domingo, 29 de mayo de 2022

Leonor Teles de Menezes ♔ Ref: TV-1350 |•••► #PORTUGAL 🏆🇵🇹★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 (Es Tu Tía Abuela Número 21)-is your 21st great aunt de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Leonor Teles de Menezes, Rainha de Portugal is your 21st great aunt.


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

 (Linea Materna)

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Leonor Teles de Menezes, Rainha de Portugal is your 21st great aunt.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Eloina Alamo

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → María Manuela Ibarra y Galindo

her mother → Andres Eugenio Rafael Ibarra é Ibarra

her father → Juan Julián de Ibarra y Herrera

his father → Antonia Nicolasa Sarmiento de Herrera y Loaisa

his mother → Juan Sarmiento de Herrera y Fernández Pacheco, Alférez Mayor

her father → Agustín Sarmiento de Herrera y Rojas

his father → Diego Sarmiento de Rojas y Ayala

his father → Pedro Fernández de Saavedra y Escobar, el Mozo

his father → Catalina Escobar de las Roelas

his mother → Juana de Ribera y Gudiel de las Roelas

her mother → Perafán de Rivera y Dávila

her father → Gómez Davila Fajardo, 6to Señor de San Roman, Villanueva, Guadamora y la Ventosa

his father → Inés Fajardo y Quesada

his mother → Teresa Rodríguez de Avilés

her mother → Beatriz Fernández Pacheco Téllez de Meneses

her mother → Inês de Menezes

her mother → Gonçalo Teles de Menezes, 1º conde de Neiva

her father → Leonor Teles de Menezes, Rainha de Portugal

his sisterConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

Shortest in-law relationship

Leonor Teles de Menezes, Rainha de Portugal is your 20th great grandfather's wife.


Leonor Teles de Menezes, Rainha de Portugal  MP

Spanish: Leonor Teles e Vasconcelos, Rainha de Portugal

Gender: Female

Birth: estimated between 1314 and 1362  

Death: April 27, 1386

Convento de Tordesillas, Valladolid, Castille and Leon, Spain

Place of Burial: Convento de la Merced, Valladolid, Castille and Leon, Spain

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Martim Afonso Telo de Menezes and Aldonça Anes de Vasconcelos

Wife of João da Cunha, 2.º senhor de Pombeiro and Fernando I o Gentil, rei de Portugal

Mother of Alvaro da Cunha, 3.º Senhor de Pombeiro; Beatriz de Portugal, reina consorte de Castilla; Afonso de Portugal and Pedro de Portugal

Sister of João Afonso Telo de Menezes, 6º conde de Barcelos; Gonçalo Teles de Menezes, 1º conde de Neiva; Maria Teles de Menezes; Vasco Teles de Meneses and Rodrigo Afonso Pimentel

Half sister of Joana Telles de Menezes 


Added by: Bjørn P. Brox on June 8, 2007

Managed by: Victar and 28 others

Curated by: Victar

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Confirmed Matches3 confirmed matches


Leonor Telles De Menezes in Famous People Throughout History


Leonor Teles De Menezes in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Leonora Teles De Menezes in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index

Overview

Media (11)

Timeline

Discussions

Sources (5)

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonor_Telles_de_Meneses


From https://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A2344790 :


Leonor, the Scheming Queen of Portugal


King Pedro I of Portugal died in 1367, to be succeeded by his legitimate son, Fernando, son of Queen Constança.


The Marriage


A few years into the reign of King Fernando I there was a revolt of the populace against him, during which 3,000 men took to arms in Lisbon. The protest was not about the King's attempt to gain the throne of Castile but about his proposed marriage with Leonor Teles, the niece of his late father's favourite, João Afonso Teles, Count of Barcelos.


In 1372, King Fernando I took the plunge and married Leonor Teles de Meneses, a lady of renowned beauty (and doubtful morals), in secret at the monastery of Leça do Balio. She was a descendant of the Mendes (de Meneses), whose breeding was more noble than that of the king. The escutcheon of the Mendes was a field d'or1. There was no emblazon or device2 on this field, declaring that they were before all other families that required an emblem. She was also a descendant of the Afonsine kings3 ; Leonor's mother could trace her ancestry back to Teresa Sanchez, the illegitimate daughter of King Sancho I and his mistress, Maria Pais da Ribeira.


