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Alfonso VIII of Castile

Alfonso VIII (11 November 1155[2] – 5 October 1214), called the Noble (El Noble) or the one of Las Navas (el de las Navas), was King of Castile from 1158 to his death and King of Toledo.[3][4] After having suffered a great defeat with his own army at Alarcos against the Almohads in 1195,[5] he led the coalition of Christian princes and foreign crusaders who broke the power of the Almohads in the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212, an event which marked the arrival of a tide of Christian supremacy on the Iberian peninsula.[6]

Alfonso VIII
Miniature detail of Alfonso VIII in the Tumbo menor de Castilla[1]
King of Castile and Toledo
Reign31 August 1158 – 5 October 1214
PredecessorSancho III
SuccessorHenry I
Born11 November 1155
Soria
Died5 October 1214(1214-10-05) (aged 58)
Gutierre-Muñoz
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1170)
Issue
among others...
HouseCastilian House of Ivrea
FatherSancho III of Castile
MotherBlanche of Navarre

His reign saw the domination of Castile over León and, by his alliance with Aragon, he drew those two spheres of Christian Iberia into close connection.

Regency and civil war edit

Alfonso was born to Sancho III of Castile and Blanche, in Soria on 11 November 1155.[7] He was named after his grandfather Alfonso VII of León and Castile, who divided his kingdoms between his sons. This division set the stage for conflict in the family until the kingdoms were re-united by Alfonso VIII's grandson, Ferdinand III of Castile.[8]

His early life resembled that of other medieval kings. His father died in 1158. Though proclaimed king when only two years of age,[6] Alfonso was regarded as merely nominal by the unruly nobles to whom a minority was convenient. Immediately, Castile was plunged into conflicts between the various noble houses vying for ascendancy in the inevitable regency. The devotion of a squire of his household, who carried him on the pommel of his saddle to the stronghold of San Esteban de Gormaz, saved him from falling into the hands of the contending factions.[9] The noble houses of Lara and Castro both claimed the regency, as did the boy's uncle, Ferdinand II of León. In 1159 the young Alfonso was put briefly in the custody of García Garcés de Aza, who was not wealthy enough to support him. In March 1160 the Castro and Lara met at the Battle of Lobregal and the Castro were victorious, but the guardianship of Alfonso and the regency fell to Manrique Pérez de Lara.

Alfonso was put in the custody of the loyal village Ávila. At barely fifteen, he began restoring his kingdom to order. It was only by surprise that he recovered his capital Toledo from the hands of the Laras.[9]

Marriage and foreign relations edit

During the regency, his uncle Sancho VI of Navarre took advantage of the chaos and the king's minority to seize lands along the border, including much of La Rioja. In 1170, Alfonso sent an embassy to Bordeaux to Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine to seek the hand of their daughter Eleanor.[10] The marriage treaty helped provide Alfonso with a powerful ally against his uncle. In 1176, Alfonso asked his father-in-law to arbitrate the disputed border territories. While Alfonso received back much that had been taken from him, he had to pay significant monetary compensation.[10]

In 1186, he recuperated part of La Rioja from the Kingdom of Navarre.[citation needed]

In 1187, Alfonso negotiated with Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor, who was seeking to marry his son Conrad to Alfonso's eldest child and heir, Berengaria. In April 1188, they agreed on a treaty in Seligenstadt, which made clear that she was the heir of Castile after any sons of Alfonso and that Conrad would only co-rule as her spouse. That became relevant in her ultimate succession to the throne even though the marriage to Conrad was never consummated and later annulled. The treaty also documented traditional rights and obligations between the sovereign and the nobles in Castile. In July 1188, Alfonso convened his court in Carrión de los Condes to allow the nobles to review and ratify the treaty. At that court, Alfonso knighted both Conrad and Alfonso IX of León, who would ultimately marry Berengaria. The younger Alfonso had come to seek the support and acknowledgement of his ascent to the throne of León from his older cousin. The elder Alfonso granted that in exchange for acknowledgement that the king of Castile was overlord of the king of León.[11]

