Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
people/1640s

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Francisco de Lucena


FieldValue
nameFrancisco de Lucena
imageFrancisco de Lucena (in Obras Completas de Almeida Garrett, Theophilo Braga, 1904).png
office2Secretary of the Crown Council
term_start21614
term_end21631
monarch2Philip II of Portugal and Philip III of Portugal
predecessor2Fernando de Matos
officeSecretary of State
term_start1640
term_end1642
monarchJohn IV of Portugal
predecessorMiguel de Vasconcelos
successorPedro Vieira da Silva
birth_datec. 1578
death_date28 April 1643
death_placeLimoeiro Prison, Lisbon
spouseD. Francisca de Castro
childrenD. Afonso de Lucena
Martim Afonso de Lucena
Fernão de Matos de Lucena
Guiomar de Lucena
Isabel de Lucena
Leonor de Lucena
Antónia Maria de Ataíde
Joana de Mendonça
signatureAssinatura Francisco de Lucena.svg

Martim Afonso de Lucena Fernão de Matos de Lucena Guiomar de Lucena Isabel de Lucena Leonor de Lucena Antónia Maria de Ataíde Joana de Mendonça Francisco de Lucena (c. 1578 – 28 April 1643) was a Portuguese nobleman and King John IV's first Secretary of State (Head of Government), and the first after the Restoration War and end of the Iberian Union. He made many enemies during his term in office, and was rumoured to be fraternising with the Spanish Crown, which led to his imprisonment and, later, his execution.

Biography

Early life

He was supposedly born in around 1578, in Vila Viçosa. At some point in his life, he married D. Francisca de Castro, and was made Knight of the Order of Christ.

In 1614, during the Iberian Union, he succeeded his uncle Fernando de Matos, as King Philip II of Portugal's Secretary of the Crown Council. He lived in Madrid, in Spain, in this capacity for 17 years.

As Secretary of State

Francisco de Lucena had familial ties to the House of Braganza via his father, Afonso de Lucena (1548–1607), a jurist. When John was acclaimed King of Portugal, Francisco de Lucena was made his Secretary of State (Secretário de Estado), holding the post from 1640 to 1642.

A practiced diplomat, de Lucena was in a very powerful and deliberative station. He advised King John to keep all titles and privileges given during the Habsburg rule, as to avoid rebellions and acts of treachery against him. On the other hand, by his suggestion, King John's supporters were seldom honoured for their actions during the Restoration War. When the Archbishop of Braga, the Duke of Coimbra and the Marquess of Vila Real were charged with treason against the new monarch, Francisco de Lucena spared his indulgence and condemned them all to death by beheading, even providing the cleaver that had cut off Rodrigo Calderón's head in his execution in Madrid.

Imprisonment and death

De Lucena made many enemies whilst in office, among them the Jesuit and generals. De Lucena was rumoured to keep subversive correspondence with Spain, and was charged with treason in 1642 by the Court. King John, however, knew the correspondence was not unlawful, as it were negotiations for the release of de Lucena's son from a Spanish prison in return for the release of a Spanish prisoner in Portugal. The King was against his sentence to death, and Francisco de Lucena was, instead, imprisoned in the Limoeiro prison, in Lisbon. Easily (and falsely) incriminated by the Jesuit and his successor in the post of Secretary of State (Pedro Vieira da Silva) of having surrendered the Santa Luzia Fort, in Elvas, to the Spaniards, he was finally sentenced to beheading (with the same cleaver used in the Archbishop of Braga, the Duke of Coimbra and the Marquess of Vila Real case) on 28 April 1643.

References

References

  1. "Francisco de Lucena – GeneAll.net".
  2. "Francisco de Lucena – Infopédia".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Francisco de Lucena — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report