Rodrigo Calderón, count de Oliva (born 1576?, Antwerp [now in Belgium]—died October 21, 1621, Madrid, Spain) was a Spanish royal favourite who enjoyed considerable authority during the ascendancy of Francisco Gómez, duque de Lerma in the reign of Philip III.
Calderón was the son of an army officer. On the accession of Philip III in 1598, he attached himself to the king’s favourite and chief minister, Lerma, by whom he was employed as a secretary. Intelligent and capable, he soon distinguished himself and was repeatedly honoured by the king. There seems little doubt that Calderón exploited his influence for private gain, and he became the main target for the anti-Lerma opposition, headed by the queen, Margarita, for whose death in 1611 he was unjustifiably alleged by his enemies to have been responsible.
The position of Calderón, who was awarded his marquessate in 1614 on returning from a special mission to Flanders, remained strong until Lerma’s fall in October 1618. He was then arrested, tortured, and implicated in the murder of a certain Francisco Xuara. After spending more than two years in prison, he was about to be released when Philip III died. This proved fatal for Calderón, as Gaspar de Guzmán, conde-duque de Olivares, the chief minister of the new king (Philip IV), wishing to disassociate his government from the previous regime, ordered Calderón’s execution. His pride and dignity while on the scaffold awaiting execution—Calderón embraced the executioner and pronounced that he gave his soul in the name of Jesus—won him the admiration and respect of onlookers. The Spanish saying “Tener más orgullo que don Rodrigo en la horca” (“To be prouder than Don Rodrigo on the scaffold”) derived from his behaviour on that occasion.