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Henry II of Castile

Henry II (13 January 1334 – 29 May 1379), called Henry of Trastámara or the Fratricidal (el Fratricida), was the first King of Castile and León from the House of Trastámara. He became king in 1369 by defeating his half-brother Peter the Cruel, after numerous rebellions and battles. As king he was involved in the Fernandine Wars and the Hundred Years' War.

Henry II
Depiction of Henry by Jaime Serra (c. 1375)[1]
King of Castile and León
Reign13 March 1366 – 3 April 1367
Coronation29 March 1366, Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas
PredecessorPeter
SuccessorPeter
Reign23 March 1369 – 29 May 1379
PredecessorPeter
SuccessorJohn I
Born13 January 1334
Seville
Died29 May 1379(1379-05-29) (aged 45)
Santo Domingo de la Calzada
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1350)
Issue
among others...
HouseTrastámara
FatherAlfonso XI of Castile
MotherEleanor de Guzmán
Coins minted by Henry II.

Biography edit

Henry was the fourth of ten illegitimate children of King Alfonso XI of Castile and Eleanor de Guzmán, a great-granddaughter of Alfonso IX of León. He was born a twin to Fadrique Alfonso, Lord of Haro, and was the first boy born to the couple that survived to adulthood.

At birth, he was adopted by Rodrigo Álvarez de las Asturias. Rodrigo died the following year and Henry inherited his lordship of Noreña. His father later made him Count of Trastámara and lord over Lemos and Sarria in Galicia, and the towns of Cabrera and Ribera, which constituted a large and important heritage in the northwest of the peninsula. It made him the head of the new Trastámara dynasty, arising from the main branch of Burgundy-Ivrea.

While Alfonso XI lived, his lover Eleanor gave a great many titles and privileges to their sons. This caused discontent among many of the noblemen and in particular the queen, Maria of Portugal, and her son, Peter.

They had a chance for revenge when Alfonso XI died unexpectedly from a fever in the siege of Gibraltar in March, 1350. They pushed Eleanor, her sons and their supporters aside, and Henry and his brothers fled and scattered. They were fearful of what their brother, King Peter, could do to them. The late king had not even been buried.

Although Eleanor and her sons reached an agreement with Peter to live peacefully in his court, the situation remained unstable. Henry and his brothers Fadrique, Tello and Sancho staged numerous rebellions against the new king. Also, to strengthen his position and gain allies, Henry married Juana Manuel, the daughter of Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena, adelantado mayor of Murcia and Lord of Villena, the most prosperous nobleman of the realm. In 1351, the King took counsel from Juan Alfonso de Alburquerque, María of Portugal's right-hand man. He became convinced that his father's lover was the instigator of the uprisings, so he ordered Eleanor to be incarcerated and finally executed in Talavera de la Reina.

After that, Henry fled to Portugal. He was pardoned by Pedro and returned to Castile, then revolted in Asturias in 1352. He reconciled with his brother, only to rebel against him again in a long, intermittent war, which ended with Henry's flight to France, where he entered the service of John II of France.

Shortly after, Henry and his men spent time in Peter IV of Aragon's army in their war against Castile (1358). During that conflict, he was defeated and held prisoner in Nájera (1360). He was liberated (with the help of Juan Ramírez de Arellano, among others) and exiled himself to France once more.

Then Peter IV of Aragon attacked Castile again. Henry agreed to help him on condition that he would lend his support to destroying his half-brother. This became the Castilian Civil War. The attack combined Henry's Castillian allies, the Aragonese and the French (a company of Bertrand du Guesclin's mercenaries, expelled by Peter of Castile, who had taken refuge in Guyenne). Henry was proclaimed king in Calahorra (1366).[2] In return, he had to reward his allies with titles and riches for the help they had provided. This earned him the nickname el de las mercedes ("mercedes being Spanish for "mercies").

Peter of Castile fled north to Bordeaux, the capital of the English dominions in France, where Edward, the Black Prince held court. Edward agreed to help Peter recover his throne. Despite the fact that the army suffered so badly from dysentery that it is said that one out of every five Englishmen would not return home,[3] on 3 April 1367 an Anglo-Gascon army, led by Edward and his younger brother, John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, met the Castilian forces (supported by French mercenaries under Bertrand du Guesclin). Peter then defeated Henry in the Battle of Nájera, but Henry escaped[4] and returned to France under the protection of Charles V of France. King Peter and Prince Edward parted ways over the funding of the expedition, and the Black Prince returned to Bordeaux, having contracted an illness on this expedition that would ail him until his death in 1376.

