fbpx
Wikipedia

Ferdinand III of Castile

Ferdinand III (Spanish: Fernando; 1199/1201 – 30 May 1252), called the Saint (el Santo), was King of Castile from 1217 and King of León from 1230 as well as King of Galicia from 1231.[1] He was the son of Alfonso IX of León and Berenguela of Castile. Through his second marriage he was also Count of Aumale. Ferdinand III was one of the most successful kings of Castile, securing not only the permanent union of the crowns of Castile and León, but also masterminding the most expansive southward territorial expansion campaign yet in the Guadalquivir Valley, in which Islamic rule was in disarray in the wake of the decline of the Almohad presence in the Iberian Peninsula.

Ferdinand III
Ferdinand III in a 13th-century miniature
King of Castile and Toledo
Reign31 August 1217 – 30 May 1252
PredecessorBerengaria
SuccessorAlfonso X
King of León and Galicia
Reign24 September 1230 (de facto) or 11 December 1230 (de jure) – 30 May 1252
PredecessorSancha and Dulce
SuccessorAlfonso X
Born1199/1201
Monastery of Valparaíso, Peleas de Arriba, Kingdom of León
Died30 May 1252 (aged 50–53)
Seville, Crown of Castile
Burial
Seville Cathedral, Seville, Spain
Consort
(m. 1219; died 1235)
(m. 1237)
Issue
among others...
HouseCastilian House of Ivrea
FatherAlfonso IX of León
MotherBerengaria of Castile
ReligionRoman Catholicism

By military and diplomatic efforts, Ferdinand greatly expanded the dominions of Castile by annexing the Guadalquivir river valley in the south of the Iberian Peninsula, establishing the boundaries of the Castilian state for the next two centuries. New territories included important cities such as Baeza, Úbeda, Jaén, Córdoba or Seville, that were subject of Repartimiento, given a new general charter and repopulated in the following years.

Ferdinand was canonized in 1671 by Pope Clement X. Places such as the cities of San Fernando, Pampanga and San Fernando, La Union; the Diocese of Ilagan and the San Fernando de Dilao Church in Paco, Manila in the Philippines; and in the United States, in California the City of San Fernando, the San Fernando Valley, and in Texas the Cathedral of San Fernando in San Antonio were named in his honor.

Early life of the king

The exact date of Ferdinand's birth is unclear. It has been proposed to have been as early as 1199 or even 1198, although more recent researchers commonly date Ferdinand's birth in the summer of 1201.[2][3][4] Ferdinand was born at the Monastery of Valparaíso (Peleas de Arriba, in what is now the Province of Zamora).

As the son of Alfonso IX of León and his second wife Berengaria of Castile, Ferdinand descended from Alfonso VII of León and Castile on both sides; his paternal grandfather Ferdinand II of León and maternal great grandfather Sancho III of Castile were the sons of Alfonso VII between whom his kingdom was divided. Ferdinand had other royal ancestors from his paternal grandmother Urraca of Portugal and his maternal grandmother Eleanor of England a daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine.[5]

The marriage of Ferdinand's parents was annulled by order of Pope Innocent III in 1204, due to consanguinity, but the legitimacy of the children was recognized.[6] Berengaria then took their children, including Ferdinand, to the court of her father, King Alfonso VIII of Castile.[7] In 1217, her younger brother, Henry I, died and she succeeded him on the Castilian throne with Ferdinand as her heir, but she quickly surrendered it to her son.

Alfonso of León considered himself tricked, and the young king had to begin his reign by a war against his father and a faction of the Castilian nobles. His and his mother's abilities proved too much for the king of Leon and his Castilian allies. Berengaria continued to be a key influence on Ferdinand, following her advice in prosecuting wars and even in the choice of a wife, Elisabeth of Swabia.[6]

Unification of Castile and León

 
Equestrian seal (1237) of Ferdinand III, quartering the arms of Castile and León.

When Ferdinand's father died in 1230, his will delivered the kingdom to his older daughters Sancha and Dulce, from his first marriage to Teresa of Portugal. But Ferdinand contested the will, and claimed the inheritance for himself. At length, an agreement was reached, negotiated primarily between their mothers, Berengaria and Teresa. The resulting treaty of Benavente was signed on 11 December 1230, by which Ferdinand received the Kingdom of León, in return for a substantial compensation in cash and lands for his half-sisters, Sancha and Dulce. Ferdinand thus became the first sovereign of both kingdoms since the death of Alfonso VII in 1157.[8]

Early in his reign, Ferdinand had to deal with a rebellion of the House of Lara.

