Nuño González de Lara (died 1296)

He was the lord consort of Alegrete, Vide, and Sintra and served as Alférez del rey for King Ferdinand IV of Castile.

Nevertheless, later in the same year, he returned with his father to Castile where King Sancho IV gave Nuño González a set of inheritances throughout the kingdom in exchange for an oath of loyalty from the young Lara.

[1] During the Summer of 1293, whilst Nuño González and his brother, Juan Núñez II de Lara accompanied King Sancho IV to a meeting held in the city of Logroño with James II of Aragon, their father was captured by the infante John of Castile, brother of King Sancho IV.

He was accompanied during this time by various contemporary magnates including his wife the queen, María de Molina, the Infante Henry of Castile, and by Nuño González himself who had after the death of his father, become a very powerful landed noble.

[3] In 1296, Nuño González's brother, Juan Núñez II, the infante John, Alfonso de la Cerda and the kings of Aragon and Portugal together attacked the Kingdom of Castile.

Nevertheless, Nuño González remained loyal to King Ferdinand II throughout along with the infante Henry and Diego López V de Haro.

Arms of the House of Lara .