They reorganised their army at Peyrepertuse Castle. Then, with the help of many Castilian rebels and Bertrand du Guesclin's Frenchmen, they defeated Peter at the Battle of Montiel on 14 March 1369.[5] Henry killed "the Cruel King", now a prisoner, with his own hand.[6] This definitively won him the Castilian throne and the name of Henry II.

Before being consolidated in his throne and being able to hand on power to his son John, Henry had to defeat Ferdinand I of Portugal. He embarked on the three Ferdinand Wars. Ferdinand's main ally in these wars was John of Gaunt, the husband of Peter's daughter Constance. Henry was allied with Charles V of France. He put the Castilian navy at Charles' disposal and they played a key part in the siege of La Rochelle, and the Battle of La Rochelle where the admiral Ambrosio Boccanegra completely defeated the English side.

Henry recompensed his allies, but he still had to defend his interests in the kingdom of Castile and León. Consequently, he denied the King of Aragon the territories that he had promised him in the difficult times.

Henry then went to war against Portugal and England in the Hundred Years' War. For most of his reign he had to fight off the attempts of John of Gaunt, a son of Edward III of England, to claim the Castilian throne in right of Constance. In his domestic policy he started to rebuild the kingdom, sped up the transformation of the royal administration; and held numerous courts. He also permanently set up the Lordship of Biscay after the death of his brother Tello. In foreign policy, he favoured France over England.

He died on 29 May 1379 in Santo Domingo de la Calzada. His son John I of Castile succeeded him on the throne.

Policy regarding Jews edit

Henry was as hostile to the Jews as Peter had been friendly.[7] In order to pay Bertrand du Guesclin's mercenaries, he imposed a war contribution of twenty thousand gold doubloons on the already heavily oppressed community of Toledo, and issued an order to take all the Jews of Toledo as prisoners, to give them neither food nor drink, and if they still refused to raise this enormous sum, to sell their property, both movable and immovable, at auction. Nonetheless, he was compelled, owing to his financial straits, to have recourse to Jewish financiers. He made Don Joseph Pichon his chief tax-collector (contador major), and appointed several Jews farmers of the taxes.[8]

The demands of the Cortes in Toro (1369) and in Burgos (1374 and 1377) against the Jews harmonized perfectly with Henry's inclinations. He ordered the Jews to wear the humiliating badge, and forbade them to use Christian names. He further ordered that for short loans Christian debtors should repay only two-thirds of the principal. Shortly before his death Henry declared that Jews should no longer be permitted to hold public office.[8]

Henry was potentially the first ruler since the Visigothic King Ergica to implement anti-Jewish policies in the Iberian Peninsula.[citation needed]

Burial edit

 
The tomb of Henry II of Castile.

After Henry's death, his body was transported to Burgos, then to Valladolid, then finally to Toledo where he was buried in Capilla de los Reyes Nuevos de Toledo[9] His remains are still there today. His grave is in the choir stalls at one side of the church and it is in the Plateresque style. The box is adorned with the shields of Castille and León, and the lower interior part has three panels decorated with trophies. There are two cherubs over the panels, holding the cartouche on which the king's epitaph is displayed. The inscription translates to:[10]

Here lies the most adventurous and noble knight and king, the sweetly remembered Don Henry, son of the late noble king Don Alfonso, who came from Benmarin and ended his life in Santo Domingo de la Calzada, he just died gloriously on the XXX day of May, in the year of our saviour Jesus Christ MCCCLXXIX.

There is a recumbent statue of Henry II on top of the tomb. It is made from polychromed alabaster. It depicts the king wearing his royal robes, with his sword in his left hand and his girdle decorated with the lions of Castile. His right hand holds the sceptre, the upper end of which rests on three pillows that support the monarch's head. The king wears slippers and his feet rest on a recumbent lion.

The king's entrails are buried in the Cathedral of Santo Domingo de la Calzada.

