Juan Núñez de Prado | |
---|---|
Died | 1355 Maqueda |
Nationality | Castilian |
Occupation | Nobleman |
Known for | Master of the Order of Calatrava |
Juan Núñez de Prado (died 1355), illegitimate son of Infanta Blanche of Portugal and a Portuguese nobleman named Pedro Nunes Carpinteyro, was a nobleman in the 14th century who became Master of the Order of Calatrava in 1325 after leading a revolt against the former Master. There was a prolonged dispute before his position was recognized. After he fell out of favor with King Peter of Castile he was removed from office and murdered.
Juan Núñez de Prado was a knight of the Order of Calatrava. He and other knights rose against the Master Garci López de Padilla, who was discredited because of his failure in his fight against the Taifa of Jaén, and his poor performance in an expedition against the Muslims of the Emirate of Granada, where he was supposed to have fled from the battlefield. The rebellious knights made Villareal, the future Ciudad Real, their stronghold, since some of them were from that town. They defeated the Master Garci López de Padilla at the Battle of Malas Tardes.
In 1325 Alfonso XI of Castile granted the wishes of the rebel knights and friars, who came to the court at Valladolid to indict the master on four counts. The first was dereliction of the strongholds that the master Garci had left without supplies and that had been lost, including those of Alcaudete, Locubín, Susaña, Chist and Mathet. The second was that having fled the fighting during the battle of Baena he had left the friars who accompanied him. The third was the authoritarianism and cruelty of the master in his treatment of his friars. Fourth was his attacks on places and vassals of the Crown, particularly in Villarreal. The master was summoned to the royal court, but fled to Alcañiz, headquarters of the Aragonese dominions of the Order of Calatrava.
Since Garci López de Padilla had taken flight, Alfonso XI ordered the friars opposing him to organize an irregular chapter that elected Juan Núñez de Prado as the new master. The schism was prolonged, as the deposed master tried to assert his rights before the general chapter of the Cistercians. That order, through the Abbots of Monsalud and of Morimond, recognized the legitimacy of his position and restored to him in possession of the mastership. But, with the backing of the Castilian king and most of the knights of the order for Juan Núñez de Prado, who held the Calatrava villas and castles, García López de Padilla resigned from the mastership in 1329 in exchange for continuing to have the service of ten knights and lifetime enjoyment of a few villas and castles held by the order in the kingdoms of Aragon and Valencia, with their income, and the Zorita and El Collado sections.