This was Leonor's second marriage. Her first marriage, with João Lourenço da Cunha, was arranged while she was still very young. It is thought that she had been divorced for adultery, but the king insisted that her marriage had been annulled by reason of consanguity. Like his father, Fernando had decided that there was only one woman for him4. The King quickly disposed of the leaders of the protest of the year before.


In December, King Henry of Castile invaded through Almeida, supposedly in protest of King Fernando and Leonor's marriage. His reasoning was that one of his daughters would have proved a much more suitable bride. He was probably right, as it is apparent that Leonor was as haughty, ruthless and scheming as she was beautiful.


At the official wedding in 1373, the members of the court were required to kiss the Queen's hand. Dom5 Dinis, son of Inêz de Castro who was half-brother to the King, refused to do this. As the new queen would brook no opposition, Dom Dinis found himself exiled.


Leonor had a full brother, Gonçales, a full sister, Maria, and a half-sister, Joanna. Maria was married to the prince, Dom João, the eldest son of Inêz and half-brother of the king. Their father, Martin Afonso Teles was brother to João Afonso Teles, the Count of Barcelos and erstwhile Count of Ourém.


King Fernando and Leonor had but one child, Princess Beatriz.


The Murder


Queen Leonor, now a double adulteress (as she was openly enamoured of João Fernandes de Andeiro, the current Count of Ourém) arranged for her sister Maria to be murdered in the Palace of Sub-Ripas6, Coimbra.


The story of the murder is this. Maria Teles had secretly married Dom João, the son of King Pedro and Inêz and (some would say) the true heir to the throne. For this reason, she had incurred the anger of her sister the queen, who meant to keep all the power and influence to herself. Leonor worked on this prince's fiery temperament, and persuaded him that if he were free he could marry his niece, Beatriz, and thereby make doubly sure of gaining the crown.


The ambitious prince was determined to remove his wife himself. After a banquet, at which most of the nobility were present, Dom João collected some of his friends and proposed that they ride to Coimbra to visit his wife.


Dawn the next day found them at the convent of Santa Anna, at the crossing of the Mondego river. There, the prince informed his followers that he suspected his wife of infidelity, which was the rumour that Leonor had spread, and that he intended to surprise her in her adultery and punish her by death7.


Continuing their journey, they came to Coimbra and the palace in the Rua de Sub-Ripas. There, finding that the door had been left open by the early rising servants, João rushed in and leapt up the stairs to his wife's chambers.


Hearing the noise, Maria rose from her bed, gathering the coverlet around her in modesty. Dashing the blanket from her, leaving her naked, Dom João drew his dagger, which had been given to him as a present by his own brother-in-law Gonçales, and stabbed her in full view of his companions. Confronted by this shocking scene, the nobles were aghast and found themselves unable to stop the frenzied prince, who continued to hack at his wife until she was dead.


Having completed his crime the Infante8 fled the city and wandered all over Beira9, a prey to his remorse. Eventually Queen Leonor intervened and his pardon was issued. However, he now had not the slightest chance of marrying his niece. Although departing from the court to spend a self-appointed exile in one of his castles in the north, he was then hunted down by his son and his brother-in-law, who hounded him even further north out of Portugal into Galicia, where he remained exiled until his death.


Leonor also arranged the deaths of the other two children of Pedro and Inêz, thus clearing all the offspring of that liaison out of the way except for her nephew, Maria's son.


The Interregnum


When King Fernando died there was a crisis in the kingdom, for who was the heir?


Juan of Castile claimed the kingdom by the right of his wife, Beatriz (then aged ten) which upset the general population as they were rather keen on remaining Portuguese. On her marriage to a foreigner, Beatriz had forfeited her right to the throne of Portugal; this could only be inherited by a royal daughter who had married a Portuguese nobleman. The inheritance law had been set up like this to avoid such a claim from the ruler of another country.


Many thought that Prince João, the son of Pedro I and Inêz, should be the king as they considered him legitimate. He was excluded from the succession because of the murder of his wife, Maria Teles.


The third contender was Dom João, Master of Aviz10, the son of King Pedro and his later mistress Teresa.


