Henry ( Portuguese : Henrique , French : Henri ; c. 1066 – 22 May 1112), Count of Portugal , was the first member of the Capetian House of Burgundy to rule Portugal and the father of the country's first king, Afonso Henriques .
20-456: Henrique Pronunciation Portuguese: [ẽˈʁikɨ] Gender Male Other names Related names Henry, Henrik, Enrique, Henrietta, Henri, Heinrich Henrique (English: Henry ) may refer to: Henry, Count of Portugal (1066–1112) Henry I, King of Portugal (1512–1580) Henry the Navigator (1394–1460),
40-515: A half year left in summer 2007 Inter (SM) and signed with Bahia , later signed in October 2007 with Colo-Colo-BRA . He left Colo-Colo-BRA in January 2008 and signed with Tupi , after just few months signed with Ituano . On 16 May 2009 Palmeiras have signed the right-back from Ituano . This biographical article related to a Brazilian association football defender born in the 1980s
60-861: A royal prince and important figure in the early days of the Portuguese Empire People [ edit ] Carlos Henrique (disambiguation) , several people Fernando Henrique (disambiguation) , several people Arts and entertainment [ edit ] Henrique Campos (1909–1983), Portuguese film director Henrique de Curitiba (1934–2008), Brazilian composer Henrique Lopes de Mendonça (1856–1931), Portuguese poet, playwright and naval officer Henrique Pousão (1859–1884), Portuguese painter Politics and military [ edit ] Henrique Capriles (born 1972), Venezuelan politician Henrique Galvão (1895–1970), Portuguese military officer, politician and writer Henrique Meirelles (born 1945), Brazilian former Minister of
80-476: A strong backlash during the last years of the reign of King Alfonso VI. He married Teresa of León around 1095. From Teresa, Henry had the following issue: Henrique (footballer, born May 1986) Henrique Loureiro dos Santos (born 13 May 1986), known as Henrique , is a former soccer defender from Brazil . Henrique began his career with Catuense-BA and joined in July 2006 to Inter (SM) . After
100-456: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Henry, Count of Portugal Born in about 1066 in Dijon , Duchy of Burgundy , Count Henry was the youngest son of Henry , the second son of Robert I, Duke of Burgundy . His two older brothers, Hugh I and Odo I , inherited the duchy. No contemporary record of his mother has survived. She
120-434: Is much more slight" , his presence is confirmed only as of 1096 when he appears confirming the forais of Guimarães and Constantim de Panoias . Three of these French nobles married daughters of King Alfonso VI: Raymond of Burgundy married infanta Urraca, later Queen Urraca of León ; Raymond of St. Gilles married Elvira ; and Henry of Burgundy married Teresa of León , illegitimate daughter, as her sister Elvira, of
140-3049: The Economy, president of the Banco Central do Brasil Henrique Mitchell de Paiva Cabral Couceiro (1861–1944), Portuguese military Henrique Rosa (1946–2013), interim president of Guinea-Bissau Science, medicine, and technology [ edit ] Emílio Henrique Baumgart (1889–1943), Brazilian engineer Henrique da Rocha Lima (1879–1956), Brazilian physician, pathologist and infectologist Henrique Walter Pinotti (1929–2010), Brazilian physician and gastric surgeon Sérgio Henrique Ferreira (1934–2016), Brazilian physician and pharmacologist Sports [ edit ] Football [ edit ] Henrique (footballer, born 1966) , Henrique Arlindo Etges, Brazilian football defender Henrique (footballer, born 1976) , Carlos Henrique Raimundo Rodrigues, Brazilian football forward Henrique (footballer, born 1977) , Leonardo Henrique Peixoto dos Santos, Brazilian football centre-back Henrique (footballer, born 1980) , José Henrique Souto Esteves, Portuguese football forward Henrique (footballer, born 1982) , Henrique Da Silva Gomes, Brazilian football defender Henrique (footballer, born 1983) , Carlos Henrique dos Santos Souza, Brazilian football defender Henrique (footballer, born 9 May 1985) , Henrique Andrade Silva, Brazilian football winger Henrique (footballer, born 16 May 1985) , Henrique Pacheco de Lima, Brazilian football defensive midfielder Henrique (footballer, born May 1986) , Henrique Loureiro dos Santos, Brazilian football right-back Henrique (footballer, born October 1986) , Henrique Adriano Buss, Brazilian football centre-back Henrique (footballer, born January 1987) , Henrique de Jesus Bernardo, Brazilian football forward Henrique (footballer, born May 1987) , Henrique Neris de Brito, Brazilian football striker Henrique (footballer, born 1989) , Carlos Henrique Barbosa Augusto, Brazilian footballer Henrique (footballer, born 1993) , Henrique Roberto Rafael, Brazilian football winger Henrique (footballer, born 1994) , Henrique Silva Milagres, Brazilian football left-back Henrique (footballer, born 1995) , Henrique Gelain Custodio, Brazilian football left-back Henrique Frade (1934–2004), Brazilian football striker José Henrique (born 1983), Portuguese goalkeeper Other sports [ edit ] Adam Henrique (born 1990), Canadian ice hockey forward Henrique Guimarães (born 1972), Brazilian judoka Other people [ edit ] Prince Pedro Henrique of Orléans-Braganza (1909–1981), titular emperor of Brazil in 1921 Henrique Mecking (born 1952), Brazilian chess master Other uses [ edit ] Estádio D. Afonso Henriques , football stadium in Guimarães, Portugal Henrique, São Tomé and Príncipe , village on
160-524: The blessings of their relative, the Abbot of Cluny , Raymond "promised his cousin under oath to hand him over the Kingdom of Toledo and one third of the royal treasury upon the death of King Alfonso VI" . If he could not deliver Toledo, he would give him Galicia . Henry, in turn, promised to help Raymond "obtain all the dominions of King Alfonso and two thirds of the royal treasury" . Historians who date
