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Crown of Castile

Coordinates: 40°25′03″N 03°42′54″W / 40.41750°N 3.71500°W / 40.41750; -3.71500

The Crown of Castile[nb 1] was a medieval polity in the Iberian Peninsula that formed in 1230 as a result of the third and definitive union of the crowns and, some decades later, the parliaments of the kingdoms of Castile and León upon the accession of the then Castilian king, Ferdinand III, to the vacant Leonese throne. It continued to exist as a separate entity after the personal union in 1469 of the crowns of Castile and Aragon with the marriage of the Catholic Monarchs up to the promulgation of the Nueva Planta decrees by Philip V in 1715.

Crown of Castile
1230–1715
The Crown of Castile in the early 16th century in the Iberian Peninsula.
Capital
Common languages
Religion
GovernmentMonarchy subject to fueros
Monarch 
• 1230–1252
Ferdinand III (first)
• 1474–1504
Isabella I and Ferdinand V
LegislatureCortes of Castile
Historical eraMiddle Ages early modern period
• Union of Castile & León
23 September 1230
19 October 1469
2 January 1492
1512 (annexed 7 July 1515)
• Ascension of Charles I
23 January 1516
1715
Area
1300[3]335,000 km2 (129,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1300[3]
3 000 000
Currency
a. ^ Itinerant court until Philip II fixed it to Madrid.

In 1492, the voyage of Christopher Columbus and the discovery of the Americas were major events in the history of Castile. The West Indies, Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea were also a part of the Crown of Castile when transformed from lordships to kingdoms of the heirs of Castile in 1506, with the Treaty of Villafáfila, and upon the death of Ferdinand the Catholic. The discovery of the Pacific Ocean, the conquest of the Aztec Empire, the conquest of the Inca Empire, the conquest of New Granada as well as the conquest of the Philippines all helped shape the Crown of Castile into a global empire in the 16th Century.

The title of "King of Castile" remained in use by the Habsburg rulers during the 16th and 17th centuries. Charles I was King of Aragon, Majorca, Valencia, and Sicily, and Count of Barcelona, Roussillon and Cerdagne, as well as King of Castile and León, 1516–1556.

In the early 18th century, Philip of Bourbon won the War of the Spanish Succession and imposed unification policies over the Crown of Aragon, supporters of their enemies. This unified the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Castile into the kingdom of Spain. Even though the Nueva Planta decrees did not formally abolish the Crown of Castile, the country of (Castile and Aragon) was called "Spain" by both contemporaries and historians.

History

Preceding events

Two kingdoms: León and Castile

Towards unification

The Kingdom of León arose out of the Kingdom of Asturias. The Kingdom of Castile appeared initially as a county of the Kingdom of León. From the second half of the 10th century to the first half of the 11th century it changed hands between León and the Kingdom of Navarre. In the 11th century, it became a kingdom in its own right.

The two kingdoms had been united twice previously:

  • From 1037 until 1065 under Ferdinand I of León. Upon his death his kingdoms passed to his sons, León to Alfonso VI, Castile to Sancho II, and Galicia to García.
  • From 1072 until 1157 under Alfonso VI (died 1109), Urraca (died 1126), and Alfonso VII. From 1111 until 1126 Galicia was separate from the union under Alfonso VII. In 1157 the kingdoms were divided between Alfonso's sons, with Ferdinand II receiving León and Sancho III Castile.
Occupation of western Navarre

From 1199 to 1201 under Alfonso VIII the Castilian king's armies invaded the Kingdom of Navarre, annexing thereafter Álava, Durangaldea and Gipuzkoa, including San Sebastián and Vitoria (Gasteiz). However, these western Basque territories saw their Navarrese charters confirmed under Castilian rule.[4]

Crown of Castile from the rule of Ferdinand III until the ascension of Charles I

Union of the two kingdoms under Ferdinand III

Ferdinand III received the Kingdom of Castile from his mother, Queen Berengaria of Castile granddaughter of Sancho III in 1217, and the Kingdom of León from his father Alfonso IX of León son of Ferdinand II in 1230. From then on the two kingdoms were united under the name of the Kingdom of León and Castile, or simply as the Crown of Castile. Ferdinand III later conquered the Guadalquivir Valley, while his son Alfonso X conquered the Kingdom of Murcia from Al-Andalus, further extending the area of the Crown of Castile. Given this, the kings of the Crown of Castile traditionally styled themselves "King of Castile, León, Toledo, Galicia, Murcia, Jaén, Córdoba, Seville, and Lord of Biscay and Molina", among other possessions they later gained. The heir to the throne has been titled Prince of Asturias since the 14th century.

Union of the Cortes and the legal code

 
Equestrian heraldic of King John II of Castile in the Equestrian armorial of the Golden Fleece 1433–1435. Collection Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal.

Almost immediately after the union of the two kingdoms under Ferdinand III, the parliaments of Castile and León were united. It was divided into three estates, which corresponded with the nobility, the church and the cities, and included representation from Castile, León, Galicia, Toledo, and the Basque Provinces.[citation needed] Initially the number of cities represented in the Cortes varied over the next century, until John I permanently set those that would be allowed to send representatives (procuradores): Burgos, Toledo, León, Sevilla, Córdoba, Murcia, Jaén, Zamora, Segovia, Ávila, Salamanca, Cuenca, Toro, Valladolid, Soria, Madrid and Guadalajara (with Granada added after its conquest in 1492).

Under Alfonso X, most sessions of the Cortes of both kingdoms were held jointly. The Cortes of 1258 in Valladolid comprised representatives of Castile, Extremadura and León ("de Castiella e de Estremadura e de tierra de León") and those of Seville in 1261 of Castile, León and all other kingdoms ("de Castiella e de León e de todos los otros nuestros Regnos"). Subsequent Cortes were celebrated separately, for example in 1301 that of Castile in Burgos and that of León in Zamora, but the representatives demanded that the parliaments be reunited from then on.

Although the individual kingdoms and cities initially retained their individual historical rights-including the Old Fuero of Castile (Viejo Fuero de Castilla) and the different fueros of the municipal councils of Castile, León, Extremadura and Andalucía-a unified legal code for the entire new kingdom was created in the Siete Partidas (c. 1265), the Ordenamiento de Alcalá (1348) and the Leyes de Toro (1505). These laws continued to be in force until 1889, when a new Spanish civil code, the Código Civil Español, was enacted.

Spanish languages and universities

 
Map of Castilian and Aragonese Universities

In the 13th century there were many languages spoken in the Kingdoms of León and Castile among them Castilian, Leonese, Basque and Galician-Portuguese. But, as the century progressed, Castilian gained increasing prominence as the language of culture and communication- one example of this is the Cantar de Mio Cid.[citation needed]

In the last years of the reign of Ferdinand III, Castilian began to be used for some important documents, such as the Visigothic Code, the basis of the legal code for Christians living in Muslim Cordova, but it was during the reign of Alfonso X that it became the official language. Henceforth all public documents were written in Castilian, likewise all translations of Arabic legal and government documents were made into Castilian instead of Latin.

