Medrano may refer to:

Medrano
16th Century Coat of Arms of Medrano in Navarre with their family motto: 'Ave Maria Gratia Plena Dominus Tecum'
Origin
Word/nameBasque
MeaningAbundance, to grow, to prosper or to improve
Region of originAndalusia and Navarre
Other names
Related namesVélaz de Medrano, Martínez de Medrano, Íñiguez de Medrano, Fernández de Medrano, López de Medrano, González de Medrano, etc.

People edit

Medrano is a gender-neutral Spanish surname of Basque origin that means "abundance, to grow, to prosper, or to improve". It is a surname of high nobility established in the old Kingdoms of Navarre, Aragon, Castile, France, etc.[1] They are all descendants of a common ancestor who was called Medrano.[2][3] Notable people with the surname include:

  • María Ramírez de Medrano, Lady of Fuenmayor, wealthy noblewoman in the 12th century, founder of the Commandery, hospital and convent of San Juan de Acre in Navarrete to protect pilgrims on the Camino de Santiago, donated some of her lands to the Order of Saint John
  • Juan Martínez de Medrano 'The Elder', regent of the Kingdom of Navarre in 1328 AD, lord of Arroniz, Sartaguda and Villatuerta, ricohombre of Navarre
  • Diego López de Medrano y Zúñiga, a noble and lord of Fuenmayor, Agoncillo and Almarza in the Kingdom of Castile in the 14th and 15th centuries, great-great grandson of the regent Juan Martinez de Medrano 'The Elder'
  • Juan Vélaz de Medrano IV, lord of Igúzquiza, Orendáin, Learza, knight and royal chamberlain of King Charles III of Navarre in 1412 and King John II of Aragon and Navarre in 1432. Juan was targeted in a rebellion from his domain in Orendáin.
  • Luisa de Medrano, poet, philosopher, writer, and the first female professor in Spain at the University of Salamanca in the 16th century
  • Juan Bravo de Medrano, I Count of Santa Rosa, Maestre de campo, Lieutenant Capitán General of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia, and the first noble to obtain a title in Zacatecas, Mexico in 1691. He owned large mining and agriculture lands and haciendas in and around Zacatecas. He is the great-great-grandson of Baltasar Temiño de Bañuelos, one of the founders of the mines and city of Zacatecas, and Cristóbal de Oñate, founder of the city of Guadalajara in 1531
  • Julián Iñiguez de Medrano, poet, playwright, novelist, knight, explorer, author of La Silva Curiosa, courtier of the Kings of Navarre and Queen Marguerite de Valois during the Spanish Golden Age
  • Tomás Fernández de Medrano, lord of Valdeosera, 16th century author of the Mixed Republic (1602) and the Secretary of State and War of the Dukes of Savoy
  • Francisco Medrano (poet), Spanish lyric poet from Seville, considered one of the best of the Spanish imitators of Horace
  • Francisco de Medrano y Bazán, knight of the Order of Calatrava, rector and professor at Colegio Mayor de San Bartolomé, judge and magistrate of Granada, prosecutor and councilor of the Royal Council of Castile
  • Sebastian Francisco de Medrano, president and founder of the Medrano Academy (Poetic Academy of Madrid), Spanish Golden Age poet, playwright, priest, treasurer of Gómez Suárez de Figueroa, 3rd Duke of Feria
  • Juan de Espinosa Medrano, Peruvian author, sacred preacher, professor of theology at the Seminary of Saint Anthony the Abbot in Cuzco, playwright, poet, etc. Juan is the most prominent figure of the Literary Baroque of Peru and one of the most important intellectuals from Colonial Spanish America, author of the most famous literary apologetic discourse in the Americas in the 17th century: the Apologético en favor de Don Luis de Góngora (1662)
  • Alonso Molina de Medrano, judge and advisor of the Kingdom of Castile in the 17th century, inquisitor of Córdoba and Zaragoza, professor at the University of Seville, Councilor of the Indies, the first counselor and chamberlain in the Chamber of the Indies
  • Juan Antonio Molina de Medrano, prosecutor of the Royal Court of Seville in the 17th century, counselor of the Royal Council of Navarre in Plaza de Castilian, magistrate of the Audiencia of Galicia and magistrate of Crime of the Chancery of Granada in the Empire of Spain
  • Martín Juan de Castejón y Medrano, V lord of Velamazán, Riotuerto, Los Olmillos, of the Strong House of Arias and La Serna, Gentleman of the Chamber of His Majesty, Perpetual Councilman of Soria and Almazán. He was Captain of Infantry in the militias of Agreda, leading them during the siege of Fuenterrabia in 1638
