Fadrique de Portugal

Fadrique de Portugal
Archbishop of Zaragoza
Archdiocese Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zaragoza
Appointed 1532
Term ended 1539
Predecessor Fadrique de Portugal
Successor Bernardo de Fresneda
Orders
Consecration 9 November 1539
Personal details
Born 1498
Died 29 January 1575
Parents Afonso, 1st Count of Faro
María de Noroña y Sousa, 2nd Countess of Odemira

Fadrique de Portugal y Noroña (c. 1465 15 January 1539) was a Luso-Aragonese politician and cleric.

Born around 1465 in Vila Viçosa, Fadrique de Portugal was a son of Afonso, 1st Count of Faro, and María de Noroña y Sousa, 2nd Countess of Odemira. He was a patrilineal great-grandson of Afonso I, Duke of Braganza, an illegitimate son of King John I of Portugal, as well as a descendant of King Henry II of Castile. He studied law and canon law.

He had a close relationship with Queen Isabella I of Castile and was with her in her final hours, signing her last will and testament as a witness. After her death, he became a counselor of her widower, King Ferdinand II of Aragon. Due to his commitment to the royal family, the Archbishop strongly supported Isabella and Ferdinand's daughter Joanna upon her accession to her parents' thrones and also supported the accession of her son, Charles I, as her co-ruler. King Charles I kept him as royal counselor.

He started his ecclesiastical career as canon of Segorbe and Albarracin, becoming bishop of Calahorra in 1503 and remaining in that post until 1508, when he was named bishop of Segovia. He served as such until 1511. In 1512, he became bishop of Sigüenza. Charles I appointed him viceroy of Catalonia and captain-general of Catalonia, Cerdanya and Roussillon in 1525. He produced numerous works and commissioned the decoration of several churches. Finally, in 1532, he was made archbishop of Zaragoza, but he never visited the city itself.

He died in Barcelona on 15 January 1539 and was transferred to the Cathedral of Santa Maria de Sigüenza, where he was buried in the mausoleum that bears his name.

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Juan Ortega Bravo de la Laguna
Bishop of Calahorra
1503 - 1508
Succeeded by
Juan Fernández de Velasco
Preceded by
Juan Ruiz de Medina
Bishop of Segovia
1508 - 1511
Succeeded by
Diego Ribera de Toledo
Preceded by
Bernardino López de Carvajal
Bishop of Sigüenza
1512 - 1532
Succeeded by
García de Loaysa
Preceded by
Juan de Aragón
Archbishop of Zaragoza
1532-1539
Succeeded by
Hernando de Aragón
Political offices
Vacant
Title last held by
Antonio de Zúñiga
Viceroy of Catalonia
1525–1539
Succeeded by
Francis Borgia
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