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Alfonso XI of Castile

Alfonso XI (13 August 1311 – 26 March 1350), called the Avenger (el Justiciero), was King of Castile and León. He was the son of Ferdinand IV of Castile and his wife Constance of Portugal. Upon his father's death in 1312, several disputes ensued over who would hold regency, which were resolved in 1313.

Alfonso XI
Detail of a contemporary depiction in the Book of the Coronation of the Kings of Castile (14th century)
King of Castile and Leon
Reign7 September 1312 – 26 March 1350
PredecessorFerdinand IV
SuccessorPeter
Born13 August 1311
Salamanca, Crown of Castile
Died26 March 1350 (aged 38)
Gibraltar, Emirate of Granada
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1325; ann. 1327)
(m. 1328)
Issue
among others...
HouseHouse of Burgundy
FatherFerdinand IV of Castile
MotherConstance of Portugal
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

Once Alfonso was declared an adult in 1325, he began a reign that would serve to strengthen royal power. His achievements include the victory in the Battle of Río Salado over Granadans and Marinids and the Castilian control over the Strait of Gibraltar.[citation needed]

Life

Minority

 
Alfonso XI of Castile attacks the Muslim Moors led by Muhammed IV, Sultan of the emirate of Granada.
 
Depiction in an illumination of Froissart's chronicles, c. 1410

Born on 13 August 1311 in Salamanca,[1] he was the son of King Ferdinand IV of Castile[2] and Constance of Portugal. His father died when Alfonso was one year old.[3] His grandmother, María de Molina, his mother Constance, his granduncle Infante John of Castile, son of King Alfonso X of Castile and uncle Infante Peter of Castile, son of King Sancho IV assumed the regency. His mother died first on 18 November 1313, followed by Infantes John and Peter during a military campaign against Granada in 1319 at the Disaster of the Vega, which left Dowager Queen María as the only regent until her death on 1 July 1321.[citation needed]

Alfonso inherited the throne at a time of instability within the region, decline in populations, reductions in the royal treasury and increasingly ambitious regents caused numerous problems during his young reign.[3]

After the death of the Infantes John and Peter in 1319, Philip (son of Sancho IV and María de Molina, thus brother of Infante Peter), Juan Manuel (the king's second-degree uncle by virtue of being Ferdinand III's grandson) and Juan the One-eyed (his second-degree uncle, son of John of Castile who died in 1319) split the kingdom among themselves according to their aspirations for regency, even as it was being looted by Moors and the rebellious nobility.[citation needed]

A 14th century chronicle mentioned his appearance as "...King Alfonso was not very tall but well proportioned, and he was rather strong and had fair skin and hair."[4]

Majority

His effective reign began in August 1325 when he was sworn in as king as he was proclaimed to have reached the age of majority in the Cortes of Valladolid.[5] Following a ritual that took him to Santiago de Compostela and to the monastery of Las Huelgas in Burgos, his self-crowning took place in 1332.[6]

As soon as he took the throne, he began working hard to strengthen royal power by dividing his enemies. His early display of ruthless rulership skills included the unhesitant execution of possible opponents. Alfonso XI ordered the assassination of his uncle Juan the One-eyed in Toro in the 1326 eve of the feast of All Saints, along with two of the latter's knights, luring the former with promises of reconciliation.[7]

He managed to extend the limits of his kingdom to the Strait of Gibraltar after the important victory at the Battle of Río Salado against the Marinid dynasty in 1340 and the conquest of the Kingdom of Algeciras in 1344. Once that conflict was resolved, he redirected all his Reconquista efforts to fighting the Moorish king of Granada.[citation needed]

During his reign a political reform in the municipal government took place, with the substitution of the concejos abiertos by the regimientos.[8] He fostered the issuance of cartas pueblas as strategy for the demographic strengthening in the borderland areas.[8]

He is variously known among Castilian kings as the Avenger or the Implacable, and as "He of Río Salado." The first two names he earned by the ferocity with which he repressed the disorders caused by the nobles during his long minority; the third by his victory in the Battle of Río Salado over the last formidable Marinid invasion of the Iberian Peninsula in 1340.[citation needed]

