Gonçalo Pereira

Gonçalo (Gonçalves) Pereira (c.1280–1348), 97th Archbishop of Braga, was a son of Gonçalo Pires Pereira, who held the titles of Count of the Kingdom of Portugal and Knight Commander of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.

After being raised at the court of King Denis of Portugal, he studied law at the University of Salamanca, where he met Teresa Peres Vilarinho (1285-?). Their son, Álvaro Gonçalves Pereira (c. 1310 - c. 1379), was the father of Constable of Portugal Nuno Álvares Pereira, the ancestor of the House of Braganza.[1][2][3]

After completing his studies, he returned to Portugal, where he became a canon of the Diocese of Tuy and, later, Dean of the See of Porto. In 1320, King Denis sent him and Admiral Manuel Pessanha as envoys to the papal court at Avignon to obtain, among other things, financial aid for the war against the Moors.

In the following year he was elected bishop of Évora but was never consecrated bishop of that see. On 21 August 1322, Pope John XXII appointed him Bishop of Lisbon.[4] The decrees of the diocesan synod that he held in 1324 were seen as imposing excessive financial burdens and were revoked by his successor. In 1326, Pope John XXII appointed him Archbishop of Braga,[5] a post that he held until his death on 22 December 1348.

He helped Queen Elizabeth of Portugal settle the quarrels between her husband King Denis and their son, the future Afonso IV of Portugal. In 1338 he was King Afonso's ambassador to the Crown of Castile, arranging peace between the two kingdoms. He participated in the famous Battle of Río Salado on 30 October 1340, when the joint forces of both kingdoms destroyed those of Sultan Abu al-Hasan 'Ali of Morocco and Yusuf I of Granada.

References

  1. Luis Vilar y Pascual, Diccionario histórico, genealógico y heráldico de las familias ilustres de la monarquía española, vol. II, pp. 79-80.
  2. Geneall.net
  3. Nobiliário das Famílias de Portugal, Felgueiras Gayo, Carvalhos de Basto, Braga, 1989. vol. VIII, p. 170 (Pereiras).
  4. João Bautista de Castro: Mappa de Portugal antigo et moderno, tomo III, pp. 113-114.
  5. Rodrigo da Cunha, Historia ecclesiastica dos arcebispos de Braga, parte II, cap. XLII y XLIII y Historia ecclesiastica da Igreja de Lisboa, part II, chap. LXXXVI.

Bibliography


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