Some scholars think that the substitution of Castilian for Latin was due to the strength of the new language, whereas others consider that it was due to the influence of Hebrew-speaking intellectuals who were hostile towards Latin, the language of the Christian Church.[citation needed]

In 1492, under the Catholic Monarchs, the first edition of the Grammar of the Castilian Language by Antonio de Nebrija was published. Castilian was eventually carried to the Americas in the 16th century by the conquistadors. Because of Castilian's importance in the land ruled by the Spanish Crown, the language is also known as Spanish.

Furthermore, in the 13th century many universities were founded where instruction was in Castilian, such as the Leonese University of Salamanca, the Castilian Estudio General of Palencia and the University of Valladolid, which were among the first universities in Europe.

In the 13th century, emerging groups of local grazers coalesced into the powerful Mesta, the headpin for wool trade over the following three centuries.[5] In time, Castile would become a leading export market for wool in the late middle ages.[6]

Ascension of the Trastámara dynasty

 
Expansion of Castilian territory.

The Castilian Civil War pitting supporters of Henry of Trastámara against Peter I entailed a struggle of competing factions, with the former party being favoured by the Castilian nobility (and, to a lesser extent, the Clergy),[7] whereas the latter party lied on the side of Jews', conversos' and town councils' interests.[8] A substantial transfer from the royal patrimony to the nobles ensued upon the prevail of the Trastámaras in the conflict.[8] Likewise, the resulting dynastic change ran parallel to a radicalization of the antisemitic sentiment in Castile.[9]

On the death of Alfonso XI a dynastic conflict started between his sons, the Infantes Peter (Pedro) and Henry, Count of Trastámara, which became entangled in the Hundred Years' War (between England and France). Alfonso XI had married Maria of Portugal with whom he had his heir, the Infante Peter. However, the King also had many illegitimate children with Eleanor of Guzman, among them the above-mentioned Henry, who disputed Peter's right to the throne once the latter became king.

In the resulting struggle, in which both brothers claimed to be king, Pedro allied himself with Edward, Prince of Wales, "the Black Prince". In 1367, the Black Prince defeated Henry II's allies at the Battle of Nájera, restoring Pedro's control of the kingdom. The Black Prince, seeing that the king would not reimburse his expenses, left Castile. Henry, who had fled to France, took advantage of the opportunity and recommenced the fight. Henry finally was victorious in 1369 in the Battle of Montiel, in which he had Peter killed.

In 1371 the brother of the Black Prince, John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, married Constance, Peter's daughter. In 1386, he claimed the Crown of Castile in the name of his wife, the legitimate heir according to the Cortes de Seville of 1361. He arrived in A Coruña with an army and took the city. He then moved on to occupy Santiago de Compostela, Pontevedra and Vigo. He asked John I, Henry II's son, to give up the throne in favor of Constance.

John declined but proposed that his son, the Infante Henry, marry John of Gaunt's daughter Catherine. The proposal was accepted, and the title Prince of Asturias was created for Henry and Catherine. This ended the dynastic conflict, strengthened the House of Trastámara's position and created peace between England and Castile.

Relations with the Crown of Aragon during the 14th century

 
Castilian territory at the end of the 14th century.

During the reign of Henry III royal power was restored, overshadowing the much powerful Castilian nobility. In his later years Henry delegated some of his power to his brother Ferdinand I of Antequera, who would be regent, along with his wife Catherine of Lancaster, during the childhood of his son John II. After the Compromise of Caspe in 1412, Ferdinand left Castile to become King of Aragon.

Upon the death of his mother, John II at the age of 14, took to the throne and married his cousin Maria of Aragon. The young king entrusted his government to regent Álvaro de Luna, the most influential person in court and allied with the lesser nobility, the cities, the clergy, and the Jews. This brought together the mutual dislikes of the king shared by the greater Castilian nobility and the Aragonese Infantes, sons of Ferdinand I of Antequera, who sought to control the Castilian crown. This eventually led to war in 1429 and 1430 between the two kingdoms. Álvaro de Luna won the war and expelled the Aragonese Infantes from Castile.

Second Conflict of Succession

Henry IV unsuccessfully tried to re-establish the peace with the nobility that his father, John II, had shattered. When his second wife, Joan of Portugal, gave birth to Infanta Joanna, it was claimed that she was the result of an affair of the Queen with Beltrán de la Cueva, one of the King's chief ministers.

The King, besieged by riots and the demands of the nobles, had to sign a treaty in which he named as his successor his half-brother Alfonso, leaving Infanta Joanna out of the line of succession. After the death of Alfonso in an accident, Henry IV signed the Treaty of the Bulls of Guisando with his half-sister Isabella I in which he named her heiress in return for her marrying a prince chosen by him.

Catholic Monarchs: Union with the Crown of Aragon

 
The Surrender of Granada (F. Padilla)

In October 1469 Isabella I and Ferdinand II, heir to the throne of Aragon, married in secret in the Palacio de los Vivero in Castilian Valladolid. The consequence was a dynastic union of the Crown of Castile and the Crown of Aragon in 1479 when Ferdinand ascended to the Aragonese throne. This union however was not effective until the reign of his grandson Charles I (Holy Roman Emperor Charles V). Ferdinand and Isabella were related and had married without papal approval. Although Isabella wanted to marry Ferdinand, she refused to proceed with the marriage until she received a Papal dispensation. Consequently, Ferdinand's father forged a papal dispensation for the two to marry. Isabella believed that the dispensation was authentic and the marriage went ahead. A genuine papal dispensation arrived afterwards. Later Pope Alexander VI bestowed upon them the title of 'los Reyes Católicos' ('the Catholic Monarchs').

Henry IV, half brother of Isabella, considered the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella as breaking the Treaty of the Bulls of Guisando, under which Isabella would ascend to the Castilian throne on his death only if her suitor was approved by him. Henry wanted to ally Castile with Portugal or France rather than Aragon. He therefore decided to name his daughter Infanta Joanna as heiress to the throne rather than Isabella I. When he died in 1474 the War of the Castilian Succession broke out over who would ascend to the throne. It lasted until 1479 when Isabella and her supporters came out victorious.

 
Columbus and the Catholic Monarchs (The return of Columbus)

After Isabella's victory in the civil war and Ferdinand's ascension to the Aragonese throne the two crowns were united under the same monarchs. However, this was a personal union and both kingdoms remained administratively separate to some extent, each maintaining largely its own laws; both parliaments remained separate, the only common institution would be the Inquisition. Despite their titles of "Monarchs of Castile, Leon, Aragon and Sicily" Ferdinand and Isabella reigned over their respective territories, although they also took decisions together. Its central position, larger territorial area (three times greater than that of Aragon) and larger population (4.3 million as opposed to the 1 million in Aragon) led to Castile becoming the dominating partner in the union.