Reconquest of al-Andalus

Since the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212 halted the advance of the Almohads in Spain, a series of truces had kept Castile and the Almohad dominions of al-Andalus more-or-less at peace. However, a crisis of succession in the Almohad Caliphate after the death of Yusuf II in 1224 opened to Ferdinand III an opportunity for intervention. The Andalusian-based claimant, Abdallah al-Adil, began to ship the bulk of Almohad arms and men across the straits to Morocco to contest the succession with his rival there, leaving al-Andalus relatively undefended. Al-Adil's rebellious cousin, Abdallah al-Bayyasi (the Baezan), appealed to Ferdinand III for military assistance against the usurper. In 1225, a Castilian army accompanied al-Bayyasi in a campaign, ravaging the regions of Jaén, vega de Granada and, before the end of the year, had successfully installed al-Bayyasi in Córdoba. In payment, al-Bayyasi gave Ferdinand the strategic frontier strongholds of Baños de la Encina, Salvatierra (the old Order of Calatrava fortress near Ciudad Real) and Capilla (the last of which had to be taken by siege). When al-Bayyasi was rejected and killed by a popular uprising in Córdoba shortly after, the Castilians remained in occupation of al-Bayyasi's holdings in Andújar, Baeza and Martos.

The crisis in the Almohad Caliphate, however, remained unresolved. In 1228, a new Almohad pretender, Idris al-Ma'mun, decided to abandon Spain, and left with the last remnant of the Almohad forces for Morocco. Al-Andalus was left fragmented in the hands of local strongmen, only loosely led by Muhammad ibn Yusuf ibn Hud al-Judhami. Seeing the opportunity, the Christian kings of the north – Ferdinand III of Castile, Alfonso IX of León, James I of Aragon and Sancho II of Portugal – immediately launched a series of raids on al-Andalus, renewed almost every year. There were no great battle encounters – Ibn Hud's makeshift Andalusian army was destroyed early on, while attempting to stop the Leonese at Alange in 1230. The Christian armies romped through the south virtually unopposed in the field. Individual Andalusian cities were left to resist or negotiate their capitulation by themselves, with little or no prospect of rescue from Morocco or anywhere else.

The twenty years from 1228 to 1248 saw the most massive advance in the reconquista yet. In this great sweep, most of the great old citadels of al-Andalus fell one by one. Ferdinand III took the lion's share of the spoils – Badajoz and Mérida (which had fallen to the Leonese), were promptly inherited by Ferdinand in 1230; then by his own effort, Cazorla in 1231, Úbeda in 1233, the old Umayyad capital of Córdoba in 1236, Niebla and Huelva in 1238, Écija and Lucena in 1240, Orihuela and Murcia in 1243 (by the famous 'pact of Alcaraz'), Arjona, Mula and Lorca in 1244, Cartagena in 1245, Jaén in 1246, Alicante in 1248 and finally, on 22 December 1248, Ferdinand III entered as a conqueror in Seville, the greatest of Andalusian cities. At the end of this twenty-year onslaught, only a rump Andalusian state, the Emirate of Granada, remained unconquered (and even so, Ferdinand III managed to extract a tributary arrangement from Granada in 1238).

Ferdinand annexed some of his conquests directly into the Crown of Castile, and others were initially received and organized as vassal states under Muslim governors (e.g. Alicante, Niebla, Murcia), although they too were eventually permanently occupied and absorbed into Castile before the end of the century (Niebla in 1262, Murcia in 1264, Alicante in 1266). Outside of these vassal states, Christian rule could be heavy-handed on the new Muslim subjects. The range of Castilian conquests also sometimes transgressed into the spheres of interest of other conquerors. Thus, along the way, Ferdinand III took care to carefully negotiate with the other Christian kings to avoid conflict, e.g. the treaty of Almizra (26 March 1244) which delineated the Murcian boundary with James I of Aragon.

Ferdinand divided the conquered territories between the Knights, the Church, and the nobility, whom he endowed with great latifundia. When he took Córdoba, he ordered the Liber Iudiciorum to be adopted and observed by its citizens, and caused it to be rendered, albeit inaccurately, into Castilian.

The capture of Córdoba was the result of a well-planned and executed process whereby parts of the city (the Ajarquía) first fell to the independent almogavars of the Sierra Morena to the north, which Ferdinand had not at the time subjugated.[9] Only in 1236 did Ferdinand arrive with a royal army to take the Medina, the religious and administrative centre of the city.[9] Ferdinand set up a council of partidores to divide the conquests and between 1237 and 1244 a great deal of land was parcelled out to private individuals and members of the royal family as well as to the Church.[10] On 10 March 1241, Ferdinand established seven outposts to define the boundary of the province of Córdoba.

