1st Duke of Medinaceli Luis de la Cerda y de la Vega, 1st Duke of Medinaceli (c. 1442–1501), Count in 1454 and Duke in 1479, was the first person awarded the title of "Duke of Medinaceli". He fought in battles against Portugal and the Moorish
Kingdom of Granada.
2nd Duke of Medinaceli Duke Juan I de la Cerda y Vique, the 2nd Duke of Medinaceli, was a bastard who was legitimated with
Grandee by the Spanish Crown in 1520. He was a courtier under Queen
Isabella I of Castile, her daughter Queen
Joanna of Castile, and her son King
Charles I of Spain. He took part in the battles for the "incorporation" of the
Kingdom of Navarre on behalf of Ferdinand II of Aragon, the grandfather of King Charles I of Spain.
3rd Duke of Medinaceli Duke
Gastón de la Cerda y Portugal, died without issue. He married María Gómez Sarmiento, daughter of the 3rd Count of Salinas and Count of Ribadeo.
4th Duke of Medinaceli Juan de la Cerda, 4th Duke of Medinaceli, was
Viceroy of Sicily (1556–1564), and Captain General of Sicily. He was later
Viceroy of Navarra (1567–1572). He married Juana Manuel de Portugal (ca. 1520–1568), daughter of Sancho I de Noronha Portugal, 2nd
Count of Faro on 7 April 1541, at
Ocaña.
5th Duke of Medinaceli Duke
Juan III Luis de la Cerda y Manuel de Portugal, 5th Duke of Medinaceli, was an Ambassador in Portugal and a
Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece. He was married four times. His first wife,
Isabella d'Aragona (bef. 1543 - August 1578) was the daughter of Antonio d'Aragona, (1506–1543). His second wife was Duca di Montalto and after 1578, he married Juana de la Lama. His 4th wife was Marquesa de la Adrada, daughter of Gonzalo Fernández de la Lama.
6th Duke of Medinaceli Duke
Juan Luis de la Cerda y Aragón, 6th Duke of Medinaceli (20 May 1569 - 24 November 1607) was a
Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece. He was an Ambassador to Germanic countries. He married twice, the first time in 1564, to Ana de la Cueva, daughter of the
5th Duke of Alburquerque,
Gabriel de la Cueva, Governor of the Duchy of Milano (Italy). He got married for a second time in 1606, to Antonia Dávila y Colonna (d. 29 October 1625), daughter of Gómez Dávila y de Toledo, the 2nd Marqués de Velada (d. 30 January 1599), tutor of King
Philip III of Spain.
7th Duke of Medinaceli Duke
Antonio Juan de la Cerda y Toledo (25 October 1607 – 7 March 1671), 7th Duke of Medinaceli,
Grandee of Spain, and Captain General of Valencia in 1641. He was married at the age of seventeen to Ana Francisca Luisa Enriquez de Ribera y Portocarrero, who was thirteen years of age. The marriage took place on November 28, 1625, in
Dos Hermanas,
province of Sevilla. Ana Francisca Luisa Enríquez de Ribera y Portocarrero (bef. 19 September 1613 - 21 May 1645) was later granted the title of hereditary 5th
Duchess of Alcalá de los Gazules, as daughter of Pedro Enríquez Girón de Ribera, a
Knight of the Military Order of Santiago.
8th Duke of Medinaceli Juan Francisco de la Cerda y Portocarrero, 8th Duke of Medinaceli, (4 November 1637– 20 February 1691) was a Knight of the
Order of the Golden Fleece. He was the Prime Minister of King
Charles II of Spain. Medinaceli's strategies "produced fierce antipathy" between
Marie-Louise of Orleans, the new Queen of Spain. He firmly believed in the rivalry between France and Spain and considered France the enemy. Therefore, he tried to isolate the young Queen from any French influence. In 1681, Medinaceli managed to have the
Marquis of Villars, the French ambassador, removed from the Spanish court. In 1685 he fell from power and was replaced by
Manual Joaquín Álvarez de Toledo, 8th Count of Oropesa. He was married at the age of sixteen to eighteen-year-old Catalina Antonia de Aragón y Folch de Cardona, 9th
Duchess of Cardona, 5th
Duchess of Lerma, 8th Duchess of Segorbe, on 1 May 1653 in
Lucena,
Province of Córdoba.
9th Duke of Medinaceli Duke
Luis Francisco Tomás de la Cerda y de Aragón - Folch de Cardona, (1654 - in prison, in Pamplona fortress, 1711), was the 9th
Duke of Medinaceli, 10th
Duke of Cardona, 6th Duke of Lerma, 7th Duke of Alcalá de los Gazules, and 9th Duke of Segorbe. ==References==