Partners and children edit

 
Statue of Henry II at the Royal Palace of Madrid.
 
Image of Henry II of Castile on the Royal Hall frieze in the Alcázar of Segovia

On 27 July 1350, Henry married Juana Manuel, the daughter of Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena, head of a younger branch of the royal house of Castile. They had three children:

He had several children outside wedlock, some of which he mentioned in his will dated 29 May 1374:[11]

Titles edit

By the end of his reign, he bore the titles of the King of Castile, Toledo, León, Galicia, Sevilla, Córdoba, Murcia, Jaén, the Algarve and Lord of Molina.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although she is called Inés Díaz de la Vega in some genealogies, King Henry II mentions her several times in his will as Elvira Íñiguez. This could be an error transmitted from one genealogy to another or perhaps it refers to another mistress and mother of one or more of his illegitimate issue.
  2. ^ Her marriage was celebrated in 1378 by Enrique de Villena among others, master of the Orden de Calatrava, Count of Cangas and Tineo, and husband of María de Albornoz, Lady of the Infantado.
  3. ^ She is not mentioned in her father's will.
  4. ^ He is not mentioned in his father's 1374 will.
  5. ^ Both sisters feature in the monastery's documents, receiving various favours from their uncle the king Henry III of Castile.

References edit

  1. ^ Borrás Gualis 2014, p. 172.
  2. ^ Hume, Martin Andrew Sharp. The Spanish People, D. Appleton, 1911
  3. ^ Green, David. "Masculinity and Medicine: Thomas Washington and the Death of the Black Prince." Journal of Medieval History 35.1 (2009). 34-51
  4. ^ Sumption, Jonathan (1999). The Hundred Years War Volume II: Trial by Fire. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania. p. 554. ISBN 978-0-8122-3527-2.
  5. ^ Todesca 2015, p. 129.
  6. ^ Todesca 2015, p. 141.
  7. ^ Abraham Zacuto (1452 – circa 1515), in his book Sefer Yuchasin, Kraków 1580 (q.v. Sefer Yuchasin, p. 265 in PDF) makes mention that in the year 5130 anno mundi (corresponding with 1369/70 of our Common Era) there was a time of great disturbance all throughout the Jewish communities of Castille and Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) and that 38,000 Jews were killed in the ensuing wars between Henry and Peter.
  8. ^ a b "Henry II, or Henry de Trastamara", Jewish encyclopedia
  9. ^ Elorza et al. 1990, pp. 63–64
  10. ^ Elorza et al. 1990, p. 64
  11. ^ See Crónicas de los reyes de Castilla D. Pedro I, D. Enrique II, D. Juan I, D. Enrique III, Tomo II, pp. 106-121 de Pedro López de Ayala [1]
  12. ^ Arco y Garay 1954, p. 310

Bibliography edit

  • Arco y Garay, Ricardo del (1954). Instituto Jerónimo Zurita. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. (ed.). Sepulcros de la Casa Real de Castilla [Tombs of the Castilian Royal Family] (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Madrid. OCLC 11366237.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Borrás Gualis, Gonzalo M. (2014). "La Virgen de Tobed. Exvoto dinástico de los Trastámara" (PDF). In Escribano Paño, María Victoria; Duplá Ansuátegui, Antonio; Sancho Rocher, Laura; Villacampa Rubio, María Angustias (eds.). Miscelánea de estudios en homenaje a Guillermo Fatás Cabeza. Zaragoza: Institución Fernando el Católico. pp. 167–176. ISBN 978-84-9911-302-9.
  • Elorza, Juan C.; Vaquero, Lourdes; Castillo, Belén; Negro, Marta (1990). Junta de Castilla y León. Consejería de Cultura y Bienestar Social (ed.). El Panteón Real de las Huelgas de Burgos. Los enterramientos de los reyes de León y de Castilla [The Royal Pantheon of the Huelgas de Burgos. The graves of the monarchs of León and Castile] (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). Editorial Evergráficas S.A. ISBN 84-241-9999-5.
  • López de Ayala, Pedro (1994–1997). Buenos Aires (ed.). Crónica del rey don Pedro y del rey don Enrique, su hermano, hijos del rey don Alfonso Onceno [A chronicle of the kings Peter and Henry, his brother, sons of the king Alfonso Onceno] (in Spanish). OCLC 489686613. (critical edition and notes by Germán Orduna; a preliminary study by Germán Orduna and José Luis Moure)
  • Valdeón Baruque, Julio (1996). Palencia. Diputación Provincial de Palencia (ed.). Enrique II. Diputación Provincial de Palencia. ISBN 84-8173-051-3.
  • Todesca, James, ed. (2015). The Emergence of León-Castile c.1065-1500: Essays Presented to J.F. O'Callaghan. Ashgate Publishing Limited.
Henry II of Castile
Cadet branch of the House of Ivrea
Born: 13 January 1334 Died: 29 May 1379
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Castile and León
1366–1367
Succeeded by
King of Castile and León
1369–1379
Succeeded by

