Alfonso XIII of Spain | Alfonso X of Castile | Alfonso Cuarón | Alfonso VIII of Castile | Alfonso V of Aragon | Alfonso I d'Este | Alfonso XI of Castile | Alfonso XII of Spain | Alfonso Herrera | Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonso | Alfonso II of Aragon | Alfonso XII | Alfonso III of Asturias | Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara | Alfonso d'Este | Alfonso | Giovanni Alfonso Borelli | Alfonso Sastre | Alfonso Reyes | Alfonso Mora | Alfonso Fadrique | Alfonso Bonilla Aragón International Airport | Alfonso Arau | Alfonso A. Ossorio | Kristian Alfonso | Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise | Alfonso Romo | Alfonso Ribeiro | Alfonso Parot | Alfonso Martínez (taekwondo) |
This document, dated 13 March 1207, records a pesquisa (inquest) carried out by orders of Alfonso IX to determine what was owed by the village of Quintanilla to the convent in light of a donation made by Ponce.
During the Reconquista, Zafra was captured twice by Christian forces, first in 1229 by Alfonso IX, and then definitely by Ferdinand III, in a campaign through present-day Extremadura described in Alfonso X's Crónica General de España (General History of Spain).
He starts to appear in royal charters in 1176, and served as the alférez of King Alfonso IX in 1185 and in the following year, in which he was also appointed tenant-in-chief of Mansilla and other villages and regions that had been governed by his relatives count Suero Vermúdez and Pedro Afonso, including Tineo and Babia, Gozón, and Cabezón.