Alfonso XI never went to the insane lengths of his son Peter of Castile, but he could be bloody in his methods. He killed for reasons of state without any form of trial. He openly neglected his wife, Maria of Portugal, and indulged a scandalous passion for Eleanor of Guzman, who bore him ten children.[citation needed]

Infected by the Black Death during the 1349–1350 siege of Gibraltar, Alfonso died in the night of 25–26 March 1350 (some sources put the date wrongfully at 27 March).[9][10] The Castilian forces withdrew from Gibraltar, with some of the defenders coming out to watch.[11] Out of respect, Alfonso's rival Yusuf I of Granada ordered his army and his commanders in the border regions not to attack the Castilian procession as it traveled with the king's body to Seville.[12]

Marriage and issue

Alfonso XI first married Constanza Manuel in 1325, but had the union annulled two years later. His second marriage, in 1328, was to his double first cousin Maria of Portugal, daughter of Alfonso IV of Portugal.[13] They had:

By his mistress, Eleanor of Guzmán, he had ten children:

After Alfonso's death, his widow Maria had Eleanor arrested and later killed.[14]

Popular culture

He was depicted in the 1802 play Alfonso, King of Castile by the British writer Matthew Lewis. It was first staged at London's Covent Garden Theatre with Charles Murray in the title role.[15]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ García Fernández 2012, p. 42.
  2. ^ Ruiz 2011, p. 57.
  3. ^ a b Ruiz 2015, p. 93.
  4. ^ From 'Crónica de Pedro' by Pedro López de Ayala (1332–1407)
  5. ^ Torres Fontes 1987, p. 21–22.
  6. ^ Aurell 2016, pp. 295–296; Ruiz 2004, p. 135
  7. ^ Ruiz 2015, p. 96.
  8. ^ a b García Fernández 2012, p. 45.
  9. ^ León-Sotelo & González Crespo 1986, p. 588.
  10. ^ Wickham, Chris (15 October 2016). Medieval Europe. Yale University Press. p. 299. ISBN 978-0-300-22221-0.
  11. ^ O'Callaghan, Joseph F. (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-8122-0463-6.
  12. ^ Fernández-Puertas 1997, p. 10.
  13. ^ Medieval Iberia: an encyclopedia, 75.
  14. ^ Chapman, Charles Edward and Rafael Altamira, A history of Spain, (The MacMillan Company, 1922), 118.
  15. ^ Macdonald, David Lorne. Monk Lewis: A Critical Biography. University of Toronto Press, 2000. p.156
  16. ^ de Sousa, Antonio Caetano (1735). Historia genealogica da casa real portugueza. Lisboa Occidental. p. 415.

References

  • Aurell, Jaume (2016). "La práctica de las autocoronaciones reales. Análisis histórico e implicaciones simbólicas" (PDF). El acceso al trono: concepción y ritualización. pp. 287–302. ISBN 978-84-235-3452-4.
  • Chapman, Charles Edward and Rafael Altamira, A history of Spain, The MacMillan Company, 1922.
  • Fernández-Puertas, Antonio (April 1997). "The Three Great Sultans of al-Dawla al-Ismā'īliyya al-Naṣriyya Who Built the Fourteenth-Century Alhambra: Ismā'īl I, Yūsuf I, Muḥammad V (713–793/1314–1391)". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. Third Series. London: Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 7 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1017/S1356186300008294. JSTOR 25183293. S2CID 154717811.
  • García Fernández, Manuel (2012). "Alfonso XI y Andalucía. Un rey en tierra de frontera (1312-1350)" (PDF). Andalucía en la Historia. Seville: Universidad de Sevilla (38): 41–47.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHannay, D. (1911). "Alphonso". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • León-Sotelo, María & González Crespo, Esther (1986). "Notas para el itinerario de Alfonso XI en el periodo de 1344 a 1350". En la España Medieval (in Spanish). Vol. 8, no. 5. Complutense University of Madrid. pp. 575–589. ISSN 0214-3038.
  • Ruiz, Teofilo F. (2004). From Heaven to Earth: The Reordering of Castilian Society, 1150-1350. Princeton & Oxford: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00121-9.
  • Ruiz, Teofilo F. (2011). Spain's Centuries of Crisis, 1300 - 1474. Wiley.
  • Ruiz, Teofilo F. (2015). "Towards a Symbolic History of Alfonso XI of Castile: Power, Ceremony and Triumph". In Todesca, James J. (ed.). The Emergence of León-Castile c.1065–1500: Essays Presented to J.F. O'Callaghan. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4094-2035-4.
  • Torres Fontes, Juan (1987). "Evolución del Concejo de Murcia en la Edad Media" (PDF). Murgetana (71): 5–47. ISSN 0213-0939.
  • Medieval Iberia: an encyclopedia, Ed. E. Michael Gerli and Samuel G. Armistead, Routledge, 2003.
Alfonso XI of Castile
Cadet branch of the House of Ivrea
Born: 13 August 1311 Died: 26 March 1350
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Castile and León
1312–1350
Succeeded by

