Héctor de Pignatelli y Colonna
Héctor Pignatelli y Colonna | |
---|---|
Viceroy of Catalonia | |
In office 1603–1611 | |
Preceded by | Joan Terès i Borrull |
Succeeded by | Pedro Manrique de Lara |
Personal details | |
Born | 28 October 1572 |
Died | 4 August 1622 | (aged 49)
Spouse | Caterina Caracciolo y Mendoza |
Children | Girolama Pignatelli y Caracciolo |
Parent(s) | Camilo Pignatelli, 3rd Duke of Monteleón Girolama Colonna |
Héctor de Pignatelli y Colonna (28 October 1572 – 4 August 1622), also known as Ettore III Pignatelli, was the fourth Duke of Monteleón. He served as Viceroy of Catalonia from 1603 to 1611.
Early life
Pignatelli was born on 28 October 1572. He was the son and heir of Camillo Pignatell, 3rd Duke of Monteleón (d. 1583) and Girolama Colonna y d'Aragona.
His paternal grandparents were Ettore Pignatelli, 2nd Duke of Monteleone, and, his first wife, Diana Folch de Cardona y Gonzaga (daughter of Pedro Folch de Cardona, 3rd Count of Colisano, and Susanna Gonzaga). His maternal grandparents were Ascanio Colonna di Paliano, 1st Count of Tagliacozzo (1500–1557) and Giovanna d'Aragona. Monteleón's paternal grandfather was the nephew and heir of the same named Ettore Pignatelli, 1st Duke of Monteleone, who had been viceroy of Sicily from 1517 to 1534, had been elevated to the title of "Duke of Monteleone"[a] by Emperor Charles V, on 29 March 1527.[1]
Career
Upon the death of his father in 1583, when he was only nine years old, he inherited the Duchy of Monteleón.
He served as the Viceroy of Catalonia from 1603 to 1611 who in 1610 took the decision to expel the Moriscos born and living in Spain who were not willing to relinquish their Islamic faith.
Personal life
Monteleón married Caterina Caracciolo y Mendoza, a daughter of Carlo Caracciolo, 6th Count of Sant'Angelo, and Ana de Mendoza, but they had no sons.
- Girolama Pignatelli y Caracciolo (1599–1667), who married Fabrizio Pignatelli, 3rd Prince of Noia, eldest son of Giulio Pignatelli, 2nd Prince of Noia and, his first wife, Zenobia Pignatelli. Among Fabrizio's much younger half-siblings (from the 2nd Prince's fourth wife) were Niccolò Pignatelli, 8th Duke of Monteleone,[2] and Cardinal Francesco Pignatelli, who was nearly elected Pope in 1721, but Spain vetoed his candidature.[3]
Upon his death on 4 August 1622, he was succeeded by his daughter, Girolama, who became Duchess of Monteleone. In due course, Girolama passed her father's ducal title on to her son Ettore, who became 5th Duke of Monteleone and 4th Prince of Noia.[4]
Descendants
Through his daughter Girolama, he was a grandfather of Ettore Pignatelli, 4th Prince of Noia (1620–1674), who married the heiress Giovanna "Juana" Tagliavia d'Aragona Cortés, Princess of Castelvetrano, and Duchess of Terranova,[5] after which the family used the surname, "Aragona Pignatelli Cortés" for all their descendants, who where, however, generally known as "Pignatelli d'Aragona".[6][b]
Legacy
The 15th-century chronicle Diurnali del duca di Monteleone is named after a manuscript he once owned.[7]
Notes
- ^ Monteleone refers to the village of Monteleone di Calabria, now Vibo Valentia.
- ^ Through Héctor's grandson, Ettore Pignatelli, 4th Prince of Noia (1620–1674), he was a great-grandfather of Fabrizio Pignatelli, 5th Prince of Noia (1640–1677), who was himself the father of Giovanna Pignatelli de Aragón, 6th Princess of Noia (1666–1723), who married Niccolò Pignatelli, 8th Duke of Monteleone (a younger half-brother of Fabrizio Pignatelli, 3rd Prince of Noia).[2]
References
- ^ Cancila, Rossella (2015). "Pignatelli, Ettore". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 83: Piacentini–Pio V (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
- ^ a b Clavijero, Francisco Javier (1780). Storia Antica del Messico cavata da'mighori storici spagnuoli e da' manoscritti ...: divisa in dieci libri, e corredata di carte geografiche e di varie figure e dissertazioni sulla Terra, sugli animali, e sugli abitatori del Messico (in Italian). per Gregorio Biasini all' Insegna di Pallade. p. 237. Retrieved 6 May 2025.
- ^ Miranda, Salvador. "PIGNATELLI, seniore, Theat., Francesco (1652-1734)". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Florida International University. OCLC 53276621.
- ^ Aldimari, Biagio (1691). Historia genealogica della famiglia Carafa pt 2. Stamperia di Giacomo Raillard. p. 314.
- ^ George L. Williams (2004). Papal Genealogy: The Families And Descendants of the Popes. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-2071-1.
- ^ The Pignatelli Aragona Cortés Line. Official site of the Pignatelli family. Retrieved 21 January 2011 (in Italian)
- ^ Musto, Ronald G. (2019). Writing Southern Italy Before the Renaissance: Trecento Historians of the Mezzogiorno. Routledge. pp. 20–21..
Bibliography
- Mariela Fargas Peñarrocha, "Héctor Pignatelli y Colonna", Diccionario Biográfico Español (2018).