henry, castile, henry, january, 1334, 1379, called, henry, trastámara, fratricidal, fratricida, first, king, castile, león, from, house, trastámara, became, king, 1369, defeating, half, brother, peter, cruel, after, numerous, rebellions, battles, king, involve. Henry II 13 January 1334 29 May 1379 called Henry of Trastamara or the Fratricidal el Fratricida was the first King of Castile and Leon from the House of Trastamara He became king in 1369 by defeating his half brother Peter the Cruel after numerous rebellions and battles As king he was involved in the Fernandine Wars and the Hundred Years War Henry IIDepiction of Henry by Jaime Serra c 1375 1 King of Castile and LeonReign13 March 1366 3 April 1367Coronation29 March 1366 Santa Maria la Real de Las HuelgasPredecessorPeterSuccessorPeterReign23 March 1369 29 May 1379PredecessorPeterSuccessorJohn IBorn13 January 1334SevilleDied29 May 1379 1379 05 29 aged 45 Santo Domingo de la CalzadaBurialCathedral of ToledoSpouseJuana Manuel m 1350 wbr Issueamong others John I King of CastileEleanor Queen of NavarreInfanta JoannaHouseTrastamaraFatherAlfonso XI of CastileMotherEleanor de GuzmanCoins minted by Henry II Contents 1 Biography 2 Policy regarding Jews 3 Burial 4 Partners and children 5 Titles 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyBiography editHenry was the fourth of ten illegitimate children of King Alfonso XI of Castile and Eleanor de Guzman a great granddaughter of Alfonso IX of Leon He was born a twin to Fadrique Alfonso Lord of Haro and was the first boy born to the couple that survived to adulthood At birth he was adopted by Rodrigo Alvarez de las Asturias Rodrigo died the following year and Henry inherited his lordship of Norena His father later made him Count of Trastamara and lord over Lemos and Sarria in Galicia and the towns of Cabrera and Ribera which constituted a large and important heritage in the northwest of the peninsula It made him the head of the new Trastamara dynasty arising from the main branch of Burgundy Ivrea While Alfonso XI lived his lover Eleanor gave a great many titles and privileges to their sons This caused discontent among many of the noblemen and in particular the queen Maria of Portugal and her son Peter They had a chance for revenge when Alfonso XI died unexpectedly from a fever in the siege of Gibraltar in March 1350 They pushed Eleanor her sons and their supporters aside and Henry and his brothers fled and scattered They were fearful of what their brother King Peter could do to them The late king had not even been buried Although Eleanor and her sons reached an agreement with Peter to live peacefully in his court the situation remained unstable Henry and his brothers Fadrique Tello and Sancho staged numerous rebellions against the new king Also to strengthen his position and gain allies Henry married Juana Manuel the daughter of Juan Manuel Prince of Villena adelantado mayor of Murcia and Lord of Villena the most prosperous nobleman of the realm In 1351 the King took counsel from Juan Alfonso de Alburquerque Maria of Portugal s right hand man He became convinced that his father s lover was the instigator of the uprisings so he ordered Eleanor to be incarcerated and finally executed in Talavera de la Reina After that Henry fled to Portugal He was pardoned by Pedro and returned to Castile then revolted in Asturias in 1352 He reconciled with his brother only to rebel against him again in a long intermittent war which ended with Henry s flight to France where he entered the service of John II of France Shortly after Henry and his men spent time in Peter IV of Aragon s army in their war against Castile 1358 During that conflict he was defeated and held prisoner in Najera 1360 He was liberated with the help of Juan Ramirez de Arellano among others and exiled himself to France once more Then Peter IV of Aragon attacked Castile again Henry agreed to help him on condition that he would lend his support to destroying his half brother This became the Castilian Civil War The attack combined Henry s Castillian allies the Aragonese and the French a company of Bertrand du Guesclin s mercenaries expelled by Peter of Castile