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List of Castilian monarchs Totally Explained
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Everything about Kings Of Castile totally explainedThis is a list of counts, kings, and queens of Castile.
It is, in part, a continuation of the list of Asturian monarchs and the list of Leonese monarchs.
Counts of Castile
Elective Counts
These counts were not hereditary, being appointed as representatives of the Asturian king in the eastern march of his realm. From as early as 867, with the creation of the county of Alava, Castile was subdivided into several smaller counties that were not reunited until 931.
Castile
(diminished territory)
Munio Núñez de Castrogeriz (c.899-c.901), father-in-law of García I of León
Gonzalo Téllez (c.901-c.904), also count of Cerezo and Lantarón
Munio Núñez de Castrogeriz (again, c.904-c.909)
Gonzalo Fernández de Lara (c.909-915), nephew of Munio Núñez
Burgos
Gonzalo Fernández de Lara (c.899-915)
His acquisition of Castile resulted in reunion of Burgos with Castile, the two titles being used interchangeably thereafter
Castile & Burgos
Ferdinand Ansúrez (915-920), married Muniadona, widow of García I of León and daughter of Munio Núñez.
Nuño Fernández (920-926), brother of Gonzalo Fernández
Ferdinand Ansúrez (again, 926-c.929)
Gutier Núñez (c.929-931), probably son of Nuño Fernández
Cerezo & Lantarón
Gonzalo Téllez (c.897-913), also briefly count of Castile
Ferdinand Díaz (913-c.921), son of Diego Porcelos
Álvaro Herrameliz (c.921-931), also count of Alava, married Sancha, widow of Ordoño II of León and daughter of Sancho I of Pamplona
Alava
Rodrigo (c.867-870), count of Castile
Vela Jiménez (870-c.887), (said by some to have been brother of García Jiménez of Pamplona)
Munio Velaz (c.887-c.921), son of Vela Jiménez
Álvaro Herrameliz (c.921-931), also count of Cerezo and Lantarón
House of Lara
Following the appointment of Fernán González in 931 to succeed both Gutier Núñez and Álvaro Herrameliz, he reunited the divided counties of Castile, Burgos, Alava, Cerezo and Lantarón into what would become a single semi-autonomous hereditary county of Castile.
Fernán González (931-970), son of Gonzalo Fernández, married Sancha Sánchez, widow of Álvaro Herrameliz
García Fernández (970-995), son of Fernán González
Sancho García (995-1017), son of García Fernández
García Sánchez (1017–1029), son of Sancho García
With the death of Garcia, Sancho III of Navarre, the feudal overlord, appointed his own son by Mayor, sister of Garcia Sánchez, as count.
Ferdinand I the Great (1029–37), on acquisition of the Kingdom of León in 1037, he took the royal title
Kings of Castile
Ferdinand I the Great, (1037–65), also king of León
Sancho II the Strong (1065–72), also king of León (1070-72)
Alfonso VI the Brave (1072–1109), also king of León (1065-70,1072–1109)
Urraca (1109–26), also queen of León (1109–1126)
The follow dynasts are descendants, in the male line, of Urraca's husband, Raymond of Burgundy.
Alfonso VII the Emperor (1126–57), also king of Galicia (1111–57) and king of León (1126–57)
Sancho III the Desired (1157–58)
Alfonso VIII the Noble (1158–1214)
Henry I (1214–17)
Berenguela the Great (1217)
Ferdinand III the Saint (1217–52), also king of León from 1230, canonised in 1671
All kings hereafter were also kings of León.
Alfonso X the Learned (1252–84)
Sancho IV the Brave (1284–95)
Ferdinand IV the Summoned (1295–1312)
Alfonso XI the Just (1312–50)
Pedro of Castile (1350–69)
Henry II was the illegitimate son of Alfonso XI. He was made duke of Trastámara.
Henry II the Bastard (1369–79)
John I (1379–90)
Henry III the Infirm (1390–1406)
John II (1406–1454)
Henry IV the Impotent (1454–1474)
Isabella I with husband Ferdinand V (1474–1504)
Joanna the Mad (1504–55) with husband Philip I the Handsome (1504-1506) and with son Charles I (1516-1555); she's thought to have gone insane in 1506, following her husband's death. Her regent from 1506 until 1516 was her father, the king of Aragon Ferdinand II
Charles I (1516–56), her son, also king in his own right
The first monarch to style himself King of Spain was Philip II, son of Charles, who was King of Castile, Aragon and Portugal, among other possessions. Nevertheless the kingdom existed on its own right within the Spanish crown and with its own law until the arrival of the Bourbon dynasty after the War of Spanish Succession.
Suggested Reading
Barton, Simon. The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century León and Castile. Cambridge University Press, 1997. Appendix I: "The Counts of Twelfth Century León and Castile", pp. 235-302.Further Information
Get more info on 'Kings Of Castile'.
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