Duke of Gor


Duke of Gor is a title of Spanish nobility, granted on 10 July 1803 by King Charles IV of Spain to a Field Marshal of the Royal Spanish Armies, Nicolás Mauricio Álvarez de las Asturias Bohorques, who was the 12th Lord of Gor, as well as the 6th Marquess of Trujillos and 5th Count of Torrepalma.
Nicolás Mauricio was son of Alonso Diego Álvarez de las Asturias Bohorques y Verdugo, 11th Lord of Gor, 5th Marquess of Trujillos, 4th Count of Torrepalma, and of María Fausta Vélez Ladrón de Guevara y Enríquez, Countess of Canillas de los Torneros de Enríquez.
The title's name refers to the town of Gor in the province of Granada.

List of Dukes de Gor

History of the Dukes of Gor

He married first, María Teresa Péerez de Barradas y Fernández de Henestrosa, with whom he had no male succession, and secondly with María del Carmen Chacón y Carrillo de Albornoz Medrano y Jácome de Lienden. From his second marriage, he had son:
He married María de la O Jacoba Guiráldez y Cañas, VIII Viscountess of Valoria, daughter of Jaime Guiráldez y Mendoza. By way of this marriage all the domains and possessions of the Valoria family, including the castle of Olmillos de Sasamón, province of Burgos, and all their fiefs were incorporated into the duchy of Gor. His son succeeded him:
He died unmarried, without issue, and was succeeded by his nephew:
He married Rosa de Goyeneche y de la Puente, daughter of the Count of Guaqui and the Marchioness de Villafuerte. He was the first Spaniard to participate in the Olympic Games, competing in 1900 with the foil, sword and saber. His son succeeded him:
He married Beatriz de Silva y Mitjans, daughter of Jaime de Silva y Campbell, XV Duke of Lécera and XI Duke of Bournonville. His son succeeded him:
He married Isabel Álvarez de Toledo y Urquijo, daughter of Alonso Álvarez de Toledo y Cabeza de Vaca, XI Marquis of Villanueva de Valdueza, XI Viscount of the Armeria.

Library

The first duke, Nicolás Mauricio Álvarez de las Asturias Bohorques, lived in Granada in a palace later renovated by Francisco Giménez, and acquired a library containing 6,000 manuscripts, books and Arabic documents dating from the 14th and 15th century, from the time of the Emirate of Granada. Arevalo was acquainted with American writer Washington Irving, later Minister to Spain ; Irving stayed with the duke of Gor during his first visit to Spain, in 1829, and used the duke's library for his Chronicles of the Conquest of Granada.
The collection was acquired in 1962 by the multimillionaire banker Bartolomé March, one of General Francisco Franco's financial advisers. The Dukes of Gor's collection, which formed the largest and most important part of March's collection, was catalogued in 1907.
One notable book in the duke's library was a first edition of Gaspar Correia's Lendas da Índia.