As a result of the Reconquista (Reconquest) the Castilian aristocracy had become very powerful. The monarchs needed to assert their authority over the nobility and the clergy. With this end in mind they founded a law enforcement body, the Consejo de la Hermandad, more commonly known as the Santa Hermandad (the Holy Brotherhood), which was staffed and funded by the municipalities. They also took further measures against the nobility, destroying feudal castles, prohibiting private wars and reducing the power of the Adelantados (a governor-like military office in regions recently conquered). The monarchy incorporated military orders under the Consejo de las Órdenes in 1495, reinforced royal judicial power over the feudal one and transformed the Audiencias into the supreme judicial bodies. The crown also sought to better control the cities, and so in 1480 in the Cortes of Toledo it created the corregidores, representatives of the crown, which supervised the city councils. In religion, they reformed religious orders and sought unity of the various sections of the church. They pressured Jews to convert to Catholicism, in some cases persecuted by the Inquisition. Finally in 1492, the monarchs decided that those who would not convert would be expelled. It is estimated that between 50,000 and 70,000 people were expelled from Castile. From 1502 onwards, they began to convert the Muslim population.

Between 1478 and 1497 the monarchs' forces conquered the three Canary Islands of Gran Canaria, La Palma and Tenerife. On 2 January 1492 the monarchs entered Granada's Alhambra marking the completion and end of the Reconquista. Also in 1492, the Christopher Columbus maritime expedition claimed the newly found lands in the Americas for the Crown of Castile and began the New World conquests. In 1497 Castile conquered Melilla on the north coast of North Africa. After Castile's conquest of the Kingdom of Granada, its politics turned towards the Mediterranean, and Castile militarily helped Aragon in its problems with France, culminating in the reconquest of Naples for the Crown of Aragon in 1504. Later that same year, Queen Isabella died, on November 26.

Period of regency – Joanna I

Upon Queen Isabella I's death 1504, the crown passed to her daughter Joanna, who was married to Philip of Austria (nicknamed 'Philip the Handsome'). But Isabella knew of her daughter's possible mental health incapacities (and so nicknamed 'Juana la Loca' or 'Joanna the Mad' ) and named Ferdinand as regent in the case that Joanna "didn't want to or couldn't fulfil her duties". In the 'Salamanca Agreement' of 1505, it was decided that the government would be shared by Philip I, Ferdinand V and Joanna. However, poor relations between Phillip, who was supported by the Castilian nobility, and Ferdinand resulted in Ferdinand renouncing his regent's powers in Castile in order to avoid an armed conflict.

Through the Concordia de Villafáfila of 1506, Ferdinand returned to Aragon and Phillip was recognized as King of Castile, with Joanna a co-monarch. In the Treaty of Villafáfila in 1506 King Ferdinand the Catholic renounced not only the government of Castile in favour of his son-in-law Philip I of Castile but also the lordship of the Indies, withholding a half of the income of the kingdoms of the Indies. Joanna of Castile and Philip immediately added to their titles the kingdoms of Indies, Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea. Phillip died and Ferdinand returned in 1507 once again to be regent for Joanna. Her isolated confinement-imprisonment in the Santa Clara Convent at Tordesillas, to last over forty years until death, began with her father's orders in 1510.

In 1512 a joint Castilian-Aragonese force invaded Navarre and most of the Kingdom of Navarre south of the Pyrenees was annexed to Castile.

Crown of Castile within Habsburg Spain

Charles I

 
"The Comuneros Padilla, Bravo and Maldonado in the Patíbulo", by Antonio Gisbert, 1860.

Charles I received the Crown of Castile, the Crown of Aragon and the empire through a combination of dynastic marriages and premature deaths:

Charles I was not well received in Castile. This was partly because he was a foreign-born king (born in Ghent), and even before his arrival in Castile he had granted important positions to Flemish citizens and had used Castilian money to fund his court. The Castilian nobility and the cities were on the verge of an uprising to defend their rights. Many Castilians favoured the king's younger brother Ferdinand, who grew up in Castile, and in fact the Council of Castile opposed the idea of Charles as King of Castile.

In 1518 the Castilian parliament in Valladolid named the Wallonian Jean de Sauvage as its president. This caused angry protests in the parliament, which rejected the presence of foreigners in its deliberations. Despite threats, the parliament led by Juan de Zumel representing Burgos, resisted and forced the king to respect the laws of Castile, remove all foreigners from important governmental posts, and learn to speak Castilian. After taking his oath, Charles received a subsidy of 600,000 ducats.

Charles was conscious of the fact that he had options to become emperor and needed to impose his authority over Castile to gain access to its riches for his imperial goals. The riches from the Americas came through Castile which was one of the more dynamic, rich, and advanced territories in Europe in the 16th century. It started to realise that it could become immersed within an empire. This, added to the broken promise of Charles, only increased hostility towards the king. In 1520 in Toledo Parliament rejected a further subsidy for the king. Parliament in Santiago de Compostela reached the same decision. Finally, when Parliament was held in A Coruña, many members were bribed and others denied entry, with the result that the subsidy was approved. Those members who voted in favour were attacked by the Castilian people and their houses were burned. Parliament was not the only opposition which Charles would come up against. When he left Castile in 1520, the Castilian War of the Communities broke out, and the revolts released Joanna, claiming to support her to be the sole monarch and encouraging her to agree the dethronement of Charles. While sympathetic to revolts, Joanna however refused to sign any documents to support them or depose her son. Los comuneros were defeated one year later (1521). After their defeat, Parliament was reduced to a merely consultative body. To prevent Joanna from being proposed to be an alternative monarch by opponents again, Charles continued her confinement until her death in 1555, after which Charles became the only monarch of Spain.

Imperial policies of Philip II

Philip II continued the politics of Charles I, but unlike his father he made Castile the core of the Spanish Empire, centralising all administration in Madrid. The other Spanish regions maintained certain degree of autonomy, being governed by a Viceroy.

In fact, since the reign of Charles I the financial burden of the empire had fallen mainly on Castile, but under Philip II the cost quadrupled. During his reign, as well as increasing existing taxes he created some new ones, among them the excusado in 1567. That same year Philip ordered the proclamation of the La Pragmática; an act whereby all Moriscos had to abandon all Moorish traditions and become true Catholics. This edict limited religious, linguistic and cultural freedom of the Morisco population and provoked the Morisco Revolt (1568–1571), which was put down by John of Austria.

Castile entered a phase of recession in 1575; Spain as a whole followed, which provoked the suspension of wages (the third of his reign). In 1590 the Cortes approved the millones; a new tax on food. This exhausted Castilian cities and hindered the economy. In 1596, pay was once again suspended.