Domestic policy

On the domestic front, Ferdinand strengthened the University of Salamanca and erected the current Cathedral of Burgos. He was a patron of the newest movement in the Church, that of the mendicant Orders. Whereas the Benedictine monks, and then the Cistercians and Cluniacs, had taken a major part in the Reconquista up until then, Ferdinand founded houses for friars of the Dominican, Franciscan, Trinitarian, and Mercedarian Orders throughout Andalusia, thus determining the future religious character of that region. Ferdinand has also been credited with sustaining the convivencia in Andalusia.[11] He himself joined the Third Order of St. Francis, and is honored in that Order.

He took care not to overburden his subjects with taxation, fearing, as he said, the curse of one poor woman more than a whole army of Saracens.[12]

Death

 
Statue of Ferdinand III (Patio of Metropolitan Cathedral of San Fernando in the Philippines)

Ferdinand III had started out as a contested king of Castile. By the time of his death he had delivered to his son and heir, Alfonso X, a massively expanded kingdom. The boundaries of the new Castilian state established by Ferdinand III remained nearly unchanged until the late 15th century. His biographer, Sister María del Carmen Fernández de Castro Cabeza, A.C.J., asserts that, on his deathbed, Ferdinand said to his son "you will be rich in land and in many good vassals, more than any other king in Christendom."[13]

Ferdinand's death was attributed to a dropsy he contracted in the winter of 1251. His death took place on 30 May 1252, and he was buried in the Cathedral of Seville by his son, Alfonso X. The funeral took place on 1 June 1252 and was officiated by Remondo, Bishop of Segovia, in the cathedral. In the city there were royal vassals, bishops, abbots and wealthy men of the kingdom, who had come to show their lament. His tomb was inscribed in four languages: Arabic, Hebrew, Latin, and an early version of Castilian.[14]

He was canonized as Saint Ferdinand by Pope Clement X in 1671.[15] Today, the incorrupt body of Saint Ferdinand can still be seen in the Cathedral of Seville, for he rests enclosed in a gold and crystal casket worthy of the king.[16] His golden crown still encircles his head as he reclines beneath the statue of the Virgin of the Kings.[17] Several places named San Fernando were founded across the Spanish Empire in his honor.

The symbol of his power as a king was his sword Lobera.

Patronage

Saint Ferdinand is the patron saint of Seville, Aranjuez, San Fernando de Henares, Maspalomas, Pivijay, and of several other localities. He is also the patron of the Spanish Army's Corps of Engineers,[18] and engineers generally.[19]

Since the establishment in 1819 of the Diocese of San Cristóbal de La Laguna, also called "Diocese of Tenerife" (Canary Islands), Saint Ferdinand is the co-patron of the diocese and of its Cathedral pursuant to the papal bull issued by Pope Pius VII.[20] This is because La Laguna is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Seville whose capital city has Saint Ferdinand as one of its co-patrons, together with the Virgen de los Reyes. Saint Ferdinand is also the patron of the University of La Laguna, since this institution was founded under the name of Universidad Literaria de San Fernando (Literary University of Saint Ferdinand).[21]

Family

First marriage

 
King Ferdinand and his wife, Beatrice, depicted in the Burgos Cathedral

In 1219, Ferdinand married Elisabeth of Swabia (1203–1235).[a][23] She was the fourth daughter of Philip, Duke of Swabia, and Irene Angelina.[22] Their children were:

  1. Alfonso X (1221–1284), his successor
  2. Frederick (1223–1277)
  3. Ferdinand (1225–1243/1248)
  4. Eleanor (born 1227), died young
  5. Berengaria (1228–1288/89), a nun at Las Huelgas
  6. Henry (1230–1303)
  7. Philip (1231–1274). He was promised to the Church, but was so taken by the beauty of Christina of Norway, daughter of Haakon IV of Norway, who had been intended as a bride for one of his brothers, that he abandoned his holy vows and married her. She died in 1262, childless.
  8. Sancho, Archbishop of Toledo and Seville (1233–1261)
  9. Manuel of Castile (1234–1283)
  10. Maria, died an infant in November 1235

Second marriage

After he was widowed, he married Joan, Countess of Ponthieu, before August 1237.[24] They had four sons and one daughter:

  1. Ferdinand (1238–1264/1269), Count of Aumale
  2. Eleanor (c. 1241–1290), married Edward I of England.[25]
  3. Louis (1243–1269)
  4. Simon (1244), died young and buried in a monastery in Toledo
  5. John (1245), died young and buried at the cathedral in Córdoba

See also


Notes

  1. ^ Elisabeth changed her name to Beatrice after her sister's death in 1212.[22]