The relationship between the cousins Alfonso continued to be filled with conflict. In 1194, the papal legate negotiated a treaty between them to temporarily end the conflict. However, after Castile was defeated at the Battle of Alarcos, the younger Alfonso seized the opportunity to again attack his cousin. Castille defended itself with papal support. A more lasting peace was achieved finally by the older Alfonso's daughter Berengaria marrying the younger Alfonso in 1197.[12] The annulment of this marriage by the pope drove the younger Alfonso to again attack his cousin in 1204, but treaties made in 1205, 1207, and 1209 each forced him to concede further territories and rights.[13][14] The treaty in 1207 is the first existing public document in the Castilian dialect.[15]

Around 1200 when his brother in law John was on the English throne, Alfonso began to claim that Gascony was part of Eleanor's dowry, though there was nothing in the marriage treaty to indicate this. In 1205, he invaded, hoping to make good on his claim. By 1208, he gave up on the venture, though his heirs would come back to this claim generations later.[16]

Reconquista edit

In 1174, he ceded Uclés to the Order of Santiago and afterwards this became the order's principal seat. From Uclés, he began a campaign which culminated in the reconquest of Cuenca in 1177.[17] The city surrendered on 21 September, the feast of Saint Matthew, ever afterwards celebrated by the citizens of the town.

Alfonso took the initiative to ally all Christian kingdoms of the peninsula—Navarre, León, Portugal, and Aragon—against the Almohads. By the Treaty of Cazola of 1179, the zones of expansion of each kingdom were defined.

After founding Plasencia (Cáceres) in 1186, he embarked on a major initiative to unite the Castilian nobility around the Reconquista.

In 1195, after the treaty with the Almohads was broken, he came to the defence of Alarcos on the river Guadiana, then the principal Castilian town in the region. At the subsequent Battle of Alarcos, he was roundly defeated by the caliph Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur. The reoccupation of the surrounding territory by the Almohads was quickly commenced with Calatrava falling first. For the next seventeen years, the frontier between Moor and Castilian was fixed in the hill country just outside Toledo.

Finally, in 1212, through the mediation of Pope Innocent III, a crusade was called against the Almohads. Castilians under Alfonso, Aragonese and Catalans under Peter II, Navarrese under Sancho VII, and Franks under the archbishop of Narbonne, Arnaud Amalric, all flocked to the effort. The military orders also lent their support. Calatrava first, then Alarcos, and finally Benavente were captured before a final battle was fought at Las Navas de Tolosa near Santa Elena on 16 July. The caliph Muhammad al-Nasir was routed and Almohad power broken.[6]

Cultural legacy edit

Alfonso was the founder of the first Spanish university, a studium generale at Palencia, which, however, did not survive him.[9] His court also served as an important instrument for Spanish cultural achievement. Alfonso and his wife Eleanor of England were the first to make the Alcázar of Segovia as their residence when this fortress was still at its early stages.

Alfonso died at Gutierre-Muñoz[18] and was succeeded by his surviving son, Henry I.

Alfonso was the subject for Lion Feuchtwanger's novel Die Jüdin von Toledo (The Jewess of Toledo), in which is narrated an affair with a Jewish subject in medieval Toledo in a time when Spain was known to be the land of tolerance and learning for Jews, Christians, and Muslims. The titular Jewish woman of the novel is based on Alfonso's paramour, Rahel la Fermosa.[19] Scholars continue to debate the historical truth of this relationship.[20] The 1919 film The Jewess of Toledo by Franz Höbling is also based on this relationship.[21]

Children edit

With Eleanor of England,[22] Alfonso had 11 children:[23]

