- Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena
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Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena (5 May 1282 – 13 June 1348) was a Spanish medieval writer, nephew of Alfonso X of Castile, son of Juan Manuel, Lord of Villena and Beatrice of Savoy. He inherited from his father the great Seigneury of Villena, receiving the titles of Lord, Duke and lastly Prince of Villena.[1]
Contents
Biography
Juan Manuel was born in the Castle of Escalona, in what is now the province of Toledo, and was a politician and very active soldier. He was son of Juan Manuel of Villena (the son of Ferdinand III of Castile) and his second wife Beatrice of Savoy. With the death of his mother Beatrice in 1292, Juan Manuel became duke of Peñafiel. Juan Manuel was trained in arts such as equestrianism, hunting, and fencing, and in addition learned Latin, history, law, and theology. At the age of twelve, he fought to repel the attack of the Moors from Granada to Murcia. He married three times, choosing his wives for political and economic convenience, and worked to match his children with partners associated with royalty. Juan Manuel became one of the richest and most powerful men of his time, coining his own currency as the kings did. During his life, he was criticized for choosing literature as his vocation, an activity thought below a nobleman of such prestige.
Juan Manuel had constant confrontations with his king. At the time, the throne of Castile was occupied by two monarchs, Ferdinand IV and Alfonso XI. Juan Manuel's loyalty was with Alfonso, to whom Juan Manuel gave the hand of his daughter Constance. The wedding was postponed several times, until finally Alfonso XI jailed Constance in the Castle of Toro for unclear reasons. This incident angered Juan Manuel, who decided to turn against Alfonso. He declared war on Alfonso, beginning a confrontation that lasted five years.
Finally the Pope brought about reconciliation between Juan Manuel and Alfonso XI. This reconciliation was not complete until 1340, when Juan Manuel and Alfonso allied against the Muslims in the Battle of Río Salado, taking the city of Algeciras. After these events, Juan Manuel left political life and retired to Murcia, where he spent his last years focused on literature. Proud of his works, he decided to compile them all in a single volume. This compilation was destroyed in a fire, with no known copy preserved.
Juan Manuel died at Peñafiel in 1348, the age of sixty-six. Throughout his life, he wrote approximately thirteen books, of which only eight are preserved today. These works are predominantly didactic.
Literature
Following the path of his uncle, Alfonso X of Castile, Juan Manuel wrote in Castilian, a peculiarity in times when Latin was the 'official' language for educated writing. He wrote in the vernacular to facilitate access to literature for a greater number of readers.
While his writings were directed largely to a literate class, it was nonetheless his assumption that they would be read aloud, as was common during the Middle Ages. He is ever conscious of propriety, and speaks carefully, both because of his elevated rank, and in case women or children should hear what he has written. His works reflect his character, ambitions, and beliefs, so that in many ways they are a mirror of his time and circumstances.
Works
Juan Manuel's work is marked by a great preoccupation both with the practical and the spiritual life, and is directed not only to the nobility, but also to lower estates, since much of his work speaks not only of the duties of lords, but of their vassals as well. While his work is often classified under the general Medieval rubric of "the education of princes" it also begins to approach the Machiavellianism which is more characteristic of the Renaissance, by virtue of its dedication to the astute art of governing.
The structure of stories in El Conde Lucanor reflects the ordinances and hierarchical structuring of the medieval world. In the first parts a young nobleman, Lucanor, proposes an abstract problem to Patronio; later, he gives an apologue which extracts the solution from Patronio's tale, applying it to himself. Juan Manuel concludes the story with a short verse, condensing the moral of the story into short, concrete statements.
Children
By Constance of Aragon:
- Constance of Peñafiel (c 1323-1345), who married Pedro I of Portugal.
- Beatrice, died young
- Fernando Manuel (d c 1350), Lord of Escalona, Peñafiel and Villena, who married 1346 Joan of Ampurias, a daughter of Ramón Berenguer, Count of Ampurias, himself a younger son of James II of Aragón. The couple had a daughter, Blanca Manuel (c 1348-1361), heiress of Villena, Escalona and Penafiel until 1361.
- Juana Manuel (1339–1381), who married 1350 Enrique II of Castile (1333–79) and became Queen of Castile.
Illegitimate by Inés de Castañeda:
- Sancho Manuel (1320–1347)
- Enrique Manuel (1340–1390)
Illegitimate by unknown woman [1]:
- Guiomar Manuel de Villena (who married Juan Martínez de Leiva, Señor de Baños, Merino Mayor de Castilla)
- Juana Manuel de Villena (who married Juan Galíndez de Avendaño, Señor de Mújica)
Ancestors
Ancestors of Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena 16. Ferdinand II of León 8. Alfonso IX of León 17. Urraca of Portugal 4. Ferdinand III of Castile 18. Alfonso VIII of Castile 9. Berengaria of Castile 19. Eleanor of England 2. Juan Manuel, Lord of Villena 20. Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor 10. Philip of Swabia 21. Beatrice I of Burgundy 5. Elisabeth of Hohenstaufen 22. Isaac II Angelos 11. Irene Angelina 23. Herina 1. Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena 24. Humbert III of Savoy 12. Thomas I of Savoy 25. Beatrice of Viennois 6. Amadeus IV, Count of Savoy 26. William I of Geneva 13. Margaret of Geneva 27. Beatrice de Faucigny 3. Beatrice of Savoy 28. Hugh III of Baux 14. Barral of Baux 7. Cecilia of Baux 30. Pierre Bermond, seigneur d’Anduze 15. Sibylle d'Anduze 31. Constance of Toulouse See also
References
Sources
- Ayerbe-Chaux, Reinaldo. ' ' Count Lucanor: Traditional matter and originality creadorá'. Madrid: J. Porrúa Turanzas, 1975.
- Biglieri, Aníbal A. ' ' Towards a poetic one of the didactic story: Eight studies on count Lucanor. Chapel Hill: UNC Dept. of Romance Languages, 1989.
- Flory, David. ' ' The Count Lucanor: Don Juan Manuel within his historical context. ' '. Madrid: Pliegos, 1995.
- Giménez Soler, Andrés. ' ' Don Juan Manuel. Biography and critical study.'. Zaragoza: F. Martinez, 1932.
- Hammer, Michael Floyd. "Framing the Reader: Exemplarity and Ethics in the Manuscripts of the ' Count Lucanor'." Ph.D. University of California at Los Angeles, 2004.
- Lida de Malkiel, Maria Rosa. "Three notes on Don Juan Manuel." ' ' Romance Philology' ' 4,2-3 (1950): 155-94.
- Wacks, David A. "Don Yllán and the Egyptian Sorcerer: Vernacular commonality and literary diversity in medieval Castile." ' ' Sefarad' ' 65,2 (2005): 413-33.
- MacPherson, Ian. ed. Juan Manuel: A Selection. London: Tamesis Texts Limited, 1980.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
External links
Categories:- 1282 births
- 1349 deaths
- People from Toledo (province)
- Spanish nobility
- Dukes of Peñafiel
- 14th-century Spanish people
- 14th-century writers
- House of Burgundy (Spain)
- Castilian infantes
- Spanish writers
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