References

  1. ^ Bianchini 2012, p. 1.
  2. ^ Ansón 1998, p. 39.
  3. ^ Emmerson 2013, p. 215.
  4. ^ Ezquerra 2001, p. 284.
  5. ^ Shadis 2010, p. xix.
  6. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ferdinand III. of Castile" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 266.
  7. ^ Shadis 2010, p. 70.
  8. ^ Shadis 1999, p. 348.
  9. ^ a b Edwards 2001, p. 6.
  10. ^ Edwards 2001, p. 7.
  11. ^ Edwards 2001, p. 182.
  12. ^ Heckmann 1909.
  13. ^ Fernández de Castro Cabeza 1988, p. 277.
  14. ^ Menocal 2009, p. 47.
  15. ^ Reilly 1993, p. 133.
  16. ^ Roman Catholic Saints
  17. ^ Fitzhenry 2009, p. 6.
  18. ^ "Ceuta reúne por San Fernando a los Ingenieros con más solera" [Ceuta brings together the Engineers with the most tradition in San Fernando]. Spanish Ministry of Defence (in Spanish). 31 May 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  19. ^ Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase & Fable. Cassell Ltd.
  20. ^ Lorenzo Lima, J. (2013). Patrimonio e historia de la antigua Catedral de La Laguna (in Spanish). Diocesis of San Cristóbal de la Laguna, Government of the Canary Islands, et al. ISBN 978-84-7947-625-0.
  21. ^ . ULL. Universidad de La Laguna (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 27 August 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  22. ^ a b Kinkade 2019, p. 8.
  23. ^ Bianchini 2019, p. 66.
  24. ^ Johnstone 1914, p. 436.
  25. ^ Powicke 1991, p. 235.

Sources

  • Ansón, Francisco (1998). Fernando III: Rey de Castilla y León (in Spanish). Palabra. ISBN 978-84-8239-233-2.
  • Bianchini, Janna (2012). The Queen's Hand: Power and Authority in the Reign of Berenguela of Castile. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-0626-5.
  • Bianchini, Janna (2019). "The 'Infantazgo' in the Reign of Alfonso VIII". In Smith, Damian J.; Lincoln, Kyle C.; Gómez, Miguel (eds.). King Alfonso VIII of Castile: Government, Family, and War. Fordham University Press. pp. 59–79.
  • Brewer, Ebenezer Cobham. Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. New York: Harper and Bros.
  • Edwards, John (2001). Christian Córdoba: The City and Its Region in the Late Middle Ages. University of Central Arkansas.
  • Emmerson, Richard K., ed. (2013). Key Figures in Medieval Europe: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-136-77518-5.
  • Ezquerra, Jaime Alvar, ed. (2001). Diccionario de historia de España. Ediciones AKAL. ISBN 978-84-7090-366-3.
  • Fernández de Castro Cabeza, María del Carmen, A.C.J., Sister (1988). The Life of the Very Noble King of Castile and León, Saint Ferdinand III. Mount Kisco, N.Y.: The Foundation for a Christian Civilization, Inc. ISBN 978-1877905094.
  • Fitzhenry, James (2009). "Saint Fernando III, A Kingdom for Christ". Catholic Vitality Publications.
  • González, Julio. Reinado y Diplomas de Fernando III, i: Estudio. 1980.
  • Heckmann, Ferdinand (1909). "St. Ferdinand III" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Johnstone, Hilda (1914). "The County of Ponthieu, 1279–1307". The English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. 29 (115): 435–452. doi:10.1093/ehr/XXIX.CXV.435. JSTOR 551121. Zenodo1793255.
  • Kinkade, Richard P. (2019). Dawn of a Dynasty: The Life and Times of Infante Manuel of Castile. University of Toronto Press.
  • Menocal, Maria Rosa (2009). The Ornament of the World: How Muslims, Jews, and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-09279-1.
  • Powicke, Frederick Maurice (1991). The Thirteenth Century, 1216–1307. Oxford University Press.
  • Reilly, Bernard F. (1993). The Medieval Spains. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-39741-4.
  • Shadis, Miriam (1999), "Berenguela of Castile's Political Motherhood", in Parsons, John Carmi; Wheeler, Bonnie (eds.), Medieval Mothering, New York: Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-0-8153-3665-5
  • Shadis, Miriam (2010). Berenguela of Castile (1180–1246) and Political Women in the High Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23473-7.
  • Saint Ferdinand at the Christian Iconography web site

