Catalina de Medrano y Bravo de Lagunas (31 October 1479 in Soria â 2 December 1541 in Atienza) was a noblewoman, a lady-in-waiting for Queen Isabella I of Castile and an ecclesiastical patron from the Kingdom of Castile. Catalina is known for resuming the construction of the Franciscan monastery, convent and chapels of San Francisco in Atienza as a family mausoleum. Catalina, together with her husband, Hernando de Sandoval y Rojas, participated in the custody, or care, of Queen Juana I in Tordesillas.
Catalina de Medrano y Bravo de Lagunas lived in Atienza and was the daughter of the ricohombre Diego López de Medrano y Vergara, Lord of San Gregorio and Cañaveruelas, and Magdalena Bravo de Lagunas. Her father Diego was a member of His Majesty's Council. Her parents were among the high nobility from the Kingdom of Castile under the protection of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain.
Catalina's parents married in 1476. Nine children were born from the marriage, including Catalina de Medrano on 31 October 1479. The family trees of Diego López de Medrano and Magdalena Bravo de Lagunas also contain the relationship of the birth of their children through the will of Magdalena Bravo, dictated in 1531 in Atienza, and buried at her death in the convent of San Francisco, together with her husband Diego, the Lord of San Gregorio.
This branch of the Medrano family in Soria were known as the Lords of San Gregorio, Almarza de Cameros, Cañaveruelas, Cabanillas, the Counts of Torrubia, etc.
Catalina de Medrano became a lady-in-waiting for Queen Isabella I of Castile. Catalina is considered a person of high culture for her time, she began to serve Isabella of Castile in 1497, remaining with her until the death of the Queen herself, receiving 27,000 maravedÃÂs per year for her services (a total of 189,000 maravedÃÂs).
Catalina de Medrano married Hernando de Sandoval y Rojas, commander of Huélamo in the Order of Santiago, brother of Bernardo de Sandoval y Rojas, II Marquis of Denia, count of Lerma, great seneschal of Sicily, mayordomo of Kings Fernando the Catholic and Juana la Loca. Her husband's brother was the great-grandfather of Francisco de Sandoval y Rojas, V Marquis of Dénia, 1st Duke of Lerma, a close relative of Tomás Fernández de Medrano through his wife Isabel Ibáñez de Sandoval and their children Maria and Juan Fernández de Medrano y Sandoval.
A notable Book of Hours, believed to have been produced in Toledo around 1475, has been linked to Catalina de Medrano and her husband Hernando de Rojas Sandoval. This manuscript, written in a rounded Gothic script typical of Castilian scriptoria and featuring a calendar with numerous Toledan and Franciscan saints, recently resurfaced on the art market (Paris, Les Enluminures) and is thought to be the work of a disciple of the painter and miniaturist Jorge Inglés.
On folio 88r, it bears a halved coat of arms: on the left, the heraldry of the Sandoval family; on the right, that of the Medrano family. This heraldic pairing suggests the manuscript may have belonged to Catalina and her husband, who died in 1541 and 1538 respectively. The manuscript's illustrations are executed in grisaille, a monochromatic painting technique that imitates early copperplate engravingsâÂÂparticularly those of Martin Schongauer, widely copied in late medieval Castile.
Although some figures in the manuscript exhibit less refined draftsmanship, stylistic elements connect the work to the circle of Jorge Inglés, whose illumination of several manuscripts is preserved in SpainâÂÂs Biblioteca Nacional. The Toledo-specific content of the calendar further supports the manuscriptâÂÂs origin in a region where Inglés was active during the 15th century.
Catalina de Medrano, together with her husband, Hernando de Sandoval y Rojas, participated in the custody, or care, of Queen Juana I in Tordesillas. Catalina de Medrano's role in overseeing Queen Juana I in Tordesillas was necessitated by the tumultuous circumstances surrounding Juana's life. Juana, also known as Juana la Loca (Joanna the Mad), inherited the throne of Castile in 1504 following her mother's death, but her reign was marred by her mental instability. Juana's struggles with mental health, likely exacerbated by personal tragedies and political pressures, raised concerns about her ability to govern effectively. Consequently, her father Ferdinand II and later her son Charles I took charge of the government, effectively ruling on her behalf. In 1509, Juana was confined to the Royal Palace of Tordesillas for the remainder of her life, placed under the guardianship of her father and later her son, alongside trusted individuals like Catalina de Medrano and her husband Hernando de Sandoval y Rojas.