In December João Fernandes de Andeiro, Count of Ourém, was for the Master of Aviz, and led a popular revolt. However, his support for what Leonor considered the wrong side cost him dearly. His mistress, now Queen Regent, soon cunningly arranged his death. She appointed the Master of Aviz to the post of Alcaide11 of Ourém, both as a means of getting him out of the way and to promote rivalry between him and De Andeiro, but João marched in the other direction, to Lisbon. Here Alvaro Pais, a leading citizen of Lisbon, raised the people and they surrounded the Royal Palace so that De Andeiro could not escape. However, they let João through without pursuit. Things did not work out quite as planned as the people enthusiastically set fire to the palace. In the ensuing chaos the abandoned favourite of the Queen was stabbed by Dom João. On his exit from the palace the crowd of Lisbon acclaimed the Master of Aviz and declared him to be 'the Ruler and Defender of the Kingdom'.


The Count was buried in the Convent da Graça, Santárem. The Queen Dowager Leonor fled and Dom João, the Master of Aviz, assumed the regency.


The Alcaide of Bragança, João Afonso Pimentel, supported Beatriz as she was family. He was married to Queen Leonor de Teles's half-sister, Joana. Nuno Alvares Pereira helped him to change his mind and support the Master of Aviz.


The Alcaide of Penela, João Afonso Teles (previously Count of Barcelos and now Count of Viana de a par de Alvito) pledged to support Beatriz. He was Leonor Teles's uncle and therefore Beatriz's great-uncle. There was a passive resistance from the population of the town but when he went out with an armed escort of forty horsemen to collect the taxes in the form of food, his horse was attacked. In the melée he fell off and the taxpayers decapitated him. The escort fled. The townsfolk of Penela declared for Dom João.


The End of Power


The next year the struggle was continued. Leonor Teles was unsuccessfully besieged by Dom João when she occupied Torres Vedras. Leonor sent for aid from her son-in-law, Juan of Castile. The Master of Avis, however, left off the siege of his own accord to go to the Cortes12 which were called at Coimbra, and half the population of Torres Vedras followed him.


Unable to summon her son-in-law to her aid, Leonor travelled to Castile to see if she could persuade Juan to take up arms on Beatriz's behalf, believing that she would then have power as the Queen mother.


The year 1405 saw the demise of Leonor Teles. Despite all her scheming she had ended her life obscurely, imprisoned in Tordesillas, for her son-in-law had found her very troublesome as well. She was buried in Valledolid.


References


Murrays' Handbook to Portugal. 1875 3rd Edition. Rev.J.M.Neale

Breve História de Portugal. José Hermano Saraivo 1979

1 A gold background.

2 Most coats of arms have a symbol or collection of symbols denoting something about the owner.

3 The Afonsine kings were the first dynasty of Portuguese monarchs, taking their name from Afonso Henriques, the first King of Portugal. Fernando I was to be the last of this line.

4 King Pedro I declared that he was married to Inêz de Castro. They had had four children before she was murdered. Pedro stated on their tombstones that he would love her alone until the end of time. Only his marriage to Constança had been recognised by his father and hence Fernando had been declared the heir.

5 Portuguese honorific equivalent to Lord.

6 This house is constructed within the Roman and medieval walls of the city and an old tower of the town has become the circular staircase.

7 At this time the penalty for a husband killing an adulterous wife was light, if the adultery was proven.

8 Royal Prince.

9 A province of the north of Portugal.

10 The head of the Military Order of Knights of Aviz.

11 Governor of the castle and area.

12 Ruling courts and councils which were held at different times in various cities throughout the land.

Leonor Telles de Menezes


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Dona Leonor (Elionor) Telles (Teles) de Menezes (Meneses) (1350 - April 27, 1386), called by the people at her time a Aleivosa ("The Treacherous"), was queen consort of Portugal during the 14th century. Born in Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, she served as queen consort from 1372 to 1383 and as regent from 1383 to 1384.


Married at a young age to a courtier named Dom João Lourenço da Cunha, 3rd Senhor de Pombeiro, with whom she had a son, Dom Álvaro da Cunha, she would be seduced by Ferdinand I of Portugal when he was a prince. This would occur while Leonor was visiting her sister Maria Telles, lady-in-waiting to Ferdinand's half-sister Beatrice, infanta of Portugal.


Ferdinand managed to annul her first marriage to João Lourenço da Cunha on grounds of consanguinity and on May 5, 1372 secretly married Leonor Telles de Menezes.


Upon the death of Ferdinand (1383), Leonor was nominated regent in the name of her daughter Beatrice (Beatriz). From 1383 onwards, Leonor ruled with her lover, João Fernandes Andeiro, 2nd Conde de Ourém, called Conde Andeiro, which angered the nobility and the lower classes. Beatrice's marriage to the Castilian king John I led to the expulsion of both mother and daughter.