External links

  • Novena to St. Ferdinand III of Castile by Diego José de Cádiz
  • Saint Fernando III
  • The death of Saint Ferdinand III, the very noble King of Castile and Leon
Ferdinand III of Castile
Cadet branch of the House of Ivrea
Born: 5 August 1201 Died: 30 May 1252
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Castile and Toledo
1217–1252
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of León and Galicia
1230–1252
Preceded by
Abdul-Wahid II
King of Córdoba
1237–1252
Preceded by King of Murcia
1241–1252
Preceded by King of Jaén
1246–1252
Preceded by
Ali
King of Seville
1248–1252
Preceded by Count of Aumale
1239–1252
with Joan
Succeeded byas sole ruler
Preceded by Count of Ponthieu
1251–1252
with Joan

ferdinand, castile, ferdinand, spanish, fernando, 1199, 1201, 1252, called, saint, santo, king, castile, from, 1217, king, león, from, 1230, well, king, galicia, from, 1231, alfonso, león, berenguela, castile, through, second, marriage, also, count, aumale, fe. Ferdinand III Spanish Fernando 1199 1201 30 May 1252 called the Saint el Santo was King of Castile from 1217 and King of Leon from 1230 as well as King of Galicia from 1231 1 He was the son of Alfonso IX of Leon and Berenguela of Castile Through his second marriage he was also Count of Aumale Ferdinand III was one of the most successful kings of Castile securing not only the permanent union of the crowns of Castile and Leon but also masterminding the most expansive southward territorial expansion campaign yet in the Guadalquivir Valley in which Islamic rule was in disarray in the wake of the decline of the Almohad presence in the Iberian Peninsula Ferdinand IIIFerdinand III in a 13th century miniatureKing of Castile and ToledoReign31 August 1217 30 May 1252PredecessorBerengariaSuccessorAlfonso XKing of Leon and GaliciaReign24 September 1230 de facto or 11 December 1230 de jure 30 May 1252PredecessorSancha and DulceSuccessorAlfonso XBorn1199 1201Monastery of Valparaiso Peleas de Arriba Kingdom of LeonDied30 May 1252 aged 50 53 Seville Crown of CastileBurialSeville Cathedral Seville SpainConsortElisabeth of Hohenstaufen m 1219 died 1235 wbr Joan Countess of Ponthieu m 1237 wbr Issueamong others Alfonso X of Castile Frederick Henry the Senator Philip Lord of Valdecorneja Sancho Archbishop of Seville Manuel Lord of Villena Ferdinand II Count of Aumale Eleanor Queen of EnglandHouseCastilian House of IvreaFatherAlfonso IX of LeonMotherBerengaria of CastileReligionRoman CatholicismBy military and diplomatic efforts Ferdinand greatly expanded the dominions of Castile by annexing the Guadalquivir river valley in the south of the Iberian Peninsula establishing the boundaries of the Castilian state for the next two centuries New territories included important cities such as Baeza Ubeda Jaen Cordoba or Seville that were subject of Repartimiento given a new general charter and repopulated in the following years Ferdinand was canonized in 1671 by Pope Clement X Places such as the cities of San Fernando Pampanga and San Fernando La Union the Diocese of Ilagan and the San Fernando de Dilao Church in Paco Manila in the Philippines and in the United States in California the City of San Fernando the San Fernando Valley and in Texas the Cathedral of San Fernando in San Antonio were named in his honor Contents 1 Early life of the king 2 Unification of Castile and Leon 3 Reconquest of al Andalus 4 Domestic policy 5 Death 6 Patronage 7 Family 7 1 First marriage 7 2 Second marriage 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly life of the king EditThe exact date of Ferdinand s birth is unclear It has been proposed to have been as early as 1199 or even 1198 although more recent researchers commonly date Ferdinand s birth in the summer of 1201 2 3 4 Ferdinand was born at the Monastery of Valparaiso Peleas de Arriba in what is now the Province of Zamora As the son of Alfonso IX of Leon and his second wife Berengaria of Castile Ferdinand descended from Alfonso VII of Leon and Castile on both sides his paternal grandfather Ferdinand II of Leon and maternal great grandfather Sancho III of Castile were the sons of Alfonso VII between whom his kingdom was divided Ferdinand had other royal ancestors from his paternal grandmother Urraca of Portugal and his maternal grandmother Eleanor of England a daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine 5 The marriage of Ferdinand s parents was annulled by order of Pope Innocent III in 1204 due to consanguinity but the legitimacy of the children was recognized 6 Berengaria then took their children including Ferdinand to the court of her father King Alfonso VIII of Castile 7 In 1217 her younger brother Henry I died and she succeeded him on the Castilian throne with Ferdinand as her heir but she quickly surrendered it to her son Alfonso of Leon considered himself tricked and the young king had to begin his reign by a war against his father and a faction of the Castilian nobles His and his mother s abilities proved too much for the king of Leon and his Castilian