Viscount of Barrosa: Difference between revisions
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'''Viscount of Barrosa''' (Portuguese: ''Visconde da Barrosa'') is a [[Portuguese nobility|Portuguese title of nobility]], created on July 9, 1892 by [[Carlos I of Portugal|Carlos I, king of Portugal]], for [[:pt:José Ribeiro Lima da Costa Azevedo|José Ribeiro Lima da Costa Azevedo, 1st Viscount of Barrosa]] ([[Barcelos, Portugal|Barcelos]], July 8, 1851 – [[Viana do Castelo]], November 30, 1925), a prominent political figure in Viana do Castelo and local [[philanthropist]].<ref>Various authors, ''Nobreza de Portugal e Brasil'' (Lisbon, 1983), vol. II, p. 404.</ref> |
'''Viscount of Barrosa''' (Portuguese: ''Visconde da Barrosa'') is a [[Portuguese nobility|Portuguese title of nobility]], created on July 9, 1892 by [[Carlos I of Portugal|Carlos I, king of Portugal]], for [[:pt:José Ribeiro Lima da Costa Azevedo|José Ribeiro Lima da Costa Azevedo, 1st Viscount of Barrosa]] ([[Barcelos, Portugal|Barcelos]], July 8, 1851 – [[Viana do Castelo]], November 30, 1925), a prominent political figure in Viana do Castelo and local [[philanthropist]].<ref>Various authors, ''Nobreza de Portugal e Brasil'' (Lisbon, 1983), vol. II, p. 404.</ref> |
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The viscountship takes its name from Casa da Barrosa, an eighteenth-century [[manor house]] and estate inherited by the first holder's wife Antónia Ribeiro Lima in Vila Franca do Lima, Viana do Castelo.<ref>Laurinda F. de Carvalho Araújo, ''Monografia de Santa Eulália de Rio Covo'' (Barcelos, Braga: Editora Pax, 1984), p. 43.</ref> |
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== References == |
== References == |
Revision as of 00:28, 27 September 2020
Viscount of Barrosa (Portuguese: Visconde da Barrosa) is a Portuguese title of nobility, created on July 9, 1892 by Carlos I, king of Portugal, for José Ribeiro Lima da Costa Azevedo, 1st Viscount of Barrosa (Barcelos, July 8, 1851 – Viana do Castelo, November 30, 1925), a prominent political figure in Viana do Castelo and local philanthropist.[1]
The viscountship takes its name from Casa da Barrosa, an eighteenth-century manor house and estate inherited by the first holder's wife Antónia Ribeiro Lima in Vila Franca do Lima, Viana do Castelo.[2]