List of governors of Oran
This is a list of the Spanish and Algerine governors or Beys of Oran.
| Tenure | Incumbent | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Spanish Suzerainty, administered as Spanish Oran | ||
| 1509–1509 | Pedro Navarro, conde de Oliveto, Governor | Took the city from the Zayyanids. |
| 1509–1510 | Rui Días Álvares de Rojas, Governor | |
| 1510–1512 | Diego Fernández de Córdoba, Governor | 1st Term |
| 1512–1516 | Martín de Argote, Governor | |
| 1516–1518 | Diego Fernández de Córdoba y Arellano, marqués de Comares, Governor | 2nd Term, died in office |
| 1518–1520 | Luis Fernández de Córdoba, marqués de Comares, Governor | 1st Term, son of his predecessor |
| 1520–1523 | Luis de Cárdenas, Governor | |
| 1523–1531 | Luis Fernández de Córdoba, marqués de Comares, Governor | 2nd Term |
| 1531–1534 | Pedro de Godoy, Governor | |
| 1534–1558 | Martín Alonso Fernández de Córdoba Montemayor y Velasco, conde de Alcaudete, Governor | |
| 1558–1564 | Alonso de Córdoba y Fernández de Velasco, conde de Alcaudete, Governor | |
| 1564–1565 | Andrés Ponce de León, Governor | |
| 1565–1567 | Hernán Tello de Guzmán, Governor | |
| 1567–1571 | Pedro Luis Galcerán de Borja y de Castro-Pinós, marqués de Navarrés, Governor | |
| 1571–1573 | Felipe Galcerán de Borja, Governor | |
| 1573–1574 | Diego Fernández de Córdoba, conde de Comares, Governor | 1st Term |
| 1574–1575 | Luis de Bocanegra, Governor | |
| 1575–1585 | Martín de Córdoba y Velasco, marqués de Cortes, Governor | |
| 1585–1589 | Pedro de Padilla, Governor | |
| 1589–1594 | Diego Fernández de Córdoba, conde de Comares, Governor | 2nd Term |
| 1594–1596 | Gabriel Niño de Zúñiga, Governor | |
| 1596–1604 | Francisco de Córdoba y Velasco, conde de Alcaudete, Governor | |
| 1604–1607 | Juan Ramírez de Guzmán, conde de Teba, Governor | |
| 1607–1608 | Diego de Toledo y Guzmán, Governor | |
| 1608–1616 | Felipe Ramírez de Arellano, conde de Aguilar de Inestrillas, Governor | |
| 1616–1625 | Jorge de Cárdenas Manrique, duque de Maqueda, Governor | |
| 1625–1628 | Antonio Sancho Davila y Toledo, marqués de Velada, Governor | |
| 1628–1632 | Francisco González de Andía y Irarrazábal y Zárate, visconde de Santa Clara de Avedillo, Governor | |
| 1632–1639 | Antonio de Zúñiga y de la Cueva, marqués de Flores Dávila, Governor | 1st Term |
| 1639–1643 | Álvaro de Bazán Manrique de Lara y Benavides, marqués del Viso, Governor | |
| 1643–1647 | Rodrigo Pimentel Ponce de León, marqués de Viana, Governor | |
| 1647–1652 | Antonio de Zúñiga y de la Cueva, marqués de Flores Dávila, Governor | 2nd Term |
| 1652–1660 | Antonio Gómez Dávila Toledo y Osorio, marqués de San Román, Governor | |
| 1660–1666 | Gaspar Felipe de Guzmán, duque de San Lucar, Governor | |
| 1666–1672 | Fernando Joaquín Fajardo de Requeséns y Zúñiga, marqués de los Vélez, Governor | |
| 1672–1675 | Diego de Portugal, Governor | |
| 1675–1678 | Iñigo de Toledo y Osorio, Governor | |
| 1678–1681 | Pedro Andrés Ramírez de Guzmán y Acuña, marqués de Algava, Governor | |