The loss of independence had been unthinkable for the majority of Portuguese nobles. A rebellion led by the Master of the Order of Aviz, future João I of Portugal, started in that year, leading to the 1383-1385 Crisis.


She died in exile at a monastery at Tordesillas.



NN, dizem alguns autores corresponder a Beatriz de Portugal (Brites de Portugal), meia-irmã de Fernando I de Portugal, filha de Pedro I e Inês de Castro.



Rainha de Portugal

Foto: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Leonor_Telles_de_Menezes


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text View

Showing 12 of 17 people


Fernando I o Gentil, rei de Port...

husband


Beatriz de Portugal, reina conso...

daughter


Afonso de Portugal

son


Pedro de Portugal

son


João da Cunha, 2.º senhor de P...

husband


Alvaro da Cunha, 3.º Senhor de ...

son


Martim Afonso Telo de Menezes

father


Aldonça Anes de Vasconcelos

mother


João Afonso Telo de Menezes, 6...

brother


Gonçalo Teles de Menezes, 1º c...

brother


Maria Teles de Menezes

sister


Vasco Teles de Meneses

brother

<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Leonor Teles

Origem: Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre.

Disambig grey.svg Nota: Para a realizadora portuguesa, veja Leonor Teles (cineasta). Para outros significados, veja Leonor, rainha de Portugal.


Este artigo cita fontes, mas estas não cobrem todo o conteúdo. Ajude a inserir referências. Conteúdo não verificável poderá ser removido.—Encontre fontes: Google (notícias, livros e acadêmico) (Junho de 2020)

Leonor Teles de Menezes

Leonor Teles, a aleivosa

Dona Leonor Teles,

consorte do rei Dom Fernando I de Portugal

Rainha de Portugal

Reinado

Março de 1372 – 22 de outubro de 1383

Regente de Portugal

Reinado

1383 – 1384

Regente

Beatriz de Portugal

 

Nascimento

1350

 

Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal

Morte

1405 (55 anos)[1]

Sepultado em

Convento de la Merced, em Valladolid, Espanha[1]

Cônjuge

Fernando I de Portugal

Descendência

Beatriz, Rainha de Castela

Afonso de Portugal

Casa

Teles de Meneses

Borgonha

Pai

Martim Afonso Telo de Meneses

Mãe

Aldonça Anes de Vasconcelos

Leonor Teles, cognominada a Aleivosa (Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, c. 1350 – Tordesilhas, 27 de abril de 1386, ou 1390-1406[1]) foi rainha de Portugal entre 1372 e 1383, pelo seu casamento com Fernando I de Portugal. Foi regente de Portugal de 1383 a 1384.



Índice

1 Vida

1.1 Rainha

2 Crise de 1383–1385

3 Descendência

4 Títulos e estilos

5 Na literatura

6 Referências

7 Bibliografia

8 Ligações externas

Vida

Leonor era sobrinha de João Afonso Telo de Meneses, conde de Barcelos, descendia por seu pai Martim Afonso Telo de Meneses do rei Fruela II das Astúrias e Leão e, por sua mãe Aldonça Anes de Vasconcelos,[2] de Teresa Sanches, filha bastarda do rei Sancho I de Portugal.


Ainda muito jovem, Leonor casou-se com João Lourenço da Cunha, filho do morgado do Pombeiro, com quem teve um filho: Álvaro da Cunha. O casamento foi anulado, pois o rei Fernando quis casar com ela, rompendo o noivado que tinha com a filha do rei de Castela, também ela de nome Leonor.


Leonor Teles foi a primeira rainha nascida em Portugal. Foi regente por alguns meses e foi afastada depois duma revolta.