Later Habsburgs

 
Worldwide Crown of Castile

In the previous kingdoms, positions in national institutions were filled by educated gentlemen. Philip II's administrators would normally come from either the University of Alcalá or the University of Salamanca. After Philip III the nobility once again asserted their right to govern the country. In order to show that there was a new order ruling there was a cleansing of the blood of Spain. Religious persecution led Philip to declare the expulsion of the Moriscos in 1609.

Faced with the collapse of the Exchequer, in order to maintain the hegemony of Philip IV's Spanish Empire, the Count-Duke of Olivares, the king's favourite (valido) from 1621 to 1643, tried to introduce a series of reforms. Among these was the Unión de Armas, the creation of a new army of 140,000 reservists. Every territory within the kingdom contributed citizens proportionally in order to maintain the force. His aims of union did not work and the Spanish Crown continued as a confederation of kingdoms.

Luis Méndez de Haro took over from Olivares as favourite Philip IV between 1659 and 1665. This was in order to alleviate interior conflicts sparked off by his predecessor (revolts in Portugal, Catalonia and Andalusia) and achieve peace in Europe.

Upon the death of Philip IV in 1665, and with the incapacity of Charles II to govern, Spain suffered an economic slowdown and battles for power between the different 'favourites'. The death of Charles II in 1700 without descendants provoked the War of the Spanish Succession.

After the war, all the territories were unified as a single country under the Crown of Spain.[10][11]

Spanish territorial divisions within the Crown of Castile

 
The Crown in late medieval Spain
 
North America, 18th century
 
South America, 18th century

In Spain

Overseas (before 1715)

NorthSeptentrional

SouthMeridional

In the viceroyalties the viceroy, whose term etymologically means "in the place of the king", concentrated all public power. They was freely appointed and removed by the Monarch, when the sovereign wanted he/she could remove the viceroy of the office. In New Spain and Peru they played the role of sovereign, but in reality they only obeyed the orders of the Monarch of the Crown of Castile.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Spanish: Corona de Castilla, Galician: Coroa de Castela, Leonese: Corona de Castiella, Basque: Gaztelako Koroa, Latin: Corona Castellae.

References

  1. ^ Menéndez Pidal, Ramón (1906). El dialecto leonés (in Spanish). Curpo facultativo de archiveros, bibliotecarios y arqueologos.
  2. ^ Menéndez Pidal, Ramón (1904). Manual elemental de gramática histórica española (in Spanish). Madrid: Librería General de Victoriano Suárez.
  3. ^ a b Reilly, Bernard F. (1993). The Medieval Spains. Cambridge University Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780521397414. from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 11 October 2019. The new kingdom of Castile had roughly tripled in size to some 335,000 square kilometers by 1300 but, at the same time, its population had increased by the same factor, from one to three millions, so that the average density remained steady at about 8.5 persons per square kilometer.
  4. ^ Urzainqui, Tomás (1998). La Navarra marítima. Pamplona: Pamiela. pp. 213–249. ISBN 84-7681-284-1.
  5. ^ Vicens Vives, Jaime (1969). An economic history of Spain. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 131–132.
  6. ^ Vicens Vives 1969, p. 6.
  7. ^ Díaz Ibáñez, Jorge (2019). "Iglesia, nobleza y poderes urbanos en la corona de Castilla durante la baja Edad Media. Una aproximación historiográfica". Iglesia, nobleza y poderes urbanos en los reinos cristianos de la Península Ibérica durante la Edad Media (PDF). Murcia: Sociedad Española de Estudios Medievales. pp. 38–39. ISBN 978-84-17157-97-5.
  8. ^ a b Vicens Vives 1969, p. 246.
  9. ^ Cantera-Montenegro, Enrique (2019). "Los judíos de Castilla ante el cambio de dinastía". Memoria y Civilización. Pamplona: Universidad de Navarra. 22: 143, 146. doi:10.15581/001.22.028. ISSN 1139-0107. S2CID 214282114.
  10. ^ Charles Arnold-Baker (2001), The Companion to British History (2, revised, illustrated, reprint ed.), Routledge, p. 1161, ISBN 9780415185837, from the original on 2022-05-21, retrieved 2020-10-30, Louis XIV accepted [in 1700] on behald of his grandson, who succeeded as Philip V on condition that the Crowns of France and Spain should never be united. (...) This provoked the great War of the Spanish Succession. (...) Barcelona fell in 1714 and the Aragonese privileges were abolished. Spain had become one country.
  11. ^ Vicent de Melchor; Albert Branchadell; Vicent de Melchor (2002), El catalán: Una lengua de Europa para compartir, Univ. Autònoma de Barcelona, pp. 106–107, ISBN 9788449022999, from the original on 2022-05-21, retrieved 2020-10-30, Mas que con los Reyes Católicos (a finales del siglo XV), como todavia suele repetirse, es a partir de Felipe V (a principios del sigo XVIII) cuando podemos comenzar a considerar España como un Estado auténticamente unificado o, mejor, unitario: es a partir de entonces cuando podemos empezar a hablar con propiedad de un rey de España o de una Corona de España y, consecuentemente de un Reino de España.

Further reading

  • "Castile. Titles of European hereditary rulers". nobhist.narod.ru. 2022.

