Filipa Moniz Perestrelo
{{Short description|Portuguese noblewoman (born 1455)}}
{{Clear}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Filipa Moniz Perestrelo
| birth_date = c. 1455
| birth_place = Porto Santo Island, Madeira, Kingdom of Portugal
| death_date = between 1479–1484 (aged 24–29)
| children = Diego Columbus
| parents = Bartolomeu Perestrello
Isabel Moniz
| spouse = {{marriage|Christopher Columbus|1479}}
}}
Image:Todos os Santos Lisboa.jpg
Image:Chapel of Piety Carmo Lisbon.jpg
Filipa Moniz Perestrelo (c. 1455 – between 1479 and 1484) was a Portuguese noblewoman from Porto Santo Island, in Madeira, Portugal. She married Christopher Columbus in 1479 at Vila Baleira on the island.
History
Filipa Moniz Perestrelo was the daughter of Isabel Moniz and Bartolomeu Perestrello.{{cite book |first=Antonio Maria de |last=Freitas |title=The Wife of Columbus: With Genealogical Tree of the Perestrello and Moniz Families |publisher=Stettinger, Lambert & Co |location=New York |year=1893 |url=https://archive.org/details/wifeofcolumbus00frei}} Prior to marrying she was one of the twelve elite Comendadoras of the Monastery of All Saints in Lisbon of the Military Order of St. James, which means she had a comendary.A district or a manor with lands and tenements appertaining thereto, under the control of a member of an order of knights who was called a commander; - called also a preceptory. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Commandery Her step son Ferdinand Columbus and her brother-in-law Bartholomew Columbus, described her as a "noble Comendadora" residing in the Monastery of All Saints.Historie del S. D. Fernando Colombo; nelle quali s'ha particolare, & vera relatione della vita, & de fatti dell'Ammiraglio D. Cristoforo Colombo, suo padre: Et dello scoprimento ch'egli fece dell'Indie Occidentali, dette Mondo Nuovo (The life of the Admiral Christopher Columbus by his son Ferdinand)
=Marriage=
Discussing the question of how Christopher Columbus, the son of a Genoese wool weaver, could marry the daughter of a Portuguese Knight of Santiago, a member of the household of Prince John, Lord of Reguengos de Monsaraz (Master of Santiago,) and of Prince Henry the Navigator's household, Samuel Eliot MorisonSamuel Eliot Morison, [https://books.google.com/books?id=H3ME_u-41PsC&pg=PA37 Admiral of the Ocean Sea pp. 37-39] wrote that this is "no great mystery." Filipa was "already about 25 years old," her mother was a widow "with slender means," and "her mother was glad enough to have no more convent bills to pay, and a son-in-law [...] who asked for no dowry."
Another view is presented by Portuguese professor Joel Silva Ferreira Mata, who researched All-Saints and its residents.A Comunidade Feminina da Ordem de Santiago: A comenda de Santos na Idade Média, Prof. Joel Silva Ferreira Mata, Universidad Lusíada, Oporto, 1992. According to him, as "member" of the Order of Santiago, in order for Filipa to marry the future Admiral Columbus, she, like all members, required authorization from Santiago's Master,{{Cite web |url=http://www.cepese.pt/portal/investigacao/publicacoes/Militarium_9.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2011-12-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426051422/http://www.cepese.pt/portal/investigacao/publicacoes/Militarium_9.pdf |archive-date=2012-04-26 |url-status=dead }} because, like all other religious and military orders, the Order of Santiago had its established rules and protocols by which it was governed.MATA, Joel Silva Ferreira – A comunidade feminina da Ordem de Santiago: a comenda de Santos em finais do século XV e no século XVI. Um estudo religioso, económico e social. In Militarium Ordinum Analecta. Porto, No. 9, Fundação Engenheiro António de Almeida, 2007. The Master of Santiago from 1470 to 1492, thus governing at the time of Filipa's marriage, was King John II of Portugal. From this marriage was born Diego Columbus in 1479 or 1480 who went on to become 2nd Admiral of the Indies, 2nd Viceroy of the Indies and 4th Governor of the Indies, and who married King Fernando's cousin, María de Toledo y Rojas. Thus Filipa Moniz was daughter of a King's Captain, wife of a Viceroy and mother of another Viceroy.
=Interment=
Filipa's fate is unknown and it is uncertain whether she was dead before Columbus left Portugal, nor is her cause of death known. Current scholarship places her death sometime between 1478 and 1484.{{cite book|last1=Davidson|first1=Miles H.|title=Columbus Then and Now: A Life Reexamined|date=1997|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|isbn=9780806129341|pages=47–49|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BR6Ek48GgzEC&q=filipa+columbus+dead%7Cdied&pg=PA47|accessdate=14 January 2018}} She was buried in the Capela da Piedade (Chapel of Piety), which is the first chapel to the right of the main chapel in the Carmo Convent along with her sister, Izeu Perestrelo and her brother-in-law, Pedro Correia da Cunha.{{cn|date=September 2022}}
See also
- People from Madeira
- Rafael Perestrello, a cousin of Filipa Perestrello who was among the first Europeans to land in China (via the South China Sea) during the Chinese Ming Dynasty
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{Cite book |last=Fernández-Armesto |first=Felipe |title=Columbus |date=1991 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-215898-8 }}
- {{Cite book |last=Phillips |first=William D. |title=The Worlds of Christopher Columbus |date=1992 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |others=Carla Rahn Phillips |isbn=0-521-35097-2 }}
- {{cite encyclopedia |title=Perestrelo y Moniz, Filipa |encyclopedia=The Christopher Columbus Encyclopedia |year=1992 |last=Taviani |first=Paolo Emilio |publisher=Simon & Schuster|location= |id= |url=https://archive.org/details/christophercolum00bedi/page/540/mode/1up }}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Moniz Perestrello, Filipa}}
Category:People from Porto Santo
Category:15th-century Portuguese nobility
Category:Year of birth uncertain