Rainha


Estátua de Fernando I e Leonor Teles em Leça do Balio

Conta-se que, numa altura em que visitou a irmã Maria Teles, aia da infanta Beatriz, o rei Fernando I de Portugal ficou loucamente apaixonado por Leonor — que Fernão Lopes descreveu como sendo "louçana e aposta e de bom corpo (...), com suas fremosas feiçõoes e graça", querendo-a tomar por amante. Leonor resistiu e o rei ficou sabendo que só a teria por via de casamento. Alegando-se uma remota consanguinidade, foi obtida a anulação do primeiro casamento de Leonor Teles e preparado o casamento com o rei. Isto motivou uma enorme reprovação popular, a revolta foi reprimida e manchou negativamente a imagem da rainha.[3]


O casamento público com o rei ocorreu no Mosteiro de Leça do Balio, em 15 de maio de 1372, havendo notícia de que teria sido precedido por um outro, este secreto, ainda em 1371. Leça do Balio era pertença da Ordem do Hospital, o prior era Álvaro Gonçalves Pereira, pai de Nuno Álvares Pereira.[4] Em fevereiro de 1373, nascia a infanta Beatriz. Nesse mesmo ano, na altura da segunda guerra fernandina, a rainha armou por sua vontade Nuno Álvares cavaleiro, ficando o jovem, com cerca de treze anos, escudeiro da rainha.


Temendo o prestígio do infante D. João, que se casara com sua irmã Maria Teles de Menezes,[5] Leonor concebeu o plano de casar o infante com sua filha Beatriz. Mas para isso era preciso eliminar Maria Teles de Menezes, sua própria irmã, acção por que terá sido responsável, ao insinuar que esta seria adúltera. João, enfurecido, matou a mulher, e apresentou-se como viúvo disponível à cunhada, que logo o acusou de homicídio, tendo sido preso e exilado pelo crime cometido, afastando assim um temível rival ao trono. Seguindo a mesma linha, em 1382, mandou prender em Évora, outro cunhado: João, mestre de Avis e com ordem de execução. Valeu a João a ajuda do conde de Cambridge e foi solto.[6]


As rainhas de Portugal contaram, desde muito cedo, com os rendimentos de bens, adquiridos, na sua grande maioria, por doação. Leonor Teles, através de doação de Fernando, recebeu Vila Viçosa, Abrantes, Almada, Sintra, Torres Vedras, Alenquer, Atouguia, Óbidos, Aveiro, bem como os reguengos de Sacavém, Frielas, Unhos e a terra de Melres, em Ribadouro. Trocou Vila Viçosa por Vila Real em 1374 e adquiriu Pinhel em 1376.[7]


Em 1382 terminou a última guerra fernandina. No ano seguinte é assinado o tratado de Salvaterra de Magos que estipula as condições de paz e quem seria o próximo rei.


Crise de 1383–1385

Ver artigo principal: Crise dinástica de 1383–1385


Morte do Conde de Andeiro (Museu Nacional Soares dos Reis, Porto)

Com a morte de Fernando em 22 de outubro de 1383, Leonor assumiu a regência do reino e o seu amante, João Fernandes Andeiro, passou a exercer uma influência decisiva na corte.[8] Esta ligação e influência desagradavam manifestamente ao povo e à burguesia e a alguma nobreza que odiavam a regente e temiam ser governados por um soberano castelhano.


D. João, mestre de Avis, apoiado por um grupo de conspiradores, entre os quais o jovem Nuno Álvares Pereira, que terá tido a ideia original, e Álvaro Pais, foi incentivado pelo descontentamento geral a assassinar o conde Andeiro.[8] A acção ocorreu no paço, a 6 de dezembro de 1383 e iniciou o processo de obtenção da regência em nome do infante João, mas este foi preso pelo rei de Castela.[9]


Leonor abandonou Lisboa, fiel ao mestre de Avis, e refugiou-se em Alenquer e depois em Santarém, cidades fiéis à causa da rainha, onde tentou manobrar politicamente a sua continuidade no poder. Álvaro Pais propôs à rainha casar com o mestre de Avis, mas ela recusou.[8][9] Com o desenvolver do conflito entre o mestre de Avis e o rei castelhano, a regente perdeu espaço de manobra e acabou por ser constrangida a abdicar da regência a favor de João I de Castela e de Beatriz, sua filha, a esposa do rei castelhano.


Com a vitória do partido do mestre de Avis na guerra civil e contra Castela, este tornou-se regente e depois rei. O rei João I de Castela, genro de Leonor, logo em 1384, pouco depois dela ter renunciado à regência, havia-a internado no Mosteiro de Tordesilhas, perto de Valladolid, onde, segundo alguns historiadores, faleceu em 1386. No entanto, referências do cronista castelhano López de Ayala, seu contemporâneo, dão-na como viva em 1390 ou até 1406.[1]


Descendência

Do seu primeiro casamento com João Lourenço da Cunha, filho do morgado do Pombeiro, nasceu:


Álvaro da Cunha (c.1371-1415), partidário de D. João, mestre de Avis, durante a Crise de 1383–1385, morreu de peste no regresso da Conquista de Ceuta.

