Jimena Muñoz

[3] She would appear to be the woman of this name in charters of the monastery of San Pedro de Montes along with a Munio Muñoz and his wife Velasquita.

[7][8] He concluded that, among the possible solutions to the parentage of Jimena, it was most likely she was identical to the daughter of this count Munio González and his wife Mayor.

He would name his former mistress his tenente (non-hereditary feudal administrator) over Castillo de Cornatel in El Bierzo, a role she occupied from 1093 to 1108.

Jimena would be interred in San Andrés monastery, Vega de Espinareda, in the El Bierzo region of León.

Her grave, now lost, was once marked with an inscribed memorial stone that is now held by the Museo de León in that city.

Non-contemporary portrayal of Jimena Muñoz from the 16th-century Liber genealogiae regum Hispanie
Epitaph of Jimena Muñoz:
Quam deus a pena defendat dicta Semena Alphonsi vidui regis amica fui; Copia, forma, genus, dos morum, cultus amenus, Me regnatoris prostituere thoris, Me simul et Regem mortis persolvere legem. Fata coegerunt, que fera queque terunt Terdenis demptis super hec de mille ducentis, Quator eripies, que fuit era. Scies84. [ 1 ]