Madragana


Madragana Ben Aloandro, later Maior or Mór Afonso, was a woman from the Algarve known as a mistress to king Afonso III of Portugal, in the 13th century, when he ended the Reconquista in Portugal by taking Faro in 1249. Faro was at that time the last part of the Kingdom of the Algarve still in Muslim hands, and there her father was the Qadi.

Christening

She was christened in time, receiving her new name as Maior Afonso, or Mor Afonso, Mor being short for Maior, a common female name in medieval Portuguese. Afonso was given her in baptism as her new patronymic, meaning "the daughter of" Afonso - and that suggests that her elderly royal lover was also her godfather, that she took his spiritual "fatherhood" when christened. Her father's name was Aloandro Ben Bekar.
In ancient Portuguese chronicles, Madragana was also referred to as Mouroana, Mouroana Gil, and Madraganil - all of which are Christian names.

Ethnicity

There is some controversy regarding her ethnicity. :pt:Duarte Nunes de Leão|Duarte Nunes de Leão, a Portuguese royal chronicler of the 16th century, said that Madragana was a Moor. That was disputed in the 18th century by :pt:António Caetano de Sousa|António Caetano de Sousa. She was probably Mozarab. Nonetheless, this supposed Moorish connection gave rise to a claim by Mario de Valdes y Cocom that the royal family of England had African ancestry via the 15-generation descent of Queen Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, wife of George III of the United Kingdom, from Madragana, giving Charlotte what the proponent described as a "conspicuously Negroid" appearance. However, it is far from clear that Madragana's family was of recent African origin, nor is it likely that, if she were African, Madragana's negligible contribution to Charlotte's genetic makeup would have caused the Queen alone, among all of Madgarana's descendants at this distant time, to display distinctive African features.
Madragana bore Afonso two known children:
When passion with the King waned, Madragana was married to Fernão Rei. They had at least one daughter, Sancha Fernandes. Note that Rei means 'king', in Portuguese, and so Fernão Rei is believed to originally have been a servant of the king.