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・ Alfonso de Anda
・ Alfonso de Angoitia
・ Alfonso de Aragón y de Escobar
・ Alfonso de Borbón
・ Alfonso de Bourbon
・ Alfonso de Cartagena
・ Alfonso de Castilla y Molina
・ Alfonso de Castro
・ Alfonso de Ceballos-Escalera y Gila
・ Alfonso de Elías
・ Alfonso de Galarreta
・ Alfonso de Gortari
・ Alfonso de Iruarrizaga
・ Alfonso de la Cerda
・ Alfonso de la Cerda (bishop)
Alfonso de la Cueva, 1st Marquis of Bedmar
・ Alfonso De Lucia
・ Alfonso de Nigris
・ Alfonso de Orléans-Borbón, Duke of Galliera
・ Alfonso de Palencia
・ Alfonso de Portago
・ Alfonso de Valdés
・ Alfonso de Vinuesa
・ Alfonso de Zamora
・ Alfonso Delgado Evers
・ Alfonso Di Guida
・ Alfonso Diaz
・ Alfonso Domínguez
・ Alfonso Dosal
・ Alfonso Duarte Múgica


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Alfonso de la Cueva, 1st Marquis of Bedmar : ウィキペディア英語版
Alfonso de la Cueva, 1st Marquis of Bedmar

Alfonso de la Cueva-Benavides y Mendoza-Carrillo, marqués de Bedmar (first name also spelled ''Alonso'', often used was the title ''Bedmar'') (1574 – 10 August 1655) was a Spanish diplomat, bishop and Roman Catholic cardinal. He was born in Bedmar, in what is now the province of Jaén. Alfonso was the son of Luis de la Cueva-Benavides, 2nd señor of Bedmar, and Elvira Carrillo de Mendoza y Cárdenas.
==Early years==
Alfonso was born at Bedmar, now Bedmar y Garciez, province of Jaen, Spain. At an early age, he pursued a military career at the side of his father, who was the captain general of the Canary Islands. After 1590, he took his father's place in his absence, and a year later was named captain of the Harquebusiers. After the death of his father in 1599, he became the 3rd lord of his house and became a commander of a Cavalry company.
On 23 December 1606 King Philip III of Spain made him the Spanish ambassador to the Republic of Venice. This was an important position due to the amount of information concerning European affairs which passed through the hands of the Spanish representative. On 16 April 1610 King Philip III awarded him the title of Knight of the Order of Alcántara. In 1614, aged around 42, he was made Marqués de Bedmar, which he would resign when promoted to the cardinalate.
In 1618 king Philip III charged him with the devolution of the territories conquered by the Spanish forces in Piedmont to the duke of Savoy. In 1616 Venice concluded an alliance with France, Switzerland, and the Netherlands to counter Spain's power. Bedmar was instructed to destroy this league and, with Pedro Téllez-Girón, 3rd Duke of Osuna, viceroy of Naples (1574–1624), and the Spanish Governor of the Duchy of Milan, Gómez Suárez de Figueroa, 3rd Duke of Feria, planned a naval invasion to bring the city closer to the Spanish sphere of influence. The scheme was to be carried out on Ascension Day in 1618 but was revealed by the French, and Bedmar, protected by his position from arrest, left Venice.
After the fiasco of Venice, Bedmar went to Flanders as president of the council. In 1622 he received the red hat of a cardinal. Later, he became the ambassador extraordinary and counselor of Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands, Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia and the Junta of War in Flanders.
The authorship of an anonymous work, ''Squitinio della libertà Veneta'', published at Mirandola in 1612, has been attributed to him.

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