Name Birth Death Notes
Berengaria Burgos,
1 January/
June 1180
Las Huelgas near Burgos,
8 November 1246
Married firstly in Seligenstadt on 23 April 1188 with Duke Conrad II of Swabia, but the union (only by contract and never solemnized) was later annulled. Married in Valladolid between 1/16 December 1197 with King Alfonso IX of León as his second wife.[24] After their marriage was dissolved on grounds of consanguinity in 1204, she returned to her homeland and became regent of her minor brother King Henry I. Queen of Castile in her own right after the death of Henry I in 1217, quickly abdicated in favor of her son Ferdinand III of Castile who would re-unite the kingdoms of Castile and León.
Sancho Burgos,
5 April 1181
26 July 1181 Heir of the throne since his birth, died aged three months.
Sancha 20/28 March 1182 3 February 1184/
16 October 1185
Died in infancy.
Henry 1184 1184? Heir of the throne since his birth, died either shortly after being born or in infancy. His existence is disputed among sources.
Urraca 1186/
28 May 1187
Coimbra,
3 November 1220
Queen of Afonso II of Portugal
Blanche Palencia,
4 March 1188
Paris,
27 November 1252
Married to Louis VIII of France
Ferdinand Cuenca,
29 September 1189
Madrid,
14 October 1211
Heir of the throne since his birth. On whose behalf Diego of Acebo and the future Saint Dominic travelled to Denmark in 1203 to secure a bride.[25] Ferdinand was returning through the San Vicente mountains from a campaign against the Muslims when he contracted a fever and died.[26]
Mafalda Plasencia,
1191
Salamanca,
1204
Betrothed in 1204 to Infante Ferdinand of Leon, eldest son of Alfonso IX and stepson of her oldest sister.
Eleanor 1200[27] Las Huelgas,
1244
Married in Ágreda on 6 February 1221 with James I of Aragon.
Constance c. 1202[27] Las Huelgas,
1243
A nun at the Cistercian monastery of Santa María la Real at Las Huelgas in 1217, she became known as the Lady of Las Huelgas, a title shared with later royal family members who joined the community.[27]
Henry Valladolid,
14 April 1204
Palencia,
6 June 1217
Only surviving son, he succeeded his father in 1214 aged ten under the regency firstly of his mother and later his oldest sister. He was killed when he was struck by a tile falling from a roof.

Through his daughters, Berengaria and Blanche, he was the grandfather of two monarchs who became saints of the Roman Church.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pérez Monzón 2002, pp. 23–24, 27.
  2. ^ Anales Toledanos
  3. ^ Roth 1994, p. 128.
  4. ^
  5. ^ Vann 2003, p. 62.
  6. ^ a b c Rogers 2010, p. 28.
  7. ^ Vann 2003, p. 61.
  8. ^ Shadis 2010, p. xix.
  9. ^ a b c   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alphonso s.v.". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 735.
  10. ^ a b Shadis 2010, pp. 25–31.
  11. ^ Shadis 2010, pp. 52–56.
  12. ^ Shadis 2010, pp. 61–62.
  13. ^ Shadis 2010, pp. 78–84.
  14. ^ Túy 2003, p. 324, 4.84.
  15. ^ Wright 2000.
  16. ^ Shadis 2010, p. 31.
  17. ^ Linehan 2011, p. 34.
  18. ^ Ricardo del Arco y Garay, Sepulcros de la Casa Real de Castilla
  19. ^ Marrache 2009.
  20. ^ Shadis 2010, pp. 48–50.
  21. ^ "Die Jüdin von Toledo (1919)". IMDb.
  22. ^ Crónica Latina
  23. ^ Vann 2003, p. 63.
  24. ^ New International Encyclopedia, Vol. 13, (Dodd, Mead and Company, 1915), 782.
  25. ^ Vicaire, pp. 89–98.
  26. ^ Osma 1997, pp. 55–56, vol. 20.
  27. ^ a b c Shadis 2010, p. 4.