180-527: The family conflicts and political unrest to serve on both sides and aggrandize his domains at the cost of the squabbling royal couple. Caught under siege in Astorga by the King of Aragon, then at war with Urraca, Henry held the city with the help of his sister-in-law. Henry died on 22 May 1112, from wounds received during the siege. His remains were transferred, following his previous orders, to Braga where he
200-841: The island of São Tomé Order of Infante D. Henrique , Portuguese honorific order See also [ edit ] Henriques (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Henrique . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Henrique&oldid=1254166057 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Human name disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with given-name-holder lists Portuguese masculine given names Masculine given names Hidden categories: Pages with Portuguese IPA Articles containing explicitly cited English-language text Short description
220-491: The king and his mistress Jimena Muñoz . Between the years 1096 and 1105, count Raymond, seeing that his influence in the curia regis was diminishing, reached an agreement with his cousin Henry of Burgundy. The birth of King Alfonso's only son, Sancho Alfónsez , was also perceived as a threat by the two cousins. They agreed to share power, the royal treasury, and to support each other. Under this agreement, which counted with
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#1732765541516240-431: The maternal aunt of Raymond who would then be Henry's first cousin. This solution is problematic, as Henry's brother Odo I, Duke of Burgundy married Raymond's sister, Sibylla , and though marriages between close kin sometimes took place through dispensation , the prohibition against first-cousin marriages in church law makes it likely that the relationship between Odo and Sibylla, and hence that between Henry and Raymond,
260-556: The other side of the Pyrenees . Many French nobles and soldiers heeded the call, including Raymond of Burgundy , Odo I (Henry's brother), and Raymond of St. Gilles . Not all of them arrived at the same time in the Iberian Peninsula and it is most likely that Raymond of Burgundy came in 1091. Although some authors claim that Count Henry came with the expedition which arrived in 1087, even though "documentary evidence here
280-511: The pact closer to 1096 surmise that news of this agreement might have reached the king who, in order to counter the initiative of his two sons-in-law, appointed Henry governor of the region extending a flumine mineo usque in tagum (from the Minho river to the banks of the Tagus ). Until then, this region had been governed by count Raymond who saw his power limited to just Galicia, thereby nullifying
300-482: The terms of the pact. Other historians however have showed that the pact could not have been made before 1103, several years after the two counts had been granted their respective title, implying that their alliance must have prevailed over their hypothetical rivalry. After Raymond's death, Queen Urraca (Teresa's half-sister) married Alfonso the Battler for political and strategic reasons. Henry took advantage of
320-447: The then-reigning Hugh II . Historian Jean Richard suggested that she might instead have been called Clémence. Whatever her name, her son Henry was kinsman ( congermanus ) of his brother-in-law, Raymond of Burgundy , and this relationship may have come through either, or both, of their mothers, who are both of undocumented parentage. It has been suggested that Henry's mother may have been the daughter of Reginald I , which would make her
340-594: Was Hugh , Abbot of Cluny , one of the most influential and venerated personalities of his time. Count Henry's family was very powerful and governed many cities in France such as Chalon, Auxerre , Autun , Nevers , Dijon, Mâcon and Semur . After the defeat of the Christian troops in the Battle of Sagrajas in October 1086, in the early months of the following year, King Alfonso VI appealed for aid from Christians at
360-674: Was buried in a chapel at Braga Cathedral , the building of which he had promoted. After his death, his widow ruled alone. Count Henry was the leader of a group of gentlemen, monks, and clerics of French origin who exerted great influence in the Iberian Peninsula, promoted many reforms and introduced several institutions from the other side of the Pyrenees, such as the customs of Cluny and the Roman Rite . They occupied relevant ecclesiastical and political positions which provoked
380-456: Was more distant. Based on the relationship between Henry and Raymond and the apparent introduction of the byname Borel into the family of the dukes of Burgundy through this marriage, genealogist Szabolcs de Vajay suggested Henry's mother was a daughter of Berenguer Ramon I, Count of Barcelona , and his wife Guisla de Lluçà. One of his paternal aunts was Constance of Burgundy , the wife of Alfonso VI of León , and one of his great-uncles
400-473: Was once thought to have been named Sibylla based on an undated obituary reporting the death of " Sibilla, mater ducus Burgundie " (Sibylla, mother of the Duke of Burgundy), under the reasoning that she was not called duchess herself and hence must have been the wife of Henry, the only father of a duke who never himself held the ducal title, yet this was probably a reference to her daughter-in-law, Sibylla , mother of
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