Álvaro de Bazán, 2nd Marquess of Santa Cruz

Álvaro de Bazán, 2nd Marquess of Santa Cruz, a.k.a. Álvaro de Bazán y Benavides, a.k.a. Alvaro II de Bazán, (12 September 1571 in Naples, Italy – 1646), was the son of Álvaro de Bazán, 1st Marquess of Santa Cruz.

Álvaro de Bazán y Benavides (by Anthony van Dyck)
Relief of Genoa by the Marquess of Santa Cruz by Antonio de Pereda

Career

edit

Not as famous as his father, Alvaro II had nevertheless a distinguished military career, as well as on land as on sea.
He was Governor of the Duchy of Milan (1630–1631), Maestro de Campo General in Flanders under the Governess of the Spanish Netherlands Isabel Clara Eugenia (1631), a Spanish Navy commander and Army land General during the Thirty Years War, Member of the Spanish Councils of War and the State Council, Marquess of El Viso, Lord of Valdepeñas, and a Grandee of Spain.

Älvaro II main military actions were:

He was married in 1590, in Almagro, Spain, to Guiomar Manrique de Lara. Their descendants included two sons and five daughters.

The evolution of the title since the middle of the 17th century

edit
 
Coat of Arms of the Marquessess of Santa Cruz, title awarded by King Philip II of Spain on 11 October 1569

References

edit
edit
Government offices
Preceded by Governor of the Duchy of Milan
1630-1631
Succeeded by
Spanish nobility
Preceded by Marquess of Santa Cruz
1588–1646
Succeeded by
Álvaro de Bazán