References edit

  • Linehan, Peter (2011). Spain, 1157–1300: A Partible Inheritance. Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
  • Gómez, Miguel; Lincoln, Kyle C.; Smith, Damian (2018). King Alfonso VIII of Castile. Government, Family, and War. Fordham University Press. ISBN 978-0823284146.
  • Marrache, Abraham S. (2009). La Historia de Fermosa, la amante de Alfonso VIII. Madrid: Hebraica Ediciones.
  • Osma, Juan (1997). "Chronica latina regum Castellae". In Brea, Luis Charlo (ed.). Chronica Hispana Saeculi XIII. Turnhout: Brepols.
  • Pérez Monzón, Olga (2002). "Iconografía y poder real en Castilla: las imágenes de Alfonso VIII". Anuario del Departamento de Historia y Teoría del Arte (in Spanish). Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. XIV: 19–41. ISSN 1130-5517.
  • Rogers, Clifford J. (2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology: Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195334036.
  • Roth, Norman (1994). Muslims in Medieval Spain: Cooperation and Conflict. Brill.
  • Shadis, Miriam (2010). Berenguela of Castile (1180–1246) and Political Women in the High Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23473-7.
  • Túy, Lucas (2003). Rey, Emma Falque (ed.). Chronicon mundi. Turnhout: Brepols.
  • Vann, Theresa M. (2003). "Alfonso VIII, King of Castile". In Gerli, E. Michael (ed.). Medieval Iberia: An Encyclopedia. Routledge.
  • Vicaire, M.-H. (1938). "Une ambassade dans les Marches". In Mandonnet, Pierre (ed.). Saint Dominique: l'idée, l'homme et l'oeuvre Vol. 1. Paris: Desclée De Brouwer.
  • Wright, Roger (2000). El tratado de Cabreros (1206): estudio sociofilológico de una reforma ortográfica. London: Queen Mary and Westfield College.
  • . In: Oliveria, Marco A. M. de (org.). Guerras e Imigrações. Campo Grande: Editora da UFMS, 2004, pp. 73–94 ISBN 85-7613-023-8.
Alfonso VIII of Castile
Cadet branch of the House of Ivrea
Born: 11 November 1155 Died: 5 October 1214
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Castile
1158–1214
Succeeded by