who had taken refuge in Guyenne Henry was proclaimed king in Calahorra 1366 2 In return he had to reward his allies with titles and riches for the help they had provided This earned him the nickname el de las mercedes mercedesbeing Spanish for mercies Peter of Castile fled north to Bordeaux the capital of the English dominions in France where Edward the Black Prince held court Edward agreed to help Peter recover his throne Despite the fact that the army suffered so badly from dysentery that it is said that one out of every five Englishmen would not return home 3 on 3 April 1367 an Anglo Gascon army led by Edward and his younger brother John of Gaunt 1st Duke of Lancaster met the Castilian forces supported by French mercenaries under Bertrand du Guesclin Peter then defeated Henry in the Battle of Najera but Henry escaped 4 and returned to France under the protection of Charles V of France King Peter and Prince Edward parted ways over the funding of the expedition and the Black Prince returned to Bordeaux having contracted an illness on this expedition that would ail him until his death in 1376 They reorganised their army at Peyrepertuse Castle Then with the help of many Castilian rebels and Bertrand du Guesclin s Frenchmen they defeated Peter at the Battle of Montiel on 14 March 1369 5 Henry killed the Cruel King now a prisoner with his own hand 6 This definitively won him the Castilian throne and the name of Henry II Before being consolidated in his throne and being able to hand on power to his son John Henry had to defeat Ferdinand I of Portugal He embarked on the three Ferdinand Wars Ferdinand s main ally in these wars was John of Gaunt the husband of Peter s daughter Constance Henry was allied with Charles V of France He put the Castilian navy at Charles disposal and they played a key part in the siege of La Rochelle and the Battle of La Rochelle where the admiral Ambrosio Boccanegra completely defeated the English side Henry recompensed his allies but he still had to defend his interests in the kingdom of Castile and Leon Consequently he denied the King of Aragon the territories that he had promised him in the difficult times Henry then went to war against Portugal and England in the Hundred Years War For most of his reign he had to fight off the attempts of John of Gaunt a son of Edward III of England to claim the Castilian throne in right of Constance In his domestic policy he started to rebuild the kingdom sped up the transformation of the royal administration and held numerous courts He also permanently set up the Lordship of Biscay after the death of his brother Tello In foreign policy he favoured France over England He died on 29 May 1379 in Santo Domingo de la Calzada His son John I of Castile succeeded him on the throne Policy regarding Jews editHenry was as hostile to the Jews as Peter had been friendly 7 In order to pay Bertrand du Guesclin s mercenaries he imposed a war contribution of twenty thousand gold doubloons on the already heavily oppressed community of Toledo and issued an order to take all the Jews of Toledo as prisoners to give them neither food nor drink and if they still refused to raise this enormous sum to sell their property both movable and immovable at auction Nonetheless he was compelled owing to his financial straits to have recourse to Jewish financiers He made Don Joseph Pichon his chief tax collector contador major and appointed several Jews farmers of the taxes 8 The demands of the Cortes in Toro 1369 and in Burgos 1374 and 1377 against the Jews harmonized perfectly with Henry s inclinations He ordered the Jews to wear the humiliating badge and forbade them to use Christian names He further ordered that for short loans Christian debtors should repay only two thirds of the principal Shortly before his death Henry declared that Jews should no longer be permitted to hold public office 8 Henry was potentially the first ruler since the Visigothic King Ergica to implement anti Jewish policies in the Iberian Peninsula citation needed Burial edit nbsp The tomb of Henry II of Castile After Henry s death his body was transported to Burgos then to Valladolid then finally to Toledo