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The origin of the Ataíde family can be documented since the 12th century, its progenitor being D. Egas Duer [1] (c. 1140 – c. 1180), a fidalgo of the County of Portugal (and likely a member of the early medieval House of Riba Douro), who was the 1st Lord of the Honra of Ataíde («propter honorem Domne Egee Duer»), located in what was then the county of Santa Cruz de Riba Tâmega (near ...
Dom Martinho de Ataíde (c. 1415 – 1499), [1] 2nd Count of Atouguia, was a 15th-century Portuguese nobleman and diplomat. In 1455, he was granted the lordship of the Canary Islands , by donation from King Henry IV of Castile, which he later sold to the Count of Viana .
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Pero de Ataíde or Pedro d'Ataíde [a] (d'Atayde, da Thayde), nicknamed O Inferno (Hell), "for the damage he did to the Moors in Africa", [2] (c. 1450 – February/March, 1504, Mozambique Island) was a Portuguese sea captain in the Indian Ocean active in the early 1500s.
Maria Catarina, alias, Margarida da Silva, a Nun at Santa Clara, in Lisbon Violante or Maria Violante da Silva, a Nun at Santa Clara, in Lisbon Ana or Maria Ana de Ataíde, married to Heitor de Melo, bastard son of Martim Afonso de Melo, without issue
D. Jerónimo de Ataíde, 6th Count of Atouguia (1610 – 16 August 1665) was a Portuguese nobleman and colonial administrator, Governor-General of Brazil from 1654 to 1657.
Ataíde is a Portuguese surname. Notable people with the surname include: António de Ataíde (c.1500–1563), Portuguese nobleman and diplomat; Elton Junior Melo Ataíde (born 1990), Brazilian footballer; João Manuel de Ataíde (1570–1633), Portuguese bishop; Luís de Ataíde, 3rd Count of Atouguia (1516 - 1581), viceroy of Portuguese India
Reference to Catarina de Ataíde only appeared in the edition of Rimas de Faria e Sousa, in the middle of the 17th century and to the Infanta on José Maria Rodrigues, which was only published in the early 20th century. The celebrated Dinamene also appears to be a poetic image rather than a real person. [41]