alfonso, viii, castile, alfonso, viii, november, 1155, october, 1214, called, noble, noble, navas, navas, king, castile, from, 1158, death, king, toledo, after, having, suffered, great, defeat, with, army, alarcos, against, almohads, 1195, coalition, christian. Alfonso VIII 11 November 1155 2 5 October 1214 called the Noble El Noble or the one of Las Navas el de las Navas was King of Castile from 1158 to his death and King of Toledo 3 4 After having suffered a great defeat with his own army at Alarcos against the Almohads in 1195 5 he led the coalition of Christian princes and foreign crusaders who broke the power of the Almohads in the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212 an event which marked the arrival of a tide of Christian supremacy on the Iberian peninsula 6 Alfonso VIIIMiniature detail of Alfonso VIII in the Tumbo menor de Castilla 1 King of Castile and ToledoReign31 August 1158 5 October 1214PredecessorSancho IIISuccessorHenry IBorn11 November 1155SoriaDied5 October 1214 1214 10 05 aged 58 Gutierre MunozBurialAbbey of Santa Maria la Real de Las HuelgasSpouseEleanor of England m 1170 wbr Issueamong others Berengaria I the Great Urraca Queen of Portugal Blanche Queen of France Ferdinand Eleanor Queen of Aragon Henry I of CastileHouseCastilian House of IvreaFatherSancho III of CastileMotherBlanche of NavarreHis reign saw the domination of Castile over Leon and by his alliance with Aragon he drew those two spheres of Christian Iberia into close connection Contents 1 Regency and civil war 2 Marriage and foreign relations 3 Reconquista 4 Cultural legacy 5 Children 6 Notes 7 ReferencesRegency and civil war editAlfonso was born to Sancho III of Castile and Blanche in Soria on 11 November 1155 7 He was named after his grandfather Alfonso VII of Leon and Castile who divided his kingdoms between his sons This division set the stage for conflict in the family until the kingdoms were re united by Alfonso VIII s grandson Ferdinand III of Castile 8 His early life resembled that of other medieval kings His father died in 1158 Though proclaimed king when only two years of age 6 Alfonso was regarded as merely nominal by the unruly nobles to whom a minority was convenient Immediately Castile was plunged into conflicts between the various noble houses vying for ascendancy in the inevitable regency The devotion of a squire of his household who carried him on the pommel of his saddle to the stronghold of San Esteban de Gormaz saved him from falling into the hands of the contending factions 9 The noble houses of Lara and Castro both claimed the regency as did the boy s uncle Ferdinand II of Leon In 1159 the young Alfonso was put briefly in the custody of Garcia Garces de Aza who was not wealthy enough to support him In March 1160 the Castro and Lara met at the Battle of Lobregal and the Castro were victorious but the guardianship of Alfonso and the regency fell to Manrique Perez de Lara Alfonso was put in the custody of the loyal village Avila At barely fifteen he began restoring his kingdom to order It was only by surprise that he recovered his capital Toledo from the hands of the Laras 9 Marriage and foreign relations editDuring the regency his uncle Sancho VI of Navarre took advantage of the chaos and the king s minority to seize lands along the border including much of La Rioja In 1170 Alfonso sent an embassy to Bordeaux to Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine to seek the hand of their daughter Eleanor 10 The marriage treaty helped provide Alfonso with a powerful ally against his uncle In 1176 Alfonso asked his father in law to arbitrate the disputed border territories While Alfonso received back much that had been taken from him he had to pay significant monetary compensation 10 In 1186 he recuperated part of La Rioja from the Kingdom of Navarre citation needed In 1187 Alfonso negotiated with Frederick I Holy Roman Emperor who was seeking to marry his son Conrad to Alfonso s eldest child and heir Berengaria In April 1188 they agreed on a treaty in Seligenstadt which made clear that she was the heir of Castile after any sons of Alfonso and that Conrad would only co rule as her spouse That became relevant in her ultimate succession to the throne even though the marriage to Conrad was never consummated and later annulled The treaty also documented traditional rights and obligations between the sovereign and the nobles in Castile In July 1188 Alfonso convened his court in Carrion de los Condes to allow the nobles to review and ratify the treaty At that court Alfonso knighted both Conrad and Alfonso IX of Leon who would ultimately marry Berengaria The younger Alfonso had come to seek