Inês de Castro (born 1323?—died Jan. 7, 1355, Coimbra, Port.) was the mistress, before his accession, of Peter (Pedro) I of Portugal. She was famous because of her tragic death, which was related by such writers and poets as Luís de Camões, Luís Vélez de Guevara, and Henri de Montherlant.
The illegitimate daughter of Pedro Fernández de Castro, a Galician noble, she went to Portugal about 1340 with her cousin Constanza, who shortly afterward married King Afonso IV’s eldest son and heir, Peter (the future Peter I). But Peter was soon attracted to the beautiful Inês, and a violent passion sprang up between them. After the death of Constanza (1345), they lived together and had several children. However, the influence of Inês and her two brothers over Peter aroused hostility at court, and, when in 1354 Peter declared himself pretender to the throne of Castile, Afonso IV decided to have Inês executed. On Jan. 7, 1355, after a dramatic interview at Coimbra, the king abandoned her to the assassins.
After Peter’s accession (1357), her body was moved to a magnificent mausoleum in the abbey church at Alcobaça. Legend has it that the king caused the corpse to be crowned and made the courtiers kiss the hand of the dead Inês.