alfonso, castile, alfonso, august, 1311, march, 1350, called, avenger, justiciero, king, castile, león, ferdinand, castile, wife, constance, portugal, upon, father, death, 1312, several, disputes, ensued, over, would, hold, regency, which, were, resolved, 1313. Alfonso XI 13 August 1311 26 March 1350 called the Avenger el Justiciero was King of Castile and Leon He was the son of Ferdinand IV of Castile and his wife Constance of Portugal Upon his father s death in 1312 several disputes ensued over who would hold regency which were resolved in 1313 Alfonso XIDetail of a contemporary depiction in the Book of the Coronation of the Kings of Castile 14th century King of Castile and LeonReign7 September 1312 26 March 1350PredecessorFerdinand IVSuccessorPeterBorn13 August 1311Salamanca Crown of CastileDied26 March 1350 aged 38 Gibraltar Emirate of GranadaBurialRoyal Collegiate Church of Saint HippolytusSpouseConstanza Manuel m 1325 ann 1327 wbr Maria of Portugal m 1328 wbr Issueamong others Peter I the Cruel Illegitimate Henry II of Castile Fadrique Lord of Haro Tello Lord of Aguilar de Campoo Sancho Count of AlburquerqueHouseHouse of BurgundyFatherFerdinand IV of CastileMotherConstance of PortugalReligionRoman CatholicismSignatureOnce Alfonso was declared an adult in 1325 he began a reign that would serve to strengthen royal power His achievements include the victory in the Battle of Rio Salado over Granadans and Marinids and the Castilian control over the Strait of Gibraltar citation needed Contents 1 Life 1 1 Minority 1 2 Majority 2 Marriage and issue 3 Popular culture 4 Ancestry 5 Notes 6 ReferencesLife EditMinority Edit Alfonso XI of Castile attacks the Muslim Moors led by Muhammed IV Sultan of the emirate of Granada Depiction in an illumination of Froissart s chronicles c 1410 Born on 13 August 1311 in Salamanca 1 he was the son of King Ferdinand IV of Castile 2 and Constance of Portugal His father died when Alfonso was one year old 3 His grandmother Maria de Molina his mother Constance his granduncle Infante John of Castile son of King Alfonso X of Castile and uncle Infante Peter of Castile son of King Sancho IV assumed the regency His mother died first on 18 November 1313 followed by Infantes John and Peter during a military campaign against Granada in 1319 at the Disaster of the Vega which left Dowager Queen Maria as the only regent until her death on 1 July 1321 citation needed Alfonso inherited the throne at a time of instability within the region decline in populations reductions in the royal treasury and increasingly ambitious regents caused numerous problems during his young reign 3 After the death of the Infantes John and Peter in 1319 Philip son of Sancho IV and Maria de Molina thus brother of Infante Peter Juan Manuel the king s second degree uncle by virtue of being Ferdinand III s grandson and Juan the One eyed his second degree uncle son of John of Castile who died in 1319 split the kingdom among themselves according to their aspirations for regency even as it was being looted by Moors and the rebellious nobility citation needed A 14th century chronicle mentioned his appearance as King Alfonso was not very tall but well proportioned and he was rather strong and had fair skin and hair 4 Majority Edit His effective reign began in August 1325 when he was sworn in as king as he was proclaimed to have reached the age of majority in the Cortes of Valladolid 5 Following a ritual that took him to Santiago de Compostela and to the monastery of Las Huelgas in Burgos his self crowning took place in 1332 6 As soon as he took the throne he began working hard to strengthen royal power by dividing his enemies His early display of