the support and acknowledgement of his ascent to the throne of Leon from his older cousin The elder Alfonso granted that in exchange for acknowledgement that the king of Castile was overlord of the king of Leon 11 The relationship between the cousins Alfonso continued to be filled with conflict In 1194 the papal legate negotiated a treaty between them to temporarily end the conflict However after Castile was defeated at the Battle of Alarcos the younger Alfonso seized the opportunity to again attack his cousin Castille defended itself with papal support A more lasting peace was achieved finally by the older Alfonso s daughter Berengaria marrying the younger Alfonso in 1197 12 The annulment of this marriage by the pope drove the younger Alfonso to again attack his cousin in 1204 but treaties made in 1205 1207 and 1209 each forced him to concede further territories and rights 13 14 The treaty in 1207 is the first existing public document in the Castilian dialect 15 Around 1200 when his brother in law John was on the English throne Alfonso began to claim that Gascony was part of Eleanor s dowry though there was nothing in the marriage treaty to indicate this In 1205 he invaded hoping to make good on his claim By 1208 he gave up on the venture though his heirs would come back to this claim generations later 16 Reconquista editIn 1174 he ceded Ucles to the Order of Santiago and afterwards this became the order s principal seat From Ucles he began a campaign which culminated in the reconquest of Cuenca in 1177 17 The city surrendered on 21 September the feast of Saint Matthew ever afterwards celebrated by the citizens of the town Alfonso took the initiative to ally all Christian kingdoms of the peninsula Navarre Leon Portugal and Aragon against the Almohads By the Treaty of Cazola of 1179 the zones of expansion of each kingdom were defined After founding Plasencia Caceres in 1186 he embarked on a major initiative to unite the Castilian nobility around the Reconquista In 1195 after the treaty with the Almohads was broken he came to the defence of Alarcos on the river Guadiana then the principal Castilian town in the region At the subsequent Battle of Alarcos he was roundly defeated by the caliph Abu Yusuf Yaqub al Mansur The reoccupation of the surrounding territory by the Almohads was quickly commenced with Calatrava falling first For the next seventeen years the frontier between Moor and Castilian was fixed in the hill country just outside Toledo Finally in 1212 through the mediation of Pope Innocent III a crusade was called against the Almohads Castilians under Alfonso Aragonese and Catalans under Peter II Navarrese under Sancho VII and Franks under the archbishop of Narbonne Arnaud Amalric all flocked to the effort The military orders also lent their support Calatrava first then Alarcos and finally Benavente were captured before a final battle was fought at Las Navas de Tolosa near Santa Elena on 16 July The caliph Muhammad al Nasir was routed and Almohad power broken 6 Cultural legacy editAlfonso was the founder of the first Spanish university a studium generale at Palencia which however did not survive him 9 His court also served as an important instrument for Spanish cultural achievement Alfonso and his wife Eleanor of England were the first to make the Alcazar of Segovia as their residence when this fortress was still at its early stages Alfonso died at Gutierre Munoz 18 and was succeeded by his surviving son Henry I Alfonso was the subject for Lion Feuchtwanger s novel Die Judin von Toledo The Jewess of Toledo in which is narrated an affair with a Jewish subject in medieval Toledo in a time when Spain was known to be the land of tolerance and learning for Jews Christians and Muslims The titular Jewish woman of the novel is based on Alfonso s paramour Rahel la Fermosa 19 Scholars continue to debate the historical truth of this relationship 20 The 1919 film The Jewess of Toledo by Franz Hobling is also based on this relationship 21 Children editWith Eleanor of England 22 Alfonso had 11 children 23 Name Birth Death NotesBerengaria Burgos 1 January June 1180 Las Huelgas near Burgos 8 November 1246 Married firstly in Seligenstadt on 23 April 1188 with Duke Conrad II of Swabia but the union only by contract and never solemnized was later annulled Married in Valladolid between 1 16 December 1197 with King Alfonso IX of Leon as his second wife 24 After their marriage was dissolved on grounds of consanguinity in 1204 she returned to her homeland and became regent of her minor brother King Henry I Queen of Castile in her own right after the death of Henry I in 1217 quickly abdicated in favor of her son Ferdinand III