Jorge Manrique
Jorge Manrique (c. 1440 – 24 April 1479) was a major Castilian poet, whose main work, the ''Coplas por la muerte de su padre (Verses on the death of Don Rodrigo Manrique, his Father)'', is still read today. He was a supporter of the queen
Isabel I of Castile, and actively participated on her side in the civil war that broke out against her half-brother,
Enrique IV, when the latter attempted to make his daughter, Juana, crown princess. Jorge died in 1479 during an attempt to take the
castle of Garcimuñoz, defended by the
Marquis of Villena (a staunch enemy of Isabel), after Isabel gained the crown.
Manrique was a great-nephew of
Iñigo López de Mendoza (marquis of Santillana), a descendant of
Pero López de Ayala, chancellor of Castile, and a nephew of
Gómez Manrique, ''corregidor'' of Toledo, all important poets of the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. He was, therefore, a member of a noble family of great literary consequence. The topic of his work was the ''
tempus fugit''.
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