The Medrano family's association with the Franciscan Order originates in a foundational episode of spiritual and dynastic significance. According to early sources, in the year 1211, Saint Francis of Assisi passed through the lordship of Agoncillo, held at the time by a captain of the Medrano lineage. During this visit, the saint healed the lord's son of a severe and incurable illness. This event not only preserved the continuity of the Medrano house in La Rioja but also established a privileged relationship between the family and the emerging Franciscan movement. In recognition of this grace, the Medranos donated lands near the Ebro River in Logroño, where Saint Francis established the first Franciscan convent in Spain. The convent, later sustained through hereditary patronage by Diego López de Medrano, Lord of Agoncillo, became a site of enduring religious, legal, and dynastic importance.
This legacy informed the actions of Catalina de Medrano y Bravo Lagunas in the early sixteenth century. Drawing upon the established Franciscan ties of her house, Catalina, together with her husband Hernando de Sandoval y Rojas, financed the construction and embellishment of several chapels in the Franciscan friary of Atienza. The continuity between the early thirteenth-century miracle and the sixteenth-century patronage of Catalina reflects the long-standing integration of religious devotion and familial responsibility within the House of Medrano. The chapels of Logroño and Atienza thus extend an established tradition of Franciscan support that spans generations, rooted in an act of healing and sustained through acts of institutional and spiritual benefaction. The National Historical Archive in Spain holds a document referring to the completion of the construction of a conventual temple, which began in the 14th century and was still unfinished in the 16th century. The friars in Atienza lived in precarious conditions until the end of the 14th century, when the lady of the town, at that time Catalina de Lancaster, wife of King Enrique III of Trastamara, built a new conventual building at her own expense, and also undertook the construction of a new church, which, in any case, was left unfinished.
In the early 16th century, Catalina de Medrano y Bravo Lagunas and Hernando de Sandoval y Rojas emerged as the benefactors, financing the construction of two transept chapels dedicated to the Immaculate Conception (on the Gospel side) and to saints Sebastian, Fabian, and Roque (on the Epistle side). Shortly thereafter, the couple funded the establishment of a new chapel in the transept devoted to Saint Anthony.
This endeavor involved commissioning chasubles and a vestment, contributing tapestries, an altar frontal, sheets, a chalice, and wine jugs. Catalina de Medrano and her husband orchestrated the installation of an ornate wrought-iron gate at the chapel's entrance and commissioned the carving of two recumbent statues, presumably designed to house their remains eternally in white alabaster material within the confines of the Saint Anthony chapel. The existence of these funerary statues remains uncertain, although strong indications suggest their creation.
During the zenith of the 14th and 15th centuries, the town of Atienza thrived as a significant hub for communication and commerce. At the heart of this locale stood a Franciscan friary established in the mid-13th century. Demonstrating a commendable initiative to enhance the religious edifice of San Francisco in Atienza, Doña Catalina de Medrano, in 1507, instigated the construction of a main entrance, the restructuring of the choir, and numerous other intricate embellishments, marking a noteworthy chapter in the history of the friary.
Her brother, GarcàBravo de Medrano, assumed the patronage of the newly renovated temple's main chapel. That was the pinnacle moment of the Franciscan monastery. Shortly before, in 1507, while Regent of Castile was Friar Francisco Ximénez de Cisneros, Catalina de Medrano's convent was declared a Royal Convent of Atienza, and its Guardian or Superior was appointed as Dean Regidor of the town, with two votes in the Councils, a designated person to replace him in the council position whenever he deemed it appropriate, and some other preeminences that demonstrated the high power that the friars had in the government of the high town of Atienza.
Noteworthy visits from Spanish monarchs, including Philip II in 1592, Philip III, and Philip IV in 1660, as well as Philip V in 1706, attest to the monastery's prominence. However, the zenith of the monastery waned drastically on the night of January 7, 1811, when Napoleonic forces ravaged the residence of the religious and the temple, leading to the near-total destruction of this cultural and religious heritage. It was during this calamitous event that the artistic treasures bequeathed to posterity by Catalina de Medrano were tragically lost.