ruthless rulership skills included the unhesitant execution of possible opponents Alfonso XI ordered the assassination of his uncle Juan the One eyed in Toro in the 1326 eve of the feast of All Saints along with two of the latter s knights luring the former with promises of reconciliation 7 He managed to extend the limits of his kingdom to the Strait of Gibraltar after the important victory at the Battle of Rio Salado against the Marinid dynasty in 1340 and the conquest of the Kingdom of Algeciras in 1344 Once that conflict was resolved he redirected all his Reconquista efforts to fighting the Moorish king of Granada citation needed During his reign a political reform in the municipal government took place with the substitution of the concejos abiertos by the regimientos 8 He fostered the issuance of cartas pueblas as strategy for the demographic strengthening in the borderland areas 8 He is variously known among Castilian kings as the Avenger or the Implacable and as He of Rio Salado The first two names he earned by the ferocity with which he repressed the disorders caused by the nobles during his long minority the third by his victory in the Battle of Rio Salado over the last formidable Marinid invasion of the Iberian Peninsula in 1340 citation needed Alfonso XI never went to the insane lengths of his son Peter of Castile but he could be bloody in his methods He killed for reasons of state without any form of trial He openly neglected his wife Maria of Portugal and indulged a scandalous passion for Eleanor of Guzman who bore him ten children citation needed Infected by the Black Death during the 1349 1350 siege of Gibraltar Alfonso died in the night of 25 26 March 1350 some sources put the date wrongfully at 27 March 9 10 The Castilian forces withdrew from Gibraltar with some of the defenders coming out to watch 11 Out of respect Alfonso s rival Yusuf I of Granada ordered his army and his commanders in the border regions not to attack the Castilian procession as it traveled with the king s body to Seville 12 Marriage and issue EditAlfonso XI first married Constanza Manuel in 1325 but had the union annulled two years later His second marriage in 1328 was to his double first cousin Maria of Portugal daughter of Alfonso IV of Portugal 13 They had Ferdinand Valladolid 1332 1333 Peter of Castile 1334 1369 King of Castile By his mistress Eleanor of Guzman he had ten children Pedro Alfonso 1330 1338 Lord of Aguilar de Campoo Sancho Alfonso 1331 1343 1st Lord of Ledesma Henry II of Castile 1334 1379 King of Castile 1369 1379 Fadrique Alfonso 1334 1358 Henry s twin brother he was Master of the Order of Santiago and Lord of Haro Fernando Alfonso 1336 c 1350 2nd Lord of Ledesma Tello Alfonso 1337 1370 Lord of Aguilar de Campoo Juan Alfonso 1341 1359 Lord of Badajoz and Jerez de la Frontera Juana Alfonso born 1342 Lady of Trastamara due to her marriage in 1354 to Fernando Ruiz de Castro The marriage was annulled and in 1366 she married Felipe de Castro Sancho Alfonso 1343 1375 1st Count of Alburquerque Pedro Alfonso 1345 1359 After Alfonso s death his widow Maria had Eleanor arrested and later killed 14 Popular culture EditHe was depicted in the 1802 play Alfonso King of Castile by the British writer Matthew Lewis It was first staged at London s Covent Garden Theatre with Charles Murray in the title role 15 Ancestry EditAncestors of Alfonso XI of Castile 16 16 Ferdinand III of Castile8 Alfonso X of Castile 26 17 Elisabeth of Hohenstaufen4 Sancho IV of Castile18 James I of Aragon 28 9 Violant of Aragon19 Violant of Hungary 29 2 Ferdinand IV of Castile20 Alfonso IX of Leon10 Alfonso of Molina21 Berengaria of Castile5 Maria de Molina22 Alfonso