31 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Miro, king of the Suevi is your 31st great grandfather.
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(Linea Materna)
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Miro, king of the Suevi is your 31st great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→ Morella Álamo Borges
your mother → Belén Eloina Borges Ustáriz
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 → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina
her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza
his mother → Andrés Manuel Ortiz de Urbina y Landaeta, I Marqués de Torrecasa
her father → Manuel Ortiz de Urbina y Márquez de Cañizares
his father → Manuel de Ortiz de Urbina y Suárez
his father → Juan Ortíz de Urbina y Eguíluz
his father → Martín Ortíz de Urbina
his father → Pedro Ortiz de Urbina
his father → Ortún Díaz de Urbina
his father → Diego López
his father → Diego I el Blanco López, III señor de Vizcaya
his father → Lope Díaz Íñiguez, II señor de Vizcaya, IV Conde de Viscaya
his father → Íñigo Lopez Ezquerra, Conde y 1er. señor de Vizcaya
his father → Lope Velázquez, señor de Colindres
his father → Velasco
his father → Iñigo López, V conde de Vizcaya
his father → Lope "El Lindo" Iñiguez, IV conde de Vizcaya
his father → Elvira Bermudez Lainez
his mother → Bermudo Lainez de Castrogeriz
her father → Laín Calvo, Juez de Castilla
his father → Gundesinto de Castrogériz, Conde de Castrogeriz
his father → Singerico de Cantabria, Conde de Castrogeriz (Castroxeriz)
his father → Teodomiro CANTABRIA and Liebana
his father → Gulvira
his mother → Savaricus of Suéves
her father → Gaudioso of Suéves
his father → Eborico, king of the Suevi
his father → Miro, king of the Suevi
his father
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Miro
Latin: Mirun, Portuguese: Ario-Miro I
Gender: Male
Birth: 550
Galicia, Spain
Death: 583 (32-33)
Immediate Family:
Son of Theodemir, king of the Suevi and Radegonde Von Thüringen
Husband of Sisegutia
Father of Eborico, king of the Suevi; Nuño de Suevos da Galícia and daughter of King Miro
Brother of Andeca of Galícia; Oda of Swabian da Galícia and Hermenerica
Added by: D.Álvaro Kenedy da Silva Soares on August 2, 2022
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Miró
King of the Suebi or Swabians of Spain
Birth: 6th century
Death: 583
In office 570 – 583
Predecessor: Theodemar
Successor: Eboric
Citizenship: Kingdom of Galicia
Father: Teodomiro
Consort: Siseguta
occupation: sovereign
Biography
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miro_(Suebian_king)
Miro (Mir, Mirio, Latin: Mirus) was the Suebian King of Galicia from 570 until his death in 583. His reign was marked by attempts to forge alliances with other Chalcedonian Christian nations with the goal of checking the power of the Arian Visigoths under Leovigild. During his reign relations were established with both Francia and the Byzantine Empire and the kingdom reached its zenith, but it collapsed within three years of his death.[1][2]
Miro enjoyed good relations with the Church during his reign. In 572 he called the Second Council of Braga, a supplementary council to the First Council of Braga of 561.[2] It has even been suggested, based on the lack of a signatory for the diocese of Dumio in the concilar acts, that Miro himself may have represented that see.[3]
Miro also maintained "intimate and friendly" relations with Martin of Dumio, the Archbishop of Braga and Metropolitan of Gallaecia.[2] Martin's principal work, Formula Vitae Honestae, is dedicated to him, and the Exhortatio Humilitatis, printed among Martin's works, is also probably addressed to him.[2] Indeed, Martin advised Miro's counsellors to read his Formula so as to be able better to counsel the king.[4]
