- (al-fāris),
meaning "knight" or "cavalier", and it was
commonly Latinised as
alferiz or alferis,
although it was also
translated into
Latin as
armiger or armentarius...
- this term, all of
which contain the
Latin root fer-,
signifying iron:
alferiz, fertorarius, inferartis, and offertor. This
office changed hands with...
- in the
decades between 1550 and 1570. In addition, in 1556 he was
royal alferiz of the city,
between 1562 and 1563 he was its
corregidor and he represented...
- 80–81. In
contemporary do****ents he is
recorded as
Gundisalvus de
Maranon alferiz imperatoris ("Gonzalo de Marañón,
imperial alférez"). In the "Annals of...
-
absent from
royal charters. Álvaro also made
changes to the chancery. The
alferiz et
procurator regis et regni, as he is
titled in the records, succeeded...