allies Berengaria continued to be a key influence on Ferdinand following her advice in prosecuting wars and even in the choice of a wife Elisabeth of Swabia 6 Unification of Castile and Leon Edit Equestrian seal 1237 of Ferdinand III quartering the arms of Castile and Leon When Ferdinand s father died in 1230 his will delivered the kingdom to his older daughters Sancha and Dulce from his first marriage to Teresa of Portugal But Ferdinand contested the will and claimed the inheritance for himself At length an agreement was reached negotiated primarily between their mothers Berengaria and Teresa The resulting treaty of Benavente was signed on 11 December 1230 by which Ferdinand received the Kingdom of Leon in return for a substantial compensation in cash and lands for his half sisters Sancha and Dulce Ferdinand thus became the first sovereign of both kingdoms since the death of Alfonso VII in 1157 8 Early in his reign Ferdinand had to deal with a rebellion of the House of Lara Reconquest of al Andalus EditSince the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212 halted the advance of the Almohads in Spain a series of truces had kept Castile and the Almohad dominions of al Andalus more or less at peace However a crisis of succession in the Almohad Caliphate after the death of Yusuf II in 1224 opened to Ferdinand III an opportunity for intervention The Andalusian based claimant Abdallah al Adil began to ship the bulk of Almohad arms and men across the straits to Morocco to contest the succession with his rival there leaving al Andalus relatively undefended Al Adil s rebellious cousin Abdallah al Bayyasi the Baezan appealed to Ferdinand III for military assistance against the usurper In 1225 a Castilian army accompanied al Bayyasi in a campaign ravaging the regions of Jaen vega de Granada and before the end of the year had successfully installed al Bayyasi in Cordoba In payment al Bayyasi gave Ferdinand the strategic frontier strongholds of Banos de la Encina Salvatierra the old Order of Calatrava fortress near Ciudad Real and Capilla the last of which had to be taken by siege When al Bayyasi was rejected and killed by a popular uprising in Cordoba shortly after the Castilians remained in occupation of al Bayyasi s holdings in Andujar Baeza and Martos The crisis in the Almohad Caliphate however remained unresolved In 1228 a new Almohad pretender Idris al Ma mun decided to abandon Spain and left with the last remnant of the Almohad forces for Morocco Al Andalus was left fragmented in the hands of local strongmen only loosely led by Muhammad ibn Yusuf ibn Hud al Judhami Seeing the opportunity the Christian kings of the north Ferdinand III of Castile Alfonso IX of Leon James I of Aragon and Sancho II of Portugal immediately launched a series of raids on al Andalus renewed almost every year There were no great battle encounters Ibn Hud s makeshift Andalusian army was destroyed early on while attempting to stop the Leonese at Alange in 1230 The Christian armies romped through the south virtually unopposed in the field Individual Andalusian cities were left to resist or negotiate their capitulation by themselves with little or no prospect of rescue from Morocco or anywhere else The twenty years from 1228 to 1248 saw the most massive advance in the reconquista yet In this great sweep most of the great old citadels of al Andalus fell one by one Ferdinand III took the lion s share of the spoils Badajoz and Merida which had fallen to the Leonese were promptly inherited by Ferdinand in 1230 then by his own effort Cazorla in 1231 Ubeda in 1233 the old Umayyad capital of Cordoba in 1236 Niebla and Huelva in 1238 Ecija and Lucena in 1240 Orihuela and Murcia in 1243 by the famous pact of Alcaraz Arjona Mula and Lorca in 1244 Cartagena in 1245 Jaen in 1246 Alicante in 1248 and finally on 22 December 1248 Ferdinand III entered as a conqueror in Seville the greatest of Andalusian cities At the end of this twenty year onslaught only a rump Andalusian state the Emirate of Granada remained unconquered and even so Ferdinand III managed to extract a tributary arrangement from Granada in 1238 Ferdinand annexed some of his conquests directly into the Crown of Castile and others were initially received and organized as vassal states under Muslim governors e g Alicante Niebla Murcia although they too were eventually permanently occupied and absorbed into Castile before the end of the century Niebla in 1262 Murcia in 1264 Alicante in 1266 Outside of these vassal states Christian rule could be heavy handed on the new Muslim subjects The range of Castilian conquests also sometimes transgressed into the spheres of interest of other conquerors Thus along the way Ferdinand III took care to carefully negotiate with the other Christian kings to avoid conflict e g the treaty of Almizra 26 March 1244 which delineated the Murcian boundary with James I of Aragon Ferdinand divided the conquered territories between the Knights the Church and the nobility whom he endowed with great latifundia When he took Cordoba he ordered the Liber Iudiciorum to be adopted and observed by its citizens and caused it to be rendered albeit inaccurately into Castilian The capture of Cordoba was the result of a well planned and executed process whereby parts of the city the Ajarquia first fell to the independent almogavars of the Sierra Morena to the north which Ferdinand had not at the time subjugated 9 Only in 1236 did Ferdinand arrive with a royal army to take the Medina the religious and administrative centre of the city 9 Ferdinand set up a council of partidores to divide the conquests and between 1237 and 1244 a great deal of land was parcelled out to private individuals and members of the royal family as well as to the Church 10 On 10 March 1241 Ferdinand established seven outposts to define the boundary of the province of Cordoba Domestic policy EditOn the domestic front Ferdinand strengthened the University of Salamanca and erected the current Cathedral of Burgos He was a patron of the newest movement in the Church that of the mendicant Orders Whereas the Benedictine monks and then the Cistercians and Cluniacs had taken a major part in the Reconquista up until then Ferdinand founded houses for friars of the Dominican Franciscan Trinitarian and Mercedarian Orders throughout Andalusia thus determining the future religious character of that region Ferdinand has also been credited with sustaining the convivencia in Andalusia 11 He himself joined the Third Order of St Francis and is honored in that Order He took care not to overburden his subjects with taxation fearing as he said the curse of one poor woman more than a whole army of Saracens 12 Death Edit Statue of Ferdinand III Patio of Metropolitan Cathedral of San Fernando in the Philippines Ferdinand III had started out as a contested king of Castile By the time of his death he had delivered to his son and heir Alfonso X a massively expanded kingdom The boundaries of the new Castilian state established by Ferdinand III remained nearly unchanged until the late 15th century His biographer Sister Maria del Carmen Fernandez de Castro Cabeza A C J asserts that on his deathbed Ferdinand said to his son you will be rich in land and in many good vassals more than any other king in Christendom 13 Ferdinand s death was attributed to a dropsy he contracted in the winter of 1251 His death took place on 30 May 1252 and he was buried in the Cathedral of Seville by his son Alfonso X The funeral took place on 1 June 1252 and was officiated by Remondo Bishop of Segovia in the cathedral In the city there were royal vassals bishops abbots and wealthy men of the kingdom who had come to show their lament His tomb was inscribed in four languages Arabic Hebrew Latin and an early version of Castilian 14 He was canonized as Saint Ferdinand by Pope Clement X in 1671 15 Today the incorrupt body of Saint Ferdinand can still be seen in the Cathedral of Seville for he rests enclosed in a gold and crystal casket worthy of the king 16 His golden crown still encircles his head as he reclines beneath the statue of the Virgin of the Kings 17 Several places named San Fernando were founded across the Spanish Empire in his honor The symbol of his power as a king was his sword Lobera Patronage EditSaint Ferdinand is the patron saint of Seville Aranjuez San Fernando de Henares Maspalomas Pivijay and of several other localities He is also the patron of the Spanish Army s Corps of Engineers 18 and engineers generally 19 Since the establishment in 1819 of the Diocese of San Cristobal de La Laguna also called Diocese of Tenerife Canary Islands Saint Ferdinand is the co patron of the diocese and of its Cathedral pursuant to the papal bull issued by Pope Pius VII 20 This is because La Laguna is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Seville whose capital city has Saint Ferdinand as one of its co patrons together with the Virgen de los Reyes Saint Ferdinand is also the patron of the University of La Laguna since this institution was founded under the name of Universidad Literaria de San Fernando Literary University of Saint Ferdinand 21 Family EditFirst marriage Edit King Ferdinand and his wife Beatrice depicted in the Burgos Cathedral In 1219 Ferdinand married Elisabeth of Swabia 1203 1235 a 23 She was the fourth daughter of Philip Duke of Swabia and Irene Angelina 22 Their children were Alfonso X 1221 1284 his successor Frederick 1223 1277 Ferdinand 1225 1243 1248 Eleanor born 1227 died young Berengaria 1228 1288 89 a nun at Las Huelgas Henry 1230 1303 Philip 1231 1274 He was promised to the Church but was so taken by the beauty of Christina of Norway daughter of Haakon IV of Norway who had been intended as a bride for one of his brothers that he abandoned his holy vows and married her She died in 1262 childless Sancho Archbishop of Toledo and Seville 1233 1261 Manuel of Castile 1234 1283 Maria died an infant in November 1235Second marriage Edit After he was widowed he married Joan Countess of Ponthieu before August 1237 24 They had four sons and one daughter