In the same year as the council of Braga, Miro conducted an expedition against the Ruccones (Runcones) of Cantabria, possibly a Basque tribe,[2] with the intention of expanding his kingdom.[5] This attack on a people within the Gothic kingdom was perhaps an excuse for Gothic reprisals against the Sueves. In 573 Leovigild subdued the region of "Sabaria" (probably between Zamora and Salamanca) with the likely intention of preempting Miro.[5] In 574 he "restored the province [of Cantabria] to his dominion."[5] In response, Miro sent envoys to Guntram, the Frankish King of Burgundy and a consistent thorn in Leovigild's side, but they were intercepted and detained on the way by Leovigild's ally, Chilperic I, the Frankish king of Neustria.[2][6]
In 575 Leovigild invaded the "Aregensian Mountains" near Ourense and captured "the lord of the region, along with his wife, children, and riches, bringing the region under his power."[6] Aspidius, the "lord of the region", may have been a Hispano-Roman landowner who had sided with the Suevi.[6] In 576 Leovigild again marched to the southern frontier of Galicia (the Douro) and menaced the small kingdom, even founding the city of Villa Gothorum (modern Toro). Miro sued for peace, and obtained it for a short time.[2] In 580 Miro endeavoured to support Leovigild's Catholic son Hermenegild in rebellion.[2]
For the events surrounding Miro's death, the contemporary and near-contemporary accounts conflict. According to Gregory of Tours, in 583 Miro led an army to raise the siege of Seville by Leovigild, but the two kings held a conference before Miro had reached Seville and he returned to Galicia, where he died shortly after, supposedly from the effects of the bad air and water of Baetica.[2] On the other hand, two Iberian chroniclers, John of Biclar and Isidore of Seville, concur that he died before Seville while assisting Leovigild with the siege of the town.[2] Modern scholarship favours Gregory's interpretation, taking into account Miro's alliances with Francia and Byzantium, Suevic animosity to the Goths, and the shared Catholic faith of Sueves and rebels.[7]
He was succeeded in provincia Gallacciæ by his adolescent son Eboric.[7][8] He also left a widow, Sisegu(n)tia, who married Andeca, who deposed Eboric and took to ruling in Gallaccia Suevorum regnum.[7][8]
Genealogy
https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/VANDALS,%20SUEVI,%20VISIGOTHS.htm
TEODEMIRO (-570). He succeeded in 561 as TEODEMIRO King of the Suevi at Lugo. He divided his territories into two ecclesiastical provinces at the assembly at Lugo, Braga and Lugo, in 569[103]. m ---. The name of Teodemiro's wife or concubine is not known. King Teodemiro & his [wife] had one child:
1. MIRÓN (-583). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. He succeeded his father in 570 as MIRÓN King of the Suevi at Lugo. … The Iohannis Abbatis Biclarensis Chronica records the death in 583 of "Miro Suevorum rex"[107]. m as her first husband, SISEGUTIA, daughter of ---. The Iohannis Abbatis Biclarensis Chronica records that "Audeca" succeeded in 584 "in Gallaccia Suevorum regnum" and married "Sisegutiam relictam Mironis regis"[108]. She married secondly (584) as his [second] wife, Audica, who had deposed King Eborico. King Mirón & his wife had two children:
a) EBORICO (-after 585). The Iohannis Abbatis Biclarensis Chronica names "Eboricus filius eius" when recording that he succeeded his father in 583 "in provincia Gallacciæ"[109]. Gregory of Tours names "Euric" as son of "Mir King of Galicia" when recording that he succeeded his father and sought to renew a pact with King Leovigildo[110]. He succeeded his father in 583 as EBORICO King of the Suevi at Lugo. He was deposed in 584 by Audica[111]. The Iohannis Abbatis Biclarensis Chronica records that he became a monk after he was deposed[112].