Depois de anulado o primeiro matrimónio por motivos de consanguinidade, a 15 de Maio de 1372 casou-se em segundas núpcias com o rei D. Fernando I de Portugal. Desta união nasceram:


Beatriz de Portugal (1373), pretendente ao trono do pai, rainha consorte de Castela, casada com o rei D. João I de Castela;

Afonso (1382), que morreu quatro dias após o nascimento;

Pedro (1383), que morreu horas após o nascimento.

Títulos e estilos

A rainha usou os seguintes títulos:


1371 — 1383: Dona Leonor, pela graça de Santa Maria, Rainha de Portugal e do Algarve;[10]

1383 — 1384: Dona Leonor, pela graça de Deus, Rainha, Governadora e Regente dos reinos de Portugal e do Algarve.[11]

Na literatura

Fernão Lopes, cronista do reino de Duarte I, faz um exaustivo retrato de Leonor na Crónica de el-rei D. Fernando e na primeira parte da Crónica de El-Rei D. João I de Boa Memória.

O romance histórico, em versão novela, de Alexandre Herculano, Aras por Foro de Espanha - parte da sua famosa colecção Lendas e Narrativas.

O romance Rosa Brava de José Manuel Saraiva é baseado na vida de Leonor Teles[12].

O romance Eu, Leonor Teles de Maria Pilar Queralt del Hierro.

O romance Dona Leonor Teles de Heloísa Maranhão, escritora brasileira, conta como uma brasileira do século XX alucina que é a rainha e passa a viver a vida de Leonor.

A peça D. Leonor, Rainha Maravilhosamente, de Alice Sampaio.

O romance Leonor Teles ou o Canto da Salamandra de Seomara da Veiga Ferreira.

O romance Vida Ignorada de Leonor Teles de António Cândido Franco.

O romance " Padeira de Aljubarrota" de Maria João Lopo de Carvalho.

Referências

 CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?, p. 226

 CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?. p. 20

 Saraiva, (1993). História de Portugal. p. 123

 CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?. p. 24

 CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?, p. 21

 Mattoso, (1993). História de Portugal — A Monarquia Feudal. p. 496

 CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?, pp. 50-54

 FERNÃO LOPES, Crónica de El-Rei D. João I de Boa Memória

 Mattoso, (1993). História de Portugal — A Monarquia Feudal. p. 494

 Lopes, Fernão. «Crónica de D. João I». Consultado em 22 de Janeiro de 2016

 CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?, p. 169

 Rosa Brava, por José Manuel Saraiva, Oficina do Livro

Bibliografia

FERNÃO LOPES, Crónica de El-Rei D. João I de Boa Memória.

ALEXANDRE HERCULANO, Lendas e narrativas, tomo I

ANTÓNIO SÉRGIO, tomo VI; Marcelino Mesquita, D. Leonor Teles, drama, em verso, em 5 actosEnsaios,

MAURÍCIA DE FIGUEIREDO, (1914). Leonor Teles

ANTERO DE FIGUEIREDO, (1916). Leonor Teles Flor de Altura

JOAQUIM DE OLIVEIRA, (1965). Rainha D. Leonor, Figura Enigmática de Mulher (Sep. da rev. Ocidente, Lisboa.

FERREIRA ALVES, (1972). Dois Caluniados (D. Fernando I e D. Leonor Teles)

ALICE SAMPAIO (1968), D.Leonor, Rainha Maravilhosamente, peça representada no Teatro de São Luís, em Lisboa, em 1979

Maria Pilar QUERALT DEL HIERRO. Eu, Leonor Teles

HELOÍSA MARANHÃO, Dona Leonor Teles

JOSÉ MANUEL SARAIVA; 2005, Rosa Brava

CAMPOS, ISABEL MARIA GARCIA DE PINA N. BALEIRAS S. (2008), Leonor Teles, uma Mulher de Poder?, Tese de Mestrado, Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa

José Saraiva, (1993). História de Portugal. Mem Martins: Publicações Europa-América

José Mattoso, (1993). História de Portugal — A Monarquia Feudal. Círculo de Leitores.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


INDICE DE PARIENTES

INCLUYASE

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario