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  1. Pedro González de Mendoza (3 May 1428 – 11 January 1495) was a Spanish cardinal, statesman and lawyer. He served on the council of King Enrique 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 ...

  2. Apr 30, 2024 · Pedro González, cardinal de Mendoza (born May 3, 1428, Guadalajara, Castile [Spain]—died January 11, 1495, Guadalajara) was a Spanish prelate and diplomat who influenced Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragon and was called, even in his own time, “the third king of Spain.”

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Pedro González de Mendoza (m. Batalla de Aljubarrota, 14 de agosto de 1385) fue un noble, poeta y militar castellano de la Casa de Mendoza. Era hijo de Gonzalo Yáñez de Mendoza y de Juana de Orozco. 1 . Fue IX señor de Mendoza, I señor de Almazán, señor de Mendívil, señor de Mártioda y señor de Hita y Buitrago, entre otras muchas ...

  4. Escudo del cardenal en el coro de la catedral de Sigüenza. El cardenal Pedro González de Mendoza por Matías Moreno (Museo del Prado). Pedro González de Mendoza (Guadalajara, 3 de mayo de 1428-ibidem, 11 de enero de 1495) fue un eclesiástico, político, militar y mecenas castellano, conocido como Gran Cardenal de España.

  5. Gran Cardenal de España. Guadalajara, c. 1427 – 11.I.1495. Obispo de Calahorra y de Sigüenza, administrador de la sede de Osma, arzobispo de Sevilla y de Toledo, capellán de Juan II y consejero de Enrique IV y de los Reyes Católicos. El cardenal Pedro González de Mendoza nació en Guadalajara en torno a 1427 en el seno de uno de los ...

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  7. Guadalajara, Jan. 11, 1495. Son of the Marquis of Santillana, he took his doctorate in law at the University of Salamanca (1452); he became bishop of Calahorra (Nov. 28, 1453) and Sig ü enza (Oct. 30, 1467) and in 1473 cardinal and chancellor of Castile.

  8. On May 7, 1473, he was created cardinal-deacon with the titular church of S. Maria in Dominica; on May 9, 1474, he became Archbishop of Seville; on July 6, 1478, cardinal-priest with the titular church of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme; and finally, on November 13, 1482, Archbishop of Toledo and Primate of Spain.

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