b) daughter . Gregory of Tours records that Audica, a relation of Euric, married the sister of the latter[113]. m as his [first] wife, AUDICA, son of ---.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miro_(Suebian_king) Cites
Arias, Jorge C. "Identity and Interaction: The Suevi and the Hispano-Romans." Ph.D. dissertation. University of Virginia: Spring 2007. < link >
"Miro." In Henry Wace and William C. Piercy, edd. A Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature. London: John Murray, 1911. Reprinted as Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A.D., with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies. United States: Hendrickson Publishers, 1999. ISBN 1-56563-460-8. < link > cites
Authorities.—Greg. Tur. Hist. Franc. v. 42, vi. 43; Joannes Bicl. ap. Esp. Sagr. v. 377, 380, 383; Isid. Hist. Suev. ib. 506; Acts of the second council of Braga; Tejada y Ramiro, Colecc. de Lan. de la Igl. Esp. ii. 620; Formula Honestae Vitae, by Martin of Braga; Pref. Esp. Sagr. xv. 383.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_the_Suebi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Galician_monarchs
Medlands - KINGS of the SUEVI in SPAIN 411-585 https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/VANDALS,%20SUEVI,%20VISIGOTHS.htm
https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miro_(monarca) cites
«Miro». Dictionary of Christian Biography. Consultado em 16 de agosto de 2021
Arias, Jorge C. (2007). «Identity and Interaction: The Suevi and the Hispano-Romans». University of Virginia: 30-32
Regnal Chronologies -Teutões
Genealogia da Europa - Ibéria
Roma e Romania
Estados Hispânicos
https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miro_(Suebo)
4. ES MGH Auct. ant. 11, Iohannis Abbatis monasterii Biclarensis Chronica, pag. 216 < link >
History of the Kings of the Goths, Vandals, and Suevi. By Saint Isidore (of Seville). Page 42-43. < GoogleBooks >
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Immediate Family
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Sisegutia
wife
Eborico, king of the Suevi
son
Nuño de Suevos da Galícia
son
daughter of King Miro
daughter
Theodemir, king of the Suevi
father
Radegonde Von Thüringen
mother
Andeca of Galícia
brother
Oda of Swabian da Galícia
sister
Hermenerica
sister
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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.
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RANGO HISTORICO
✺- 550→Batalla de Córdoba: Los rebeldes hispanorromanos de Córdoba derrotan estrepitosamente a los visigodos. En la batalla muere el primogénito del rey Agila I y el tesoro real visigodo es capturado por los rebeldes. Agila I huye, pero ha de refugiarse en Mérida ante la rebeldía abierta de Sevilla. Al conocer la noticia de su derrota los nobles visigodos partidarios de la tolerancia a los católicos se rebelan en Sevilla al mando de Atanagildo y tratan de destronar a Agila I. En Mérida, sin embargo, el rey Agila I recibe refuerzos. Se desata la guerra civil, que se combate principalmente en la Bética, aunque se generaliza por todo el reino entre partidarios y rebeldes a Agila I, incluso en la provincia Septimania.
✺- 555→Marzo: Tras 5 años de guerra civil los partidarios del rey Agila I, para evitar que la guerra entre visigodos favorezca a los imperiales, asesinan a Agila en Mérida y reconocen a Atanagildo como rey.
✺- 560→El cronista visigodo católico Juan de Biclaro viaja a Constantinopla.
✺- 565→Primer legendario avistamiento del monstruo del lago Ness por Columba, descrito en la Vita Columbae, de Adomnán; según esta narración Columba habría ayudado a una persona atacada por el monstruo.
✺- 570→Primera campaña del rey visigodo Leovigildo contra los bizantinos: el rey devasta la Bastetania.
→ Mahoma nació en La Meca (península arábiga). Hijo de un mercader de la tribu de los Coraix o Koreischitas. Otras fuentes dicen que nació el año 571 y otras en el 575.
✺- 575→El rey visigodo Leovigildo penetra en las montañas de Orense y ocupa la región, capturando al cabecilla hispanogalaico Aspidius, junto a su esposa e hijos.
✺- 580→El príncipe visigodo Hermenegildo se proclama rey del reino visigodo de Hispania en Sevilla, aclamado por los clérigos y los nobles al grito de “Dios conceda vida al rey”, acuñando moneda con su título, aunque reconociendo también la dignidad de rey a su padre. Los visigodos de la Bética y la Lusitania acatan a Hermenegildo, produciéndose una rebelión de grandes proporciones en el reino hispano. Presuntamente los arrianos son despojados de sus iglesias y perseguidos en las provincias sublevadas.
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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.
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