where he was buried in Capilla de los Reyes Nuevos de Toledo 9 His remains are still there today His grave is in the choir stalls at one side of the church and it is in the Plateresque style The box is adorned with the shields of Castille and Leon and the lower interior part has three panels decorated with trophies There are two cherubs over the panels holding the cartouche on which the king s epitaph is displayed The inscription translates to 10 Here lies the most adventurous and noble knight and king the sweetly remembered Don Henry son of the late noble king Don Alfonso who came from Benmarin and ended his life in Santo Domingo de la Calzada he just died gloriously on the XXX day of May in the year of our saviour Jesus Christ MCCCLXXIX There is a recumbent statue of Henry II on top of the tomb It is made from polychromed alabaster It depicts the king wearing his royal robes with his sword in his left hand and his girdle decorated with the lions of Castile His right hand holds the sceptre the upper end of which rests on three pillows that support the monarch s head The king wears slippers and his feet rest on a recumbent lion The king s entrails are buried in the Cathedral of Santo Domingo de la Calzada Partners and children edit nbsp Statue of Henry II at the Royal Palace of Madrid nbsp Image of Henry II of Castile on the Royal Hall frieze in the Alcazar of SegoviaOn 27 July 1350 Henry married Juana Manuel the daughter of Juan Manuel Prince of Villena head of a younger branch of the royal house of Castile They had three children John I 1358 1390 Eleanor 1361 1425 wife of Charles III of Navarre Joanna 1372 1376 died youngHe had several children outside wedlock some of which he mentioned in his will dated 29 May 1374 11 Alfonso Enriquez Count of Gijon and Norena 1355 c 1400 a son of Elvira Iniguez note 1 Count of Norena and Gijon He married Isabel of Portugal Lady of Viseu Leonor de Castilla daughter of Leonor Alvarez from Duenas Palencia Juana de Castilla 1367 daughter of Elvira Iniguez Her father mentioned her in his will and said that if she did not marry Pedro de Aragon then she would inherit Uruena Pedro was the Marquis of Villena 1362 Aljubarrota 1385 and son of Alfonso de Aragon y Foix note 2 Constanza Enriquez de Castilla Her father did not mention her mother s name When he wrote the will in 1374 she was engaged to Infante Denis Lord of Cifuentes 1354 1397 However she eventually married his brother Infante John Duke of Valencia de Campos 1349 1387 She inherited Alba de Tormes Fernando Enriquez de Castilla 1365 1438 His father describes him as the son of Beatriz Fernandez Maria de Castilla 1375 c 1393 daughter of Beatriz Fernandez She married Diego Hurtado de Mendoza Admiral of Castile Lord of Mendoza and Mayordomo mayor of King John II of Castile Fadrique de Castilla 1360 1394 son of Beatriz Ponce de Leon y Jerica Named Duke of Benavente by his father he died in prison in Almodovar del Rio in 1394 He married Leonor Sanchez de Castilla illegitimate daughter of Sancho Alfonso 1st Count of Alburquerque Beatriz de Castilla 1409 daughter of Beatriz Ponce de Leon y Jerica and Lady of Niebla She married Juan Alonso de Guzman in 1370 or 1371 He was Lord of Sanlucar de Barrameda and the first Count of Niebla Later she became a nun in the San Clement Monastery in Seville where she was buried note 3 Enrique de Castilla 1378 1404 son of the Cordoban Lady Juana de Sousa daughter of Vasco Alfonso de Sousa the mayor of Cordoba with Maria Gomez Carrillo the Duchess of Medina Sidonia and Countess of Cabra Enrique is buried in the Cathedral of Cordoba note 4 Pedro Enriquez de Castilla 1366 He is buried in Segovia Cathedral Isabel Enriquez de Castilla c 1419 daughter of Juana de Carcamo She married Gonzalo Nunez de Guzman however this marriage was dissolved by Pope Clemente VII Later she entered the monastery of Santa Clara la Real de Toledo where she became its abbess and was buried Ines Enriquez de Castilla c 1443 daughter of Juana de Carcamo also an abbess of the monastery at Santa Clara la Real de Toledo where she was buried note 5 Juana Enriquez de Castilla daughter de Juana Lady of Cifuentes and wife of Infante