crown, castile, coordinates, 41750, 71500, 41750, 71500, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, largely, entirely, single, source, relev. Coordinates 40 25 03 N 03 42 54 W 40 41750 N 3 71500 W 40 41750 3 71500 This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Crown of Castile news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2010 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Crown of Castile news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Crown of Castile nb 1 was a medieval polity in the Iberian Peninsula that formed in 1230 as a result of the third and definitive union of the crowns and some decades later the parliaments of the kingdoms of Castile and Leon upon the accession of the then Castilian king Ferdinand III to the vacant Leonese throne It continued to exist as a separate entity after the personal union in 1469 of the crowns of Castile and Aragon with the marriage of the Catholic Monarchs up to the promulgation of the Nueva Planta decrees by Philip V in 1715 Crown of CastileLatin Corona CastellaeSpanish Corona de Castilla1230 1715Royal Standard Coat of armsThe Crown of Castile in the early 16th century in the Iberian Peninsula CapitalMadrid 1561 1601 1606 1715 Valladolid 1601 1606 a Common languagesOfficial languages Old Spanish Castilian LatinUnofficial languages Basque Galician Astur Leonese Mozarabic Andalusian Arabic Judaeo Spanish Guanche 1 2 failed verification ReligionOfficial religion CatholicismMinority religions Sunni IslamSephardic JudaismGovernmentMonarchy subject to fuerosMonarch 1230 1252Ferdinand III first 1474 1504Isabella I and Ferdinand VLegislatureCortes of CastileHistorical eraMiddle Ages early modern period Union of Castile amp Leon23 September 1230 Union of Ferdinand II and Isabella I19 October 1469 Conquest of Granada2 January 1492 Occupation of Navarre1512 annexed 7 July 1515 Ascension of Charles I23 January 1516 Nueva Planta decrees1715Area1300 3 335 000 km2 129 000 sq mi Population 1300 3 3 000 000CurrencySpanish realSpanish maravediPreceded by Succeeded byKingdom of CastileKingdom of LeonKingdom of Navarre Habsburg SpainBourbon SpainBritish Gibraltara Itinerant court until Philip II fixed it to Madrid In 1492 the voyage of Christopher Columbus and the discovery of the Americas were major events in the history of Castile The West Indies Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea were also a part of the Crown of Castile when transformed from lordships to kingdoms of the heirs of Castile in 1506 with the Treaty of Villafafila and upon the death of Ferdinand the Catholic The discovery of the Pacific Ocean the conquest of the Aztec Empire the conquest of the Inca Empire the conquest of New Granada as well as the conquest of the Philippines all helped shape the Crown of Castile into a global empire in the 16th Century The title of King of Castile remained in use by the Habsburg rulers during the 16th and 17th centuries Charles I was King of Aragon Majorca Valencia and Sicily and Count of Barcelona Roussillon and Cerdagne as well as King of Castile and Leon 1516 1556 In the early 18th century Philip of Bourbon won the War of the Spanish Succession and imposed unification policies over the Crown of Aragon supporters of their enemies This unified the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Castile into the kingdom of Spain Even though the Nueva Planta decrees did not formally abolish the Crown of Castile the country of Castile and Aragon was called Spain by both contemporaries and historians Contents 1 History 1 1 Preceding events 1 1 1 Two kingdoms Leon and Castile 1 1 1 1 Towards unification 1 1 1 2 Occupation of western Navarre 1 2 Crown of Castile from the rule of Ferdinand III until the ascension of Charles I 1 2 1 Union of the two kingdoms under Ferdinand III 1 2 2 Union of the Cortes and the legal code 1 2 3 Spanish languages and universities 1 2 4 Ascension of the Trastamara dynasty 1 2 5 Relations with the Crown of Aragon during the 14th century 1 2 6 Second Conflict of Succession 1 2 7 Catholic Monarchs Union with the Crown of Aragon 1 2 8 Period of regency Joanna I 1 3 Crown of Castile within Habsburg Spain 1 3 1 Charles I 1 3 2 Imperial policies of Philip II 1 3 3 Later Habsburgs 2 Spanish territorial divisions within the Crown of Castile 2 1 In Spain 2 2 Overseas before 1715 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further readingHistory EditPreceding events Edit Two kingdoms Leon and Castile Edit Main articles Kingdom of Leon and Kingdom of Castile Towards unification Edit The Kingdom of Leon arose out of the Kingdom of Asturias The Kingdom of Castile appeared initially as a county of the Kingdom of Leon From the second half of the 10th century to the first half of the 11th century it changed hands between Leon and the Kingdom of Navarre In the 11th century it became a kingdom in its own right The two kingdoms had been united twice previously From 1037 until 1065 under Ferdinand I of Leon Upon his death his kingdoms passed to his sons Leon to Alfonso VI Castile to Sancho II and Galicia to Garcia From 1072 until 1157 under Alfonso VI died 1109 Urraca died 1126 and Alfonso VII From 1111 until 1126 Galicia was separate from the union under Alfonso VII In 1157 the kingdoms were divided between Alfonso s sons with Ferdinand II receiving Leon and Sancho III Castile Occupation of western Navarre Edit From 1199 to 1201 under Alfonso VIII the Castilian king s armies invaded the Kingdom of Navarre annexing thereafter Alava Durangaldea and Gipuzkoa including San Sebastian and Vitoria Gasteiz However these western Basque territories saw their Navarrese charters confirmed under Castilian rule 4 Crown of Castile from the rule of Ferdinand III until the ascension of Charles I Edit Union of the two kingdoms under Ferdinand III Edit Ferdinand III received the Kingdom of Castile from his mother Queen Berengaria of Castile granddaughter of Sancho III in 1217 and the Kingdom of Leon from his father Alfonso IX of Leon son of Ferdinand II in 1230 From then on the two kingdoms were united under the name of the Kingdom of Leon and Castile or simply as the Crown of Castile Ferdinand III later conquered the Guadalquivir Valley while his son Alfonso X conquered the Kingdom of Murcia from Al Andalus further extending the area of the Crown of Castile Given this the kings of the Crown of Castile traditionally styled themselves King of Castile Leon Toledo Galicia Murcia Jaen Cordoba Seville and Lord of Biscay and Molina among other possessions they later gained The heir to the throne has been titled Prince of Asturias since the 14th century Union of the Cortes and the legal code Edit Equestrian heraldic of King John II of Castile in the Equestrian armorial of the Golden Fleece 1433 1435 Collection Bibliotheque de l Arsenal Almost immediately after the union of the two kingdoms under Ferdinand III the parliaments of Castile and Leon were united It was divided into three estates which corresponded with the nobility the church and the cities and included representation from Castile Leon Galicia Toledo and the Basque Provinces citation needed Initially the number of cities represented in the Cortes varied over the next century until John I permanently set those that would be allowed to send representatives procuradores Burgos Toledo Leon Sevilla Cordoba Murcia Jaen Zamora Segovia Avila Salamanca Cuenca Toro Valladolid Soria Madrid and Guadalajara with Granada added after its conquest in 1492 Under Alfonso X most sessions of the Cortes of both kingdoms were held jointly The Cortes of 1258 in Valladolid comprised representatives of Castile Extremadura and Leon de Castiella e de Estremadura e de tierra de Leon and those of Seville in 1261 of Castile Leon and all other kingdoms de Castiella e de Leon e de todos los otros nuestros Regnos Subsequent Cortes were celebrated separately for example in 1301 that of Castile in Burgos and that of Leon in Zamora but the representatives demanded that the parliaments be reunited from then on Although the individual kingdoms and cities initially retained their individual historical rights including the Old Fuero of Castile Viejo Fuero de Castilla and the different fueros of the municipal councils of Castile Leon Extremadura and Andalucia a unified legal code for the entire new kingdom was created in the Siete Partidas c 1265 the Ordenamiento de Alcala 1348 and the Leyes de Toro 1505 These laws continued to be in force until 1889 when a new Spanish civil code the Codigo Civil Espanol was enacted Spanish languages and universities Edit Map of Castilian and Aragonese Universities In the 13th century there were many languages spoken in the Kingdoms of Leon and Castile among them Castilian Leonese Basque and Galician Portuguese But as the century progressed Castilian gained increasing prominence as the language of culture and communication one example of this is the Cantar de Mio Cid citation needed In the last years of the reign of Ferdinand III Castilian began to be used for some important documents such as the Visigothic Code the basis of the legal code for Christians living in Muslim Cordova but it was during the reign of Alfonso X that it became the official language Henceforth all public documents were written in Castilian likewise all translations of Arabic legal and government documents were made into Castilian instead of Latin Some scholars think that the substitution of Castilian for Latin was due to the strength of the new language whereas others consider that it was due to the influence of Hebrew speaking intellectuals who were hostile towards Latin the language of the Christian Church citation needed In 1492 under the Catholic Monarchs the first edition of the Grammar of the Castilian Language by Antonio de Nebrija was published Castilian was eventually carried to the Americas in the 16th century by the conquistadors Because of Castilian s importance in the land ruled by the Spanish Crown the language is also known as Spanish Furthermore in the 13th century many universities were founded where instruction was in Castilian such as the Leonese University of Salamanca the Castilian Estudio General of Palencia and the University of Valladolid which were among the first universities in Europe In the 13th century emerging groups of local grazers coalesced into the powerful Mesta the headpin for wool trade over the following three centuries 5 In time Castile would become a leading export market for wool in the late middle ages 6 Ascension of the Trastamara dynasty Edit Expansion of Castilian territory The Castilian Civil War pitting supporters of Henry of Trastamara against Peter I entailed a struggle of competing factions with the former party being favoured by the Castilian nobility and to a lesser extent the Clergy 7 whereas the latter party lied on the side of Jews conversos and town councils interests 8 A substantial transfer from the royal patrimony to the nobles ensued upon the prevail of the Trastamaras in the conflict 8 Likewise the resulting dynastic change ran parallel to a radicalization of the antisemitic sentiment in Castile 9 On the death of Alfonso XI a dynastic conflict started between his sons the Infantes Peter Pedro and Henry Count of Trastamara which became entangled in the Hundred Years War between England and France Alfonso XI had married Maria of Portugal with whom he had his heir the Infante Peter However the King also had many illegitimate children with Eleanor of Guzman among them the above mentioned Henry who disputed Peter s right to the throne once the latter became king In the resulting struggle in which both brothers claimed to be king Pedro allied himself with Edward Prince of Wales the Black Prince In 1367 the Black Prince defeated Henry II s allies at the Battle of Najera restoring Pedro s control of the kingdom The Black Prince seeing that the king would not reimburse his expenses left Castile Henry who had fled to France took advantage of the opportunity and recommenced the fight Henry finally was victorious in 1369 in the Battle of Montiel in which he had Peter killed In 1371 the brother of the Black Prince John of Gaunt 1st Duke of Lancaster married Constance Peter s daughter In 1386 he claimed the Crown of Castile in the name of his wife the legitimate heir according to the Cortes de Seville of 1361 He arrived in A Coruna with an army and took the city He then moved on to occupy Santiago de Compostela Pontevedra and Vigo He asked John I Henry II s son to give up the throne in favor of Constance John declined but proposed that his son the Infante Henry marry John of Gaunt s daughter Catherine The proposal was accepted and the title Prince of Asturias was created for Henry and Catherine This ended the dynastic conflict strengthened the House of Trastamara s position and created peace between England and Castile Relations with the Crown of Aragon during the 14th century Edit Castilian territory at the end of the 14th century During the reign of Henry III royal power was restored overshadowing the much powerful Castilian nobility In his later years Henry delegated some of his power to his brother Ferdinand I of Antequera who would be regent along with his wife Catherine of Lancaster during the childhood of his son John II After the Compromise of Caspe in 1412 Ferdinand left Castile to become King of Aragon Upon the death of his mother John II at the age of 14 took to the throne and married his cousin Maria of Aragon The young king entrusted his government to regent Alvaro de Luna the most influential person in court and allied with the lesser nobility the cities the clergy and the Jews This brought together the mutual dislikes of the king shared by the greater Castilian nobility and the Aragonese Infantes sons of Ferdinand I of Antequera who sought to control the Castilian crown This eventually led to war in 1429 and 1430 between the two kingdoms Alvaro de Luna won the war and expelled the Aragonese Infantes from Castile Second Conflict of Succession Edit Main article War of the Castilian Succession Henry IV unsuccessfully tried to re establish the peace with the nobility that his father John II had shattered When his second wife Joan of Portugal gave birth to Infanta Joanna it was claimed that she was the result of an affair of the Queen with Beltran de la Cueva one of the King s chief ministers The King besieged by riots and the demands of the nobles had to sign a treaty in which he named as his successor his half brother Alfonso leaving Infanta Joanna out of the line of succession After the death of Alfonso in an accident Henry IV signed the Treaty of the Bulls of Guisando with his half sister Isabella I in which he named her heiress in return for her marrying a prince chosen by him Catholic Monarchs Union with the Crown of Aragon Edit The Surrender of Granada F Padilla In October 1469 Isabella I and Ferdinand II heir to the throne of Aragon married in secret in the Palacio de los Vivero in Castilian Valladolid The consequence was a dynastic union of the Crown of Castile and the Crown of Aragon in 1479 when Ferdinand ascended to the Aragonese throne This union however was not effective until the reign of his grandson Charles I Holy Roman Emperor Charles V Ferdinand and Isabella were related and had married without papal approval Although Isabella wanted to marry Ferdinand she refused to proceed with the marriage until she received a Papal dispensation Consequently Ferdinand s father forged a papal dispensation for the two to marry Isabella believed that the dispensation was authentic and the marriage went ahead A genuine papal dispensation arrived afterwards Later Pope Alexander VI bestowed upon them the title of los Reyes Catolicos the Catholic Monarchs Henry IV half brother of Isabella considered the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella as breaking the Treaty of the Bulls of Guisando under which Isabella would ascend to the Castilian throne on his death only if her suitor was approved by him Henry wanted to ally Castile with Portugal or France rather than Aragon He therefore decided to name his daughter Infanta Joanna as heiress to the throne rather than Isabella I When he died in 1474 the War of the Castilian Succession broke out over who would ascend to the throne It lasted until 1479 when Isabella and her supporters came out victorious Columbus and the Catholic Monarchs The return of Columbus After Isabella s victory in the civil war and Ferdinand s ascension to the Aragonese throne the two crowns were united under the same monarchs However this was a personal