, he was duly rewarded by Queen Isabella I of Castile, awarding Diego the title of Duke of the Infantado on 22 July 1475. The title would be awarded the Grandee of Spain in 1519 by king Charles I of Spain.[citation needed]

During the conquest of Granada, Pedro contributed largely to the maintenance of the army. On 2 January 1492, he occupied the town in the name of the Catholic sovereigns. Though his life was worldly, and though he was more soldier and statesman than priest, the "Great Cardinal", as he was commonly called, did not neglect his duty as a bishop. He used his influence with the queen and also at Rome to arrange a settlement of the disputes between the Spanish sovereigns and the papacy. He was also an advocate of Christopher Columbus.[5]

Though he maintained a splendid household as archbishop of Toledo, and, provided handsomely for his children, he devoted part of his revenue to charity, and with a part he endowed the Palacio de Santa Cruz for a college of Valladolid University. His health broke down at the close of 1493.[citation needed]

Queen Isabella visited and nursed him on his deathbed in Guadalajara. It is said that he recommended her to choose as his successor the Franciscan Jimenez de Cisneros, a man who had no likeness to himself save in political faculty and devotion to the authority of the Crown.[citation needed]

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  2. ^ a b Liss 2003.
  3. ^ a b Nieto n.d.
  4. ^ "Pedro Cardinal González de Mendoza [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2024-05-27.
  5. ^ Herbermann 1913.

References

edit
  • Campbell, Gordon (2003). "Mendoza, Pedro González de". The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance (electronic ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191727795.
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Liss, Peggy (2003). "Gonzalez de Mendoza, Pedro". In Gerli, E. Michael (ed.). Medieval Iberia : an encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. p. 365. ISBN 0-415-93918-6.
  • Nieto, Diego Gonzalez (n.d.). "Pedro González de Mendoza". Real Academia de la Historia (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-12-21.
edit