of Castile who would re unite the kingdoms of Castile and Leon Sancho Burgos 5 April 1181 26 July 1181 Heir of the throne since his birth died aged three months Sancha 20 28 March 1182 3 February 1184 16 October 1185 Died in infancy Henry 1184 1184 Heir of the throne since his birth died either shortly after being born or in infancy His existence is disputed among sources Urraca 1186 28 May 1187 Coimbra 3 November 1220 Queen of Afonso II of PortugalBlanche Palencia 4 March 1188 Paris 27 November 1252 Married to Louis VIII of FranceFerdinand Cuenca 29 September 1189 Madrid 14 October 1211 Heir of the throne since his birth On whose behalf Diego of Acebo and the future Saint Dominic travelled to Denmark in 1203 to secure a bride 25 Ferdinand was returning through the San Vicente mountains from a campaign against the Muslims when he contracted a fever and died 26 Mafalda Plasencia 1191 Salamanca 1204 Betrothed in 1204 to Infante Ferdinand of Leon eldest son of Alfonso IX and stepson of her oldest sister Eleanor 1200 27 Las Huelgas 1244 Married in Agreda on 6 February 1221 with James I of Aragon Constance c 1202 27 Las Huelgas 1243 A nun at the Cistercian monastery of Santa Maria la Real at Las Huelgas in 1217 she became known as the Lady of Las Huelgas a title shared with later royal family members who joined the community 27 Henry Valladolid 14 April 1204 Palencia 6 June 1217 Only surviving son he succeeded his father in 1214 aged ten under the regency firstly of his mother and later his oldest sister He was killed when he was struck by a tile falling from a roof Through his daughters Berengaria and Blanche he was the grandfather of two monarchs who became saints of the Roman Church Notes edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfonso VIII of Castile Perez Monzon 2002 pp 23 24 27 Anales Toledanos Roth 1994 p 128 Titles of the European kings Vann 2003 p 62 a b c Rogers 2010 p 28 Vann 2003 p 61 Shadis 2010 p xix a b c nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Alphonso s v Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 735 a b Shadis 2010 pp 25 31 Shadis 2010 pp 52 56 Shadis 2010 pp 61 62 Shadis 2010 pp 78 84 Tuy 2003 p 324 4 84 Wright 2000 Shadis 2010 p 31 Linehan 2011 p 34 Ricardo del Arco y Garay Sepulcros de la Casa Real de Castilla Marrache 2009 Shadis 2010 pp 48 50 Die Judin von Toledo 1919 IMDb Cronica Latina Vann 2003 p 63 New International Encyclopedia Vol 13 Dodd Mead and Company 1915 782 Vicaire pp 89 98 Osma 1997 pp 55 56 vol 20 a b c Shadis 2010 p 4 References editLinehan Peter 2011 Spain 1157 1300 A Partible Inheritance Blackwell Publishing Ltd Gomez Miguel Lincoln Kyle C Smith Damian 2018 King Alfonso VIII of Castile Government Family and War Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0823284146 Marrache Abraham S 2009 La Historia de Fermosa la amante de Alfonso VIII Madrid Hebraica Ediciones Osma Juan 1997 Chronica latina regum Castellae In Brea Luis Charlo ed Chronica Hispana Saeculi XIII Turnhout Brepols Perez Monzon Olga 2002 Iconografia y poder real en Castilla las imagenes de Alfonso VIII Anuario del Departamento de Historia y Teoria del Arte in Spanish Universidad Autonoma de Madrid XIV 19 41 ISSN 1130 5517 Rogers Clifford J 2010 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195334036 Roth Norman 1994 Muslims in Medieval Spain Cooperation and Conflict Brill Shadis Miriam 2010 Berenguela of Castile 1180 1246 and Political Women in the High Middle Ages Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 23473 7 Tuy Lucas 2003 Rey Emma Falque ed Chronicon mundi Turnhout Brepols Vann Theresa M 2003 Alfonso VIII King of Castile In Gerli E Michael ed Medieval Iberia An Encyclopedia Routledge Vicaire M H 1938 Une ambassade dans les Marches In Mandonnet Pierre ed Saint Dominique l idee l homme et l oeuvre Vol 1 Paris Desclee De Brouwer Wright Roger 2000 El tratado de Cabreros 1206 estudio sociofilologico de una reforma ortografica London Queen Mary and Westfield College Costa Ricardo da Love and Crime Chastisement and Redemption in Glory in the Crusade of Reconquest Alfonso VIII of Castile in the battles of Alarcos 1195 and Las Navas de Tolosa 1212 In Oliveria Marco A M de org Guerras e Imigracoes Campo Grande Editora da UFMS 2004 pp 73 94 ISBN 85 7613 023 8 Alfonso VIII of CastileCastilian House of IvreaCadet branch of the House of IvreaBorn 11 November 1155 Died 5 October 1214Regnal titlesPreceded bySancho III King of Castile1158 1214 Succeeded byHenry I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfonso VIII of Castile amp oldid 1165972789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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