union and both kingdoms remained administratively separate to some extent each maintaining largely its own laws both parliaments remained separate the only common institution would be the Inquisition Despite their titles of Monarchs of Castile Leon Aragon and Sicily Ferdinand and Isabella reigned over their respective territories although they also took decisions together Its central position larger territorial area three times greater than that of Aragon and larger population 4 3 million as opposed to the 1 million in Aragon led to Castile becoming the dominating partner in the union As a result of the Reconquista Reconquest the Castilian aristocracy had become very powerful The monarchs needed to assert their authority over the nobility and the clergy With this end in mind they founded a law enforcement body the Consejo de la Hermandad more commonly known as the Santa Hermandad the Holy Brotherhood which was staffed and funded by the municipalities They also took further measures against the nobility destroying feudal castles prohibiting private wars and reducing the power of the Adelantados a governor like military office in regions recently conquered The monarchy incorporated military orders under the Consejo de las ordenes in 1495 reinforced royal judicial power over the feudal one and transformed the Audiencias into the supreme judicial bodies The crown also sought to better control the cities and so in 1480 in the Cortes of Toledo it created the corregidores representatives of the crown which supervised the city councils In religion they reformed religious orders and sought unity of the various sections of the church They pressured Jews to convert to Catholicism in some cases persecuted by the Inquisition Finally in 1492 the monarchs decided that those who would not convert would be expelled It is estimated that between 50 000 and 70 000 people were expelled from Castile From 1502 onwards they began to convert the Muslim population Between 1478 and 1497 the monarchs forces conquered the three Canary Islands of Gran Canaria La Palma and Tenerife On 2 January 1492 the monarchs entered Granada s Alhambra marking the completion and end of the Reconquista Also in 1492 the Christopher Columbus maritime expedition claimed the newly found lands in the Americas for the Crown of Castile and began the New World conquests In 1497 Castile conquered Melilla on the north coast of North Africa After Castile s conquest of the Kingdom of Granada its politics turned towards the Mediterranean and Castile militarily helped Aragon in its problems with France culminating in the reconquest of Naples for the Crown of Aragon in 1504 Later that same year Queen Isabella died on November 26 Period of regency Joanna I Edit Upon Queen Isabella I s death 1504 the crown passed to her daughter Joanna who was married to Philip of Austria nicknamed Philip the Handsome But Isabella knew of her daughter s possible mental health incapacities and so nicknamed Juana la Loca or Joanna the Mad and named Ferdinand as regent in the case that Joanna didn t want to or couldn t fulfil her duties In the Salamanca Agreement of 1505 it was decided that the government would be shared by Philip I Ferdinand V and Joanna However poor relations between Phillip who was supported by the Castilian nobility and Ferdinand resulted in Ferdinand renouncing his regent s powers in Castile in order to avoid an armed conflict Through the Concordia de Villafafila of 1506 Ferdinand returned to Aragon and Phillip was recognized as King of Castile with Joanna a co monarch In the Treaty of Villafafila in 1506 King Ferdinand the Catholic renounced not only the government of Castile in favour of his son in law Philip I of Castile but also the lordship of the Indies withholding a half of the income of the kingdoms of the Indies Joanna of Castile and Philip immediately added to their titles the kingdoms of Indies Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea Phillip died and Ferdinand returned in 1507 once again to be regent for Joanna Her isolated confinement imprisonment in the Santa Clara Convent at Tordesillas to last over forty years until death began with her father s orders in 1510 In 1512 a joint Castilian Aragonese force invaded Navarre and most of the Kingdom of Navarre south of the Pyrenees was annexed to Castile Crown of Castile within Habsburg Spain Edit Charles I Edit The Comuneros Padilla Bravo and Maldonado in the Patibulo by Antonio Gisbert 1860 Charles I received the Crown of Castile the Crown of Aragon and the empire through a combination of dynastic marriages and premature deaths when his father Philip I died in 1506 he became sovereign of the Netherlands upon the death of Ferdinand II of Aragon his grandfather in 1516 he gained the rule of Aragon and Castile with the Americas in co regency title with his mother Queen Joanna He maintained her confinement imprisonment so she was Queen of Aragon and of Castile in title only upon the death of Maximilian his paternal grandfather in 1519 Charles was elected Holy Roman Emperor as a consequence of which he is better known as Charles V Holy Roman Emperor Charles I was not well received in Castile This was partly because he was a foreign born king born in Ghent and even before his arrival in Castile he had granted important positions to Flemish citizens and had used Castilian money to fund his court The Castilian nobility and the cities were on the verge of an uprising to defend their rights Many Castilians favoured the king s younger brother Ferdinand who grew up in Castile and in fact the Council of Castile opposed the idea of Charles as King of Castile In 1518 the Castilian parliament in Valladolid named the Wallonian Jean de Sauvage as its president This caused angry protests in the parliament which rejected the presence of foreigners in its deliberations Despite threats the parliament led by Juan de Zumel representing Burgos resisted and forced the king to respect the laws of Castile remove all foreigners from important governmental posts and learn to speak Castilian After taking his oath Charles received a subsidy of 600 000 ducats Charles was conscious of the fact that he had options to become emperor and needed to impose his authority over Castile to gain access to its riches for his imperial goals The riches from the Americas came through Castile which was one of the more dynamic rich and advanced territories in Europe in the 16th century It started to realise that it could become immersed within an empire This added to the broken promise of Charles only increased hostility towards the king In 1520 in Toledo Parliament rejected a further subsidy for the king Parliament in Santiago de Compostela reached the same decision Finally when Parliament was held in A Coruna many members were bribed and others denied entry with the result that the subsidy was approved Those members who voted in favour were attacked by the Castilian people and their houses were burned Parliament was not the only opposition which Charles would come up against When he left Castile in 1520 the Castilian War of the Communities broke out and the revolts released Joanna claiming to support her to be the sole monarch and encouraging her to agree the dethronement of Charles While sympathetic to revolts Joanna however refused to sign any documents to support them or depose her son Los comuneros were defeated one year later 1521 After their defeat Parliament was reduced to a merely consultative body To prevent Joanna from being proposed to be an alternative monarch by opponents again Charles continued her confinement until her death in 1555 after which Charles became the only monarch of Spain Imperial policies of Philip II Edit Philip II continued the politics of Charles I but unlike his father he made Castile the core of the Spanish Empire centralising all administration in Madrid The other Spanish regions maintained certain degree of autonomy being governed by a Viceroy In fact since the reign of Charles I the financial burden of the empire had fallen mainly on Castile but under Philip II the cost quadrupled During his reign as well as increasing existing taxes he created some new ones among them the excusado in 1567 That same year Philip ordered the proclamation of the La Pragmatica an act