Denis Lord of Cifuentes 1354 1397 son of Peter I of Portugal and Ines de Castro she is buried at Santa Maria de Guadalupe 12 Titles editBy the end of his reign he bore the titles of the King of Castile Toledo Leon Galicia Sevilla Cordoba Murcia Jaen the Algarve and Lord of Molina Notes edit Although she is called Ines Diaz de la Vega in some genealogies King Henry II mentions her several times in his will as Elvira Iniguez This could be an error transmitted from one genealogy to another or perhaps it refers to another mistress and mother of one or more of his illegitimate issue Her marriage was celebrated in 1378 by Enrique de Villena among others master of the Orden de Calatrava Count of Cangas and Tineo and husband of Maria de Albornoz Lady of the Infantado She is not mentioned in her father s will He is not mentioned in his father s 1374 will Both sisters feature in the monastery s documents receiving various favours from their uncle the king Henry III of Castile nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry II of Castile References edit Borras Gualis 2014 p 172 Hume Martin Andrew Sharp The Spanish People D Appleton 1911 Green David Masculinity and Medicine Thomas Washington and the Death of the Black Prince Journal of Medieval History 35 1 2009 34 51 Sumption Jonathan 1999 The Hundred Years War Volume II Trial by Fire Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania p 554 ISBN 978 0 8122 3527 2 Todesca 2015 p 129 Todesca 2015 p 141 Abraham Zacuto 1452 circa 1515 in his book Sefer Yuchasin Krakow 1580 q v Sefer Yuchasin p 265 in PDF makes mention that in the year 5130 anno mundi corresponding with 1369 70 of our Common Era there was a time of great disturbance all throughout the Jewish communities of Castille and Ṭulayṭulah Toledo and that 38 000 Jews were killed in the ensuing wars between Henry and Peter a b Henry II or Henry de Trastamara Jewish encyclopedia Elorza et al 1990 pp 63 64 Elorza et al 1990 p 64 See Cronicas de los reyes de Castilla D Pedro I D Enrique II D Juan I D Enrique III Tomo II pp 106 121 de Pedro Lopez de Ayala 1 Arco y Garay 1954 p 310Bibliography editArco y Garay Ricardo del 1954 Instituto Jeronimo Zurita Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas ed Sepulcros de la Casa Real de Castilla Tombs of the Castilian Royal Family in Spanish 1st ed Madrid OCLC 11366237 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Borras Gualis Gonzalo M 2014 La Virgen de Tobed Exvoto dinastico de los Trastamara PDF In Escribano Pano Maria Victoria Dupla Ansuategui Antonio Sancho Rocher Laura Villacampa Rubio Maria Angustias eds Miscelanea de estudios en homenaje a Guillermo Fatas Cabeza Zaragoza Institucion Fernando el Catolico pp 167 176 ISBN 978 84 9911 302 9 Elorza Juan C Vaquero Lourdes Castillo Belen Negro Marta 1990 Junta de Castilla y Leon Consejeria de Cultura y Bienestar Social ed El Panteon Real de las Huelgas de Burgos Los enterramientos de los reyes de Leon y de Castilla The Royal Pantheon of the Huelgas de Burgos The graves of the monarchs of Leon and Castile in Spanish 2nd ed Editorial Evergraficas S A ISBN 84 241 9999 5 Lopez de Ayala Pedro 1994 1997 Buenos Aires ed Cronica del rey don Pedro y del rey don Enrique su hermano hijos del rey don Alfonso Onceno A chronicle of the kings Peter and Henry his brother sons of the king Alfonso Onceno in Spanish OCLC 489686613 critical edition and notes by German Orduna a preliminary study by German Orduna and Jose Luis Moure Valdeon Baruque Julio 1996 Palencia Diputacion Provincial de Palencia ed Enrique II Diputacion Provincial de Palencia ISBN 84 8173 051 3 Todesca James ed 2015 The Emergence of Leon Castile c 1065 1500 Essays Presented to J F O Callaghan Ashgate Publishing Limited Henry II of CastileHouse of TrastamaraCadet branch of the House of IvreaBorn 13 January 1334 Died 29 May 1379Regnal titlesPreceded byPeter King of Castile and Leon1366 1367 Succeeded byPeterKing of Castile and Leon1369 1379 Succeeded byJohn I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry II of Castile amp oldid 1215324295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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