| 1681–1682 | Gaspar Portocarrero, conde de la Monclova, Governor | |
| 1682–1683 | Pedro Félix José de Silva y Meneses, conde de Cifuentes, Governor | |
| 1683–1685 | Juan de Villalpando, marqués de Osera, Governor | |
| 1685–1687 | Antonio Paniagua de Loaysa y Zúñiga, marqués de Santa Cruz de Paniangua, Governor | |
| 1687–1687 | Diego de Bracamonte, conde de Bracamonte, Governor | |
| 1687–1691 | Félix Nieto da Silva, conde de Guaro, Governor | |
| 1691–1692 | Jean-Louis d'Orléans, comte de Charny, Governor | |
| 1692–1697 | Andrés Copola, duque de Cansano, Governor | |
| 1697–1701 | Gonzalo Arias Dávila Pacheco oloma y Borja, marqués de Casasola, Governor | |
| 1701–1704 | Juan Francisco Manrique de Araña, Governor | |
| 1704–1707 | Carlo Carafa, Governor | |
| 1707–1708 | Melchor de Avellaneda Sandoval y Romero, Marquis of Valdecañas, Governor | |
| Algerine Suzerainty | ||
| 1708 | Annexed by the Beylik of Mascara, part of the Regency of Algiers | |
| 1708–1732 | Mustapha Bouchelaghem, Bey | Took the city from Spain |
| Spanish Suzerainty, administered as Spanish Oran | ||
| 1732–1732 | Álvaro de Navia Osorio y Vigil, marqués de Santa Cruz de Marcenado, Governor | Killed in a raid by Arab tribes |
| 1733–1733 | Antonio Arias del Castillo, marqués de Villadarias, Governor | |
| 1733–1738 | José Vallejo, Governor | |
| 1738–1742 | José Basilio de Aramburu, Governor | |
| 1742–1748 | Alexandre de la Mothe, Governor | |
| 1748–1752 | Pedro de Algaín, marqués de al Real Corona, Governor | |
| 1752–1758 | Juan Antonio de Escoiquiz, Governor | |
| 1758–1765 | Juan Martín Zermeño, Governor | 1st Term |
| 1765–1768 | Cristóbal de Córdoba, Governor | |
| 1767–1770 | Victorio Alcondolo Bolognino Visconti, conde de Bolognino, Governor | |
| 1770–1774 | Eugenio Fernández de Álvarado y Perales Hurtado y Colomo, Governor | |
| 1774–1778 | Pedro Martín Zermeño, Governor | 2nd Term |
| 1778–1779 | Luís de Carajal, Governor | |
| 1779–1785 | Pedro Guelif, Governor | |
| 1785–1789 | Luís de la Casas y Aragon, Governor | |
| 1789–1790 | Manuel Pineda de la Torre y Solís, marqués de Campo Santo, Governor | |
| 1790–1791 | Joaquín Mayone y Ferrari, conde de Cumbre Hermosa, Governor | |
| 1791–1792 | Juan de Courten, Governor | |
| Algerine suzerainty | ||
| 1792 | Re-incorporated into the Beylik of Mascara, became capital of the province | |
| 1792–1798/1799 | Mohammed el-Kebir, Bey | Retook the city from Spain in 1792 |
| 1798/1799–1802 | Osman Bey, Bey | Son of Mohammed el-Kebir |
| 1802–1805 | Mustafa Bey al-Manzalah, Bey | 1st Term |
| 1805?–1807 | Mohammed Bey Makkalas, Bey | Son of Mohammed el-Kebir, executed. |
| 1807–1807 | Mustafa Bey al-Manzalah, Bey | 2nd Term |
| 1807–1812 | Mohammed bou Kabous, Bey | Brother of Mohammed, executed |
| 1812–1817 | Ali Kora Bargli, Bey | Nicknamed the "Turk", executed |
| 1827–1831 | Hassan Bey, Bey | Last Bey of Oran, sent into exile |
| 1831 | Conquered by France and incorporated into French Algeria | |
See also
- List of Beys of the Western Beylik
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.