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Antonio de Mendoza (1495 – 21 July 1552) was a Spanish colonial administrator who was the first viceroy of New Spain, serving from 14 November 1535 to 25 November 1550, and the second viceroy of Peru, from 23 September 1551, until his death on 21 July 1552.
The couple had seven children together: María de Mendoza, born in 1489, married the Conde de Monteagudo in 1503. Luis Hurtado de Mendoza y Pacheco, 3rd Count of Tendilla, a friend and advisor to Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. Antonio de Mendoza y Pacheco, the first Viceroy of New Spain and the second Viceroy of the Perú.
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 .
Tomé Domínguez III de Mendoza was baptized on February 19, 1623, [1] in Mexico City. [2] His father, who had the same name, was a Spanish officer and former wine merchant who lived in Mexico City for a while and emigrated to New Mexico with his wife and at least 7 children in the mid-1630s. [3]
His daughter Catalina de Salazar de la Cadena first married Ruy de Mendoza, of the famous Mendoza clan, and subsequently wed Cristóbal de Oñate. Their son, Juan de Oñate , established San Juan de Los Caballeros near present-day Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1598.
Diego Dionisio de Peñalosa Briceño y Berdugo: 1661: 1664: Had a dispute with Franciscan missionary Alonso de Posada and was prosecuted by the Inquisition. Tomé Dominguez de Mendoza: 1664: 1664: Juan Durán de Miranda: 1664: 1665: Fernando de Villanueva: 1665: 1668: Juan de Medrano y Mesía: 1668: 1671: Juan Durán de Miranda: 1671: 1675 ...
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One of the young children besides the senior, a sixth child, of famous literary man Iñigo López de Mendoza, (1398–1458), was the Bishop of Calahorra and of Sigüenza since 1473 and later Cardinal of Toledo, the highest ecclesiastical distinction in Spain from a Pope, came to be known as Pedro González de Mendoza, (1428–1495), a.k.a ...