  • Garcia de Medrano y Alvarez de los Rios, Minister of Castile and the Indies, Minister of the Treasury, professor at the university of Salamanca, knight of the order of Santiago, regent of Navarre and Seville in the 17th century
  • Garcia de Medrano y Mendizábal, I Count of Torrubia, lord of San Gregorio, rector of the University of Salamanca, alcalde, oider, alderman, and a member of the Council of Orders, son of García de Medrano y Alvarez de los Rios
  • Pedro Antonio de Medrano y Albelda, regent of Navarre in 1702, knight in the Order of Santiago, professor in Valladolid, judge of Vizcaya and its lordship, oidor of the Valladolid Chancery and the Council of Orders
  • Pedro Velaz de Medrano y Manso de Zúñiga, II Lord of Tabuerniga, captain general of the Armada de Barlovento and custodian of the Fleet of New Spain, father of the I Marquess of Tabuerniga
  • Antonio Vélaz de Medrano y Altamirano, I Marquess of Tabuérniga, governor of the strategic city of Nieuwpoort in Flanders and Sergeant General of Battle, knight of the Order of Santiago, granted the Marquessate of Tabuérniga
  • José de Elío y Ayanz de Navarra de Esparza Artieda y Velaz de Medrano, I Marquess of Vessolla, served as the equerry and royal steward to Queen Mariana de Austria, maestre de campo in the Tercios de Navarra, captain of infantry in the valley of Urraúl, nobleman of Navarra, mayor of Pamplona, and a representative of the military estate in the Kingdom of Navarre in 1685
  • Giovanni Antonio Medrano, Major Royal Governor of Mathematics for the Kingdom of Naples, and architect, General of Battle and teacher of Charles III and his brothers, the infantes of Spain
  • Francisco Antonio de Agurto Salcedo Medrano, First Marquess of Gastañaga, Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands between 1685 and 1692, Viceroy of Catalonia
  • Don Jaime José Ignacio Velaz de Medrano y Barros, III Marquess of Tabuérniga
  • Sebastián de la Cuadra Medrano y Llarena y Llano, 1st Marquess of Villarías, Chief Prime Minister (First Secretary of State) of Spain between 1736 and 1746 during the reign of Philip V of Spain, prominent co-founder of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in 1744, and obtained royal protection in 1738 for the foundation of the Royal Academy of History
  • Diego de Medrano y Treviño, Spanish military officer, a liberal politician during the reign of Ferdinand VII, and a technical essayist reformer. Medrano was the Minister of the Interior of Spain (1822), Senator of Spain during the reign of Isabel II, founder of the first Royal Basque Economic Societies of Friends of the Country (1834), and the founder of the Savings Banks of Spain
  • Gabino Gainza Fernandez de Medrano, Captain General of Chile and the Kingdom of Guatemala, he declared Independence for the Kingdom of Guatemala on September 15, 1821 and became the first ruler of an independent and United Central America, extending from Soconusco (in Chiapas) through Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica
  • Diego Medrano, Spanish poet, narrator and columnist
  • Orlando Montenegro Medrano, Nicaraguan president
  • Enric Casadevall Medrano, Andorran politician
  • José Alberto Medrano, Salvadoran general
  • Pedro Medrano, Argentine statesman and lawyer
  • Carlos Monge Medrano, Peruvian physician
  • Jose Domingo Medrano, Salvadoran doctor
  • Medrano Tamen, Cameroonian footballer
  • Francisco Medrano (footballer), Salvadoran football player
  • Héctor Medrano, Mexican football manager
  • Íngrid Medrano, Salvadoran wrestler
  • Rosa Medrano, Dominican volleyball player
  • Vivienne Medrano, American animator and voice actress

Places edit

Entertainment and media edit

References edit

  1. ^ "MEDRANO - Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia". aunamendi.eusko-ikaskuntza.eus. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  2. ^ "Medrano". Armorial.org (in French). 2015-10-25. Retrieved 2023-11-11.
  3. ^ Pineda, Pedro (1740). New dictionary, spanish and english and english and spanish : containing the etimology, the proper and metaphorical signification of words, terms of arts and sciences ... por F. Gyles.