Bernat II de Cabrera

(Redirected from Bernardo de Cabrera)

Bernat II de Cabrera (Spanish: Bernardo II de Cabrera. 1298–1364) was an Aragonese nobleman, diplomat, and military commander. Born in Calatayud, he participated in the conquest of Majorca (1343). He commanded the naval squadron that defeated the Genoese navy and took Alghero in 1353.[1]

Reproduction of the clothing of Bernat II de Cabrera in the Montseny Ethnological Museum.

As the ambassador of Peter IV of Aragon, he negotiated the Peace of Deza between Castile and Aragon on May 18, 1361, during the War of the Two Peters.[2]

The war, however, later continued, and when Cabrera refused to further support Peter's allies Henry of Trastámara and Charles the Bad of Navarre against Pedro of Castile, Cabrera fell into disfavor at court and was executed as a traitor at Zaragoza.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Bernat de Cabrera". Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  2. ^ 1360 – 1365
edit