Catalina de Medrano wrote her will and testament in Atienza on January 18, 1541. Catalina de Medrano died without children, in Atienza, on December 2, 1541, being buried in the convent of San Francisco, together with her father, Diego López de Medrano, the Lord of San Gregorio, as well as her mother Magdalena Bravo de Lagunas in 1531.
Catalina's mother Magdalena Bravo de Lagunas came from Berlanga de Duero and Atienza in the Kingdom of Castile and was the daughter of Garci Bravo de Lagunas, Alcaide of Atienza and Sigüenza, and his wife Catalina Núñez de Cienfuegos. Catalina's mother Magdalena Bravo de Lagunas was the great-great-granddaughter of Alonso Pérez de Guzmán el Bueno (progenitor of the Dukes of Medina-Sidonia). Catalina's mother was also the first cousin of the comuneros captain of Segovia, Juan Bravo de Lagunas y Mendoza.
Catalina's sister, Luisa de Medrano, was a renowned poet and philosopher and the first female professor at the University of Salamanca in Spain and Europe during the early 16th century. Her sister Luisa was educated alongside siblings of the royal family, and benefited from living in the climate of tolerance and advancement for women that Isabella I actively cultivated in her court, called by their contemporaries "puellae doctae" (learned girls).
Catalina de Medrano's maternal grandfather, GarcàBravo de Lagunas, migrated from Soria (or Sigüenza) to establish residence in Atienza. Garcàwas the brother of the bishop Juan Ortega Bravo de Lagunas and Gonzalo Bravo de Lagunas. When GarcàBravo assumed responsibility for the Alcaidia of Atienza Castle, his relocation was not solitary; he brought his entire family, including his wife, children, and sons-in-law. Among those accompanying him were his daughter Magdalena Bravo de Lagunas and her husband, Diego López de Medrano, along with at least three sons and two daughtersâÂÂDiego, Garci, Luis, Catalina, and Isabel. Subsequently, in Atienza, the marriage bore at least four additional children.
At the onset of Queen Isabella the Catholic's rule in Castile, Atienza, like the rest of the kingdom, faced the choice between loyalty to the reigning king and the prospect of allegiance to the prospective queen, Isabella. In the Castilian War of Succession, Catalina's maternal grandfather, Garci Bravo de Lagunas, played a pivotal role in securing the city of Sigüenza for Queen Doña Isabel. Engaging in a noteworthy act during the conflict, Garci Bravo de Lagunas and his relative Pedro de Almazán courageously scaled Sigüenza Castle, capturing Bishop Diego López of Madrid, a supporter of the Beltraneja, thereby aiding the cause of Queen Isabella I.
Pedro de Almazán facilitated the ascent of Garci Bravo's men, securing the castle and town, aligning it with the sovereignty of Queen Isabella I. Consequently, the descendants of Garci Bravo wielded considerable influence in the town. Following the city's restoration to the Catholic Monarchs, Garci Bravo de Lagunas assumed the role of Alcaide, maintaining a prominent position in Sigüenza.
In that year, during the siege of the city, he made a military testament in the royal style, which was later legally recorded on May 31, 1570, by Juan Sánchez Canales, a notary in Toledo. Through this disposition, he established a trust for a third and a fifth of his assets and the perpetual alcaidÃÂa (wardenship) of Atienza in Garci Bravo de Medrano, his grandson, the second son of his daughter Magdalena and Diego López de Medrano. This marked the origin of the Bravo estate in Atienza.
Catalina's father Don Diego López de Medrano and her maternal grandfather, GarcàBravo, died in the Queen's service at the Siege of Málaga in 1487. The Chronicle of the Catholic Monarchs by Don Juan M. Carriazo confirmed the news that Garci Bravo de Lagunas and Diego López de Medrano had died in battle. Juan Bravo's wife Catalina Núñez de Cienfuegos, on the occasion of the death of her husband and son-in-law in that action, received a heartfelt letter of condolences and gratitude from the Catholic Monarchs on June 7, 1487.