whereby all Moriscos had to abandon all Moorish traditions and become true Catholics This edict limited religious linguistic and cultural freedom of the Morisco population and provoked the Morisco Revolt 1568 1571 which was put down by John of Austria Castile entered a phase of recession in 1575 Spain as a whole followed which provoked the suspension of wages the third of his reign In 1590 the Cortes approved the millones a new tax on food This exhausted Castilian cities and hindered the economy In 1596 pay was once again suspended Later Habsburgs Edit Worldwide Crown of Castile In the previous kingdoms positions in national institutions were filled by educated gentlemen Philip II s administrators would normally come from either the University of Alcala or the University of Salamanca After Philip III the nobility once again asserted their right to govern the country In order to show that there was a new order ruling there was a cleansing of the blood of Spain Religious persecution led Philip to declare the expulsion of the Moriscos in 1609 Faced with the collapse of the Exchequer in order to maintain the hegemony of Philip IV s Spanish Empire the Count Duke of Olivares the king s favourite valido from 1621 to 1643 tried to introduce a series of reforms Among these was the Union de Armas the creation of a new army of 140 000 reservists Every territory within the kingdom contributed citizens proportionally in order to maintain the force His aims of union did not work and the Spanish Crown continued as a confederation of kingdoms Luis Mendez de Haro took over from Olivares as favourite Philip IV between 1659 and 1665 This was in order to alleviate interior conflicts sparked off by his predecessor revolts in Portugal Catalonia and Andalusia and achieve peace in Europe Upon the death of Philip IV in 1665 and with the incapacity of Charles II to govern Spain suffered an economic slowdown and battles for power between the different favourites The death of Charles II in 1700 without descendants provoked the War of the Spanish Succession After the war all the territories were unified as a single country under the Crown of Spain 10 11 Spanish territorial divisions within the Crown of Castile Edit The Crown in late medieval Spain North America 18th century South America 18th century In Spain Edit Kingdom of Castille Reino de Castilla Kingdom of Leon Reino de Leon Principality of Asturias Principado de Asturias Kingdom of Galicia Reino de Galicia Lordship of Biscay Senorio de Vizcaya Province of Gipuzkoa Provincia de Guipuzcoa Province of Alava Provincia de Alava Extremadura Kingdom of Toledo Reino de Toledo Kingdom of Murcia Reino de Murcia Kingdom of Cordoba Reino de Cordoba Kingdom of Jaen Reino de Jaen Kingdom of Seville Reino de Sevilla Kingdom of Granada Reino de Granada after 1492 Kingdom of Navarre Reino de Navarra after 1512 Overseas before 1715 Edit Kingdom of the Canaries Reino de Canarias Viceroyalty of the Indies Virreinato de las Indias 1492 1535 North Septentrional Viceroyalty of New Spain Virreinato de la Nueva Espana after 1535 Kingdom of Mexico Reino de Mexico administered by the Royal Audience of Mexico presided directly by the Vice roy of New Spain New Kingdom of Galicia Nuevo Reino de Galicia Captaincy General of Guatemala or Kingdom of Guatemala Capitania General de Guatemala or Reino de Guatemala Kingdom of New Biscay Reino de Nueva Vizcaya New Kingdom of Leon Nuevo Reino de Leon Santa Fe of New Mexico Santa Fe de Nuevo Mexico New Extremadura Nueva Extremadura Province of New Navarre Provincia de Nueva Navarra Province of the Californias Provincia de Las Californias Provincia de Venezuela Provincia de Venezuela Captaincy General of the Philippines Capitania General de las Filipinas Captaincy General of Cuba Capitania General de Cuba Captaincy General of Puerto Rico Capitania General de Puerto Rico Captaincy General of Santo Domingo Capitania General de Santo Domingo Captaincy General of Yucatan Capitania General de YucatanSouth Meridional Viceroyalty of Peru Virreinato del Peru after 1542 Province of Tierra Firme Provincia de Tierra Firme administered by the Royal Audiencia of Panama 1st one 1538 43 2nd one 1564 1751 New Kingdom of Granada Nuevo Reino de Granada administered by the Royal Audience of Santa Fe de Bogota Kingdom of Quito or Presidency of Quito Reino de Quito or Presidencia de Quito administered by the Royal Audiencia of Quito Kingdom of Peru Reino de Peru administered by the Royal Audiencia of Lima presided directly by the Vice roy of Peru Province of Charcas Provincia de Charcas administered by the Royal Audiencia of Charcas Captaincy General of Chile Capitania General de Chile unofficially referred as Kingdom of Chile Reino de Chile Governorate of the Rio de la Plata Gobernacion del Rio de la Plata administered by the Royal Audiencia of Buenos Aires 1661 72 In the viceroyalties the viceroy whose term etymologically means in the place of the king concentrated all public power They was freely appointed and removed by the Monarch when the sovereign wanted he she could remove the viceroy of the office In New Spain and Peru they played the role of sovereign but in reality they only obeyed the orders of the Monarch of the Crown of Castile See also EditHeraldry of Castile Heraldry of Leon List of Castilian MonarchsNotes Edit Spanish Corona de Castilla Galician Coroa de Castela Leonese Corona de Castiella Basque Gaztelako Koroa Latin Corona Castellae References Edit Menendez Pidal Ramon 1906 El dialecto leones in Spanish Curpo facultativo de archiveros bibliotecarios y arqueologos Menendez Pidal Ramon 1904 Manual elemental de gramatica historica espanola in Spanish Madrid Libreria General de Victoriano Suarez a b Reilly Bernard F 1993 The Medieval Spains Cambridge University Press p 139 ISBN 9780521397414 Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2019 The new kingdom of Castile had roughly tripled in size to some 335 000 square kilometers by 1300 but at the same time its population had increased by the same factor from one to three millions so that the average density remained steady at about 8 5 persons per square kilometer Urzainqui Tomas 1998 La Navarra maritima Pamplona Pamiela pp 213 249 ISBN 84 7681 284 1 Vicens Vives Jaime 1969 An economic history of Spain Princeton Princeton University Press pp 131 132 Vicens Vives 1969 p 6 Diaz Ibanez Jorge 2019 Iglesia nobleza y poderes urbanos en la corona de Castilla durante la baja Edad Media Una aproximacion historiografica Iglesia nobleza y poderes urbanos en los reinos cristianos de la Peninsula Iberica durante la Edad Media PDF Murcia Sociedad Espanola de Estudios Medievales pp 38 39 ISBN 978 84 17157 97 5 a b Vicens Vives 1969 p 246 Cantera Montenegro Enrique 2019 Los judios de Castilla ante el cambio de dinastia Memoria y Civilizacion Pamplona Universidad de Navarra 22 143 146 doi 10 15581 001 22 028 ISSN 1139 0107 S2CID 214282114 Charles Arnold Baker 2001 The Companion to British History 2 revised illustrated reprint ed Routledge p 1161 ISBN 9780415185837 archived from the original on 2022 05 21 retrieved 2020 10 30 Louis XIV accepted in 1700 on behald of his grandson who succeeded as Philip V on condition that the Crowns of France and Spain should never be united This provoked the great War of the Spanish Succession Barcelona fell in 1714 and the Aragonese privileges were abolished Spain had become one country Vicent de Melchor Albert Branchadell Vicent de Melchor 2002 El catalan Una lengua de Europa para compartir Univ Autonoma de Barcelona pp 106 107 ISBN 9788449022999 archived from the original on 2022 05 21 retrieved 2020 10 30 Mas que con los Reyes Catolicos a finales del siglo XV como todavia suele repetirse es a partir de Felipe V a principios del sigo XVIII cuando podemos comenzar a considerar Espana como un Estado autenticamente unificado o mejor unitario es a partir de entonces cuando podemos empezar a hablar con propiedad de un rey de Espana o de una Corona de Espana y consecuentemente de un Reino de Espana Further reading Edit Castile Titles of European hereditary rulers nobhist narod ru 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crown of Castile amp oldid 1138798279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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