Ferdinand 1238 1264 1269 Count of Aumale Eleanor c 1241 1290 married Edward I of England 25 Louis 1243 1269 Simon 1244 died young and buried in a monastery in Toledo John 1245 died young and buried at the cathedral in CordobaSee also EditSan Fernando disambiguation Notes Edit Elisabeth changed her name to Beatrice after her sister s death in 1212 22 References Edit Bianchini 2012 p 1 Anson 1998 p 39 Emmerson 2013 p 215 Ezquerra 2001 p 284 Shadis 2010 p xix a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ferdinand III of Castile Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 266 Shadis 2010 p 70 Shadis 1999 p 348 a b Edwards 2001 p 6 Edwards 2001 p 7 Edwards 2001 p 182 Heckmann 1909 Fernandez de Castro Cabeza 1988 p 277 Menocal 2009 p 47 Reilly 1993 p 133 Roman Catholic Saints Fitzhenry 2009 p 6 Ceuta reune por San Fernando a los Ingenieros con mas solera Ceuta brings together the Engineers with the most tradition in San Fernando Spanish Ministry of Defence in Spanish 31 May 2011 Retrieved 5 August 2016 Brewer s Dictionary of Phrase amp Fable Cassell Ltd Lorenzo Lima J 2013 Patrimonio e historia de la antigua Catedral de La Laguna in Spanish Diocesis of San Cristobal de la Laguna Government of the Canary Islands et al ISBN 978 84 7947 625 0 Origenes de la ULL ULL Universidad de La Laguna in Spanish Archived from the original on 27 August 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2016 a b Kinkade 2019 p 8 Bianchini 2019 p 66 Johnstone 1914 p 436 Powicke 1991 p 235 Sources EditAnson Francisco 1998 Fernando III Rey de Castilla y Leon in Spanish Palabra ISBN 978 84 8239 233 2 Bianchini Janna 2012 The Queen s Hand Power and Authority in the Reign of Berenguela of Castile University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 0626 5 Bianchini Janna 2019 The Infantazgo in the Reign of Alfonso VIII In Smith Damian J Lincoln Kyle C Gomez Miguel eds King Alfonso VIII of Castile Government Family and War Fordham University Press pp 59 79 Brewer Ebenezer Cobham Brewer s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable New York Harper and Bros Edwards John 2001 Christian Cordoba The City and Its Region in the Late Middle Ages University of Central Arkansas Emmerson Richard K ed 2013 Key Figures in Medieval Europe An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 77518 5 Ezquerra Jaime Alvar ed 2001 Diccionario de historia de Espana Ediciones AKAL ISBN 978 84 7090 366 3 Fernandez de Castro Cabeza Maria del Carmen A C J Sister 1988 The Life of the Very Noble King of Castile and Leon Saint Ferdinand III Mount Kisco N Y The Foundation for a Christian Civilization Inc ISBN 978 1877905094 Fitzhenry James 2009 Saint Fernando III A Kingdom for Christ Catholic Vitality Publications Gonzalez Julio Reinado y Diplomas de Fernando III i Estudio 1980 Heckmann Ferdinand 1909 St Ferdinand III In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 6 New York Robert Appleton Company Johnstone Hilda 1914 The County of Ponthieu 1279 1307 The English Historical Review Oxford University Press 29 115 435 452 doi 10 1093 ehr XXIX CXV 435 JSTOR 551121 Zenodo 1793255 Kinkade Richard P 2019 Dawn of a Dynasty The Life and Times of Infante Manuel of Castile University of Toronto Press Menocal Maria Rosa 2009 The Ornament of the World How Muslims Jews and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 09279 1 Powicke Frederick Maurice 1991 The Thirteenth Century 1216 1307 Oxford University Press Reilly Bernard F 1993 The Medieval Spains Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 39741 4 Shadis Miriam 1999 Berenguela of Castile s Political Motherhood in Parsons John Carmi Wheeler Bonnie eds Medieval Mothering New York Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8153 3665 5 Shadis Miriam 2010 Berenguela of Castile 1180 1246 and Political Women in the High Middle Ages Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 23473 7 Saint Ferdinand at the Christian Iconography web siteExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ferdinand III of Castile Novena to St Ferdinand III of Castile by Diego Jose de Cadiz Ferdinand at Patron Saints Index Saint Fernando III The death of Saint Ferdinand III the very noble King of Castile and LeonFerdinand III of CastileCastilian House of IvreaCadet branch of the House of IvreaBorn 5 August 1201 Died 30 May 1252Regnal titlesPreceded byBerengaria King of Castile and Toledo1217 1252 Succeeded byAlfonso XPreceded byAlfonso IX King of Leon and Galicia1230 1252Preceded byAbdul Wahid II King of Cordoba1237 1252Preceded byAbu Bakr Muhammad King of Murcia1241 1252Preceded byMuhammad ibn al Ahmar King of Jaen1246 1252Preceded byAli King of Seville1248 1252Preceded bySimon Count of Aumale1239 1252with Joan Succeeded byJoanas sole rulerPreceded byMarie Count of Ponthieu1251 1252with Joan Portals Biography Monarchy Saints Spain Middle Ages Christianity Catholicism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand III of Castile amp oldid 1146984851, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.