Margarida Cabral de Melo (1570–1631) was a Portuguese noblewoman related to the discoverer of Brazil Pedro ÃÂlvares Cabral. In 1599 she settled with her husband and children in Buenos Aires. She was one of the most distinguished women in the RÃÂo de la Plata, in the early 17th century, owned of luxury homes, farms and vineyards.
Her family belonged to illustrious Portuguese lineages, including her royal ancestry through her great-great-grandmother, Dona Beatriz de Meneses, 2nd Countess of Loulé. She and her husband were the ancestors of Argentine politicians and military, among them Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear, President of the Argentine Republic between 1922 and 1928.
Margarida was born in Santa Maria Island, the daughter of Matias Nunes Cabral and Maria Simões de Melo, belonging to a noble Portuguese family. She was married to Amador Vaz de Alpoim, son of Estevan de Alpoim and Isabel Velha. She and her family arrived in Buenos Aires from Rio de Janeiro, where they had lived for five years.
Margarida Cabral de Melo and her sister Inês Nunes Cabral (wife of Gil Gonçalves de Moura) were the first women to have political and economic influence in the RÃÂo de la Plata. Margarida was perhaps the richest woman in Buenos Aires towards the beginning of 1600. She possessed one of the most luxurious houses in the city, with mahogany furniture, carved silverware, tapestry and among its jewelry, a gold parrot.
The house of the family Cabral de Alpoim was located at the intersection of the streets and , current neighborhood of Monserrat.
Margarida and her family were linked to the beginnings of cattle raising (cimarron cattle) in the current Argentine territory. She was the owner of a ranch located in the town of Luján, which was managed by her son Manuel Cabral de Alpoim.
Her husband died in 1617 being buried in the city. He had rendered military services to the Spanish Empire, taking part in some military expeditions led by Hernando Arias de Saavedra.
She had many sons and daughters, including General Amador Báez de Alpoim, who served as mayor of Buenos Aires, lieutenant governor of Santa Fe and Corrientes, and MatÃÂas Cabral de Melo y Alpoim (1593-1645) a well-known presbyter of Buenos Aires.
Margarita Cabral de Melo and her sister were relatives of Pedro ÃÂlvares Cabral, discoverer of Brazil and Gonçalo Velho Cabral, discoverer of Azores. Her most notorious ancestors were ÃÂlvaro Martins Homem 3ðCaptain of Praia, and João Fernandes de Andrade, possibly a descendant of Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall.
It is proven that her family descended by several genealogical lines of the kings of Portugal, including Afonso III and John I of Portugal. Through these royal ancestors, their lineage is linked to the House of Plantagenet and Castile.
She and her sister were the ancestors of various historical figures linked to the politics and culture of the RÃÂo de la Plata like Juan Manuel de Rosas, governor of the province of Buenos Aires between 1835 and 1852, and Justo José de Urquiza, first President of the Argentine Confederation.
Other famous descendants of this family include José Gervasio Artigas, a Uruguayan patriot who participated in the War of Independence, and Carlos MarÃÂa de Alvear, a military and politician who served as Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the RÃÂo de la Plata in 1815.
Her sister Inés Núñez Cabral and Gil Gonçalves de Moura were the ancestors of the writer and poet Jorge Luis Borges.