Tellez de Meneses 4th Lord of Meneses11 Mayor Alfonso Tellez es 23 Maria Anes de Lima1 Alfonso XI of Castile24 Afonso II of Portugal12 Afonso III of Portugal25 Urraca of Castile6 Denis of Portugal26 Alfonso X of Castile 8 13 Beatrice of Castile27 Mayor Guillen de Guzman3 Constance of Portugal28 James I of Aragon 18 14 Peter III of Aragon29 Violant of Hungary 19 7 Elizabeth of Aragon30 Manfred of Sicily15 Constance of Sicily31 Beatrice of SavoyNotes Edit Garcia Fernandez 2012 p 42 Ruiz 2011 p 57 a b Ruiz 2015 p 93 From Cronica de Pedro by Pedro Lopez de Ayala 1332 1407 Torres Fontes 1987 p 21 22 Aurell 2016 pp 295 296 Ruiz 2004 p 135 Ruiz 2015 p 96 a b Garcia Fernandez 2012 p 45 Leon Sotelo amp Gonzalez Crespo 1986 p 588 Wickham Chris 15 October 2016 Medieval Europe Yale University Press p 299 ISBN 978 0 300 22221 0 O Callaghan Joseph F 2011 The Gibraltar Crusade Castile and the Battle for the Strait Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 216 ISBN 978 0 8122 0463 6 Fernandez Puertas 1997 p 10 Medieval Iberia an encyclopedia 75 Chapman Charles Edward and Rafael Altamira A history of Spain The MacMillan Company 1922 118 Macdonald David Lorne Monk Lewis A Critical Biography University of Toronto Press 2000 p 156 de Sousa Antonio Caetano 1735 Historia genealogica da casa real portugueza Lisboa Occidental p 415 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfonso XI of Castile Aurell Jaume 2016 La practica de las autocoronaciones reales Analisis historico e implicaciones simbolicas PDF El acceso al trono concepcion y ritualizacion pp 287 302 ISBN 978 84 235 3452 4 Chapman Charles Edward and Rafael Altamira A history of Spain The MacMillan Company 1922 Fernandez Puertas Antonio April 1997 The Three Great Sultans of al Dawla al Isma iliyya al Naṣriyya Who Built the Fourteenth Century Alhambra Isma il I Yusuf I Muḥammad V 713 793 1314 1391 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Third Series London Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 7 1 1 25 doi 10 1017 S1356186300008294 JSTOR 25183293 S2CID 154717811 Garcia Fernandez Manuel 2012 Alfonso XI y Andalucia Un rey en tierra de frontera 1312 1350 PDF Andalucia en la Historia Seville Universidad de Sevilla 38 41 47 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Hannay D 1911 Alphonso In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press Leon Sotelo Maria amp Gonzalez Crespo Esther 1986 Notas para el itinerario de Alfonso XI en el periodo de 1344 a 1350 En la Espana Medieval in Spanish Vol 8 no 5 Complutense University of Madrid pp 575 589 ISSN 0214 3038 Ruiz Teofilo F 2004 From Heaven to Earth The Reordering of Castilian Society 1150 1350 Princeton amp Oxford Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00121 9 Ruiz Teofilo F 2011 Spain s Centuries of Crisis 1300 1474 Wiley Ruiz Teofilo F 2015 Towards a Symbolic History of Alfonso XI of Castile Power Ceremony and Triumph In Todesca James J ed The Emergence of Leon Castile c 1065 1500 Essays Presented to J F O Callaghan Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 1 4094 2035 4 Torres Fontes Juan 1987 Evolucion del Concejo de Murcia en la Edad Media PDF Murgetana 71 5 47 ISSN 0213 0939 Medieval Iberia an encyclopedia Ed E Michael Gerli and Samuel G Armistead Routledge 2003 Alfonso XI of CastileCastilian House of IvreaCadet branch of the House of IvreaBorn 13 August 1311 Died 26 March 1350Regnal titlesPreceded byFerdinand IV King of Castile and Leon1312 1350 Succeeded byPeter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfonso XI of Castile amp oldid 1124239333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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