Alfonso de Borbón y Borbón

Alfonso María Isabel Francisco Eugenio Gabriel Pedro Sebastián Pelayo Fernando Francisco de Paula Pío Miguel Rafael Juan José Joaquín Ana Zacarias Elisabeth Simeón Tereso Pedro Pablo Tadeo Santiago Simón Lucas Juan Mateo Andrés Bartolomé Ambrosio Geronimo Agustín Bernardo Candido Gerardo Luis-Gonzaga Filomeno Camilo Cayetano Andrés-Avelino Bruno Joaquín-Picolimini Felipe Luis-Rey-de-Francia Ricardo Esteban-Protomártir Genaro Nicolás Estanislao-de-Koska Lorenzo Vicente Crisostomo Cristano Darío Ignacio Francisco-Javier Francisco-de-Borja Higona Clemente Esteban-de-Hungría Ladislado Enrique Ildefonso Hermenegildo Carlos-Borromeo Eduardo Francisco-Régis Vicente-Ferrer Pascual Miguel-de-los-Santos Adriano Venancio Valentín Benito José-Oriol Domingo Florencio Alfacio Benére Domingo-de-Silos Ramón Isidro Manuel Antonio Todos-los-Santos de Borbón y Borbón[1] (Madrid, 15 November 1866[1] - Aldaar, 28 April 1934[1]), also known as Don Alfonso de Borbon y Borbon, was a Spanish nobleman, the great-great-grandson of Charles III of Spain, and is known for having had 88 forenames[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2].[2][3] This is recognised as a record by Guinness World Records.[3]

Alfonso de Borbón y Borbón
Born15 November 1866 
Died28 April 1934  (aged 67)
Spouse(s)Julia Mendez y Morales 
Parent(s)
FamilyFrancisco María de Borbón, Luis de Jesús de Borbón 

Alfonso was a son of Sebastian Gabriel of Bourbon and Braganza, Infante Sebastian of Portugal and Spain, and his second wife, Infanta Maria Christina. In 1929 he morganatically married Julia Méndez y Morales, losing all claims to the Spanish throne; the marriage remained childless and ended in divorce.[4]

Notes

  1. Some sources incorrectly say 94
  2. The 88 names include several with more than one word, hyphenated. In total there are 115 words, preceding "de Borbón y Borbón"

References

  1. "Capet 42". genealogy.euweb.cz. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  2. "het grootste aantal voornamen". Onze Taal (in Dutch). 1 March 2004. Archived from the original on 23 October 2008.
  3. "Bureaucrats Refuse To List 140 Names". AP News. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  4. Bouche, Luis Español (1999). Nuevos y viejos problemas en la Sucesión de la Corona Española (in Spanish). Madrid: Hidalguia. p. 70.
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