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Philip I of Castile

Philip the Handsome[b] (22 July 1478 – 25 September 1506), also called the Fair, was ruler of the Burgundian Netherlands and titular Duke of Burgundy from 1482 to 1506, as well as the first Habsburg King of Castile (as Philip I) for a brief time in 1506.

Philip the Handsome
Portrait by Juan de Flandes, c. 1500
King of Castile and León
Reign12 July – 25 September 1506
Proclamation12 July 1506
PredecessorJoanna
SuccessorJoanna
Lord of the Netherlands
Duke of Burgundy[a]
Reign27 March 1482 – 25 September 1506
PredecessorMary and Maximilian I
SuccessorCharles II
Governors
See list
RegentMaximilian of Austria (1482-1494)
Born22 July 1478
Bruges, Flanders, Burgundian Netherlands
Died25 September 1506(1506-09-25) (aged 28)
Burgos, Castile, Spain
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1496)
Issue
HouseHabsburg
FatherMaximilian of Austria
MotherMary, Duchess of Burgundy
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

The son of Maximilian of Austria (later Holy Roman Emperor as Maximilian I) and Mary of Burgundy, Philip was not yet four years old when his mother died as a result of a riding accident, and upon her death, he inherited the Burgundian Netherlands. Despite his young age, Philip quickly proved himself an effective ruler beloved by his people in the Low Countries, pursuing policies that favored peace and economic development, while maintaining a steady course of the government building.

In 1496, Philip's father arranged for him to marry Joanna, the second daughter of Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon.[1] Around the same time, Philip's sister, Margaret, was given in marriage to Joanna's brother John, Prince of Asturias. After the deaths of her brother John, sister Isabella, and nephew Miguel, Joanna became heiress presumptive to the thrones of Castile and Aragon. Most of Philip's time in Spain was spent consolidating his power, often leading to conflicts with his wife and her father. Joanna became queen of Castile when her mother died in 1504. Philip was proclaimed king in 1506, but died a few months later, leaving his wife distraught with grief. Joanna's father, Ferdinand II of Aragon, and her own son, Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, were quick to seize power, confining the queen for the rest of her life on account of her alleged insanity.[2]

Philip was the first Habsburg monarch in Spain, and every Spanish monarch since his son Charles V has been one of his descendants. Philip died before his father, and therefore never inherited his father's territories or became Holy Roman Emperor. However, his son Charles eventually united the Habsburg, Burgundian, Castilian, and Aragonese inheritances. By inheriting the Burgundian Netherlands and acquiring much of Spain and its possessions in the New World by marriage to Joanna, Philip was instrumental in vastly enhancing the territories of the Habsburgs, and his progeny would rule over European territories for the next five centuries.

Holland, gold florin 'Philippus Goudgulden', struck in Dordrecht under the reign of Philip the Fair

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
Boys' racing armour of Philip, made around 1490 by unknown armourer from Southern Germany

Philip was born in Bruges on 22 July 1478, the son of the future Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, by his first wife Mary, Duchess of Burgundy.[3] He was born in the County of Flanders (today in Belgium) during the reign of his grandfather Frederick III. When Philip was born, King Louis XI of France, the chief opponent of his parents, spread the rumour that the child was actually a girl, not a boy. When Philip's baptism was organized, his step-grandmother Margaret of York showed the boy naked to the populace, so that any doubt about the child's sex would disappear. The child was named in honour of his maternal great-grandfather, Philip the Good, paternal grandfather of his mother Mary. In his first presentation to the father, the parents expressed double dynastic pride. Mary said: “Sir, look at your son and our child, young Philip of imperial seed.” Maximilian kissed the baby, and replied, “O noble Burgundian blood, my offspring, named after Philip of Valois.”[4]

Philip was only four years old when his mother died in 1482, resulting in him succeeding her as ruler of the Burgundian possessions under the guardianship of his father. A period of turmoil ensued which witnessed sporadic hostilities between, principally, the large towns of Flanders (especially Ghent and Bruges) and the supporters of Maximilian. Philip became caught up in events and his custody was taken away by a council appointed by the Netherlandish Estates[5] as part of the larger Flemish campaign to support their claims of greater autonomy, which they had wrested from Mary of Burgundy in an agreement known as the Great Privilege of 1477. It was only in the summer of 1485 that Maximilian, marching into Ghent with German troops and forcing its leader Jan Coppenhole to flee, could embrace his son again. Young Philip was then brought to Mechelen and delivered to the loving care of Margaret of York.[6]

By 1492, the rebellions were completely suppressed. Maximilian revoked the Great Privilege and established a strong ducal monarchy, undisturbed by particularism. But he would not reintroduce Charles the Bold's centralizing ordinances. Since 1489 (after his departure), the government under Albert III, Duke of Saxony had made more efforts in consulting representative institutions and showed more restraint in subjugating recalcitrant territories. Notables who had previously supported rebellions returned to city administrations. The Estates General continued to develop as a regular meeting place of the central government.[7][8] By the time Maximilian handed over the government to Philip, Habsburg rule was a matter of fact.[9]

Despite tumultuous political conditions, the early death of Philip's mother as well as the separation from his father and sister, Philip's young life did not lack luxuries. He was educated for the needs of a person of his social class. He became accomplished in archery, tennis, stick fighting, hunting. He also proved a valiant knight, like his father. He was a good dancer and conversationalist. He also inherited his parents' passion for music. Although, this boisterousness would not manifest in his manners as a politician.[10][11][12]

Due to constant campaigning, Maximilian, the father, tended to be absent in the young Philip's life (he returned to battles only two months after Philip's birth). Later, due to emotional problems, Maximilian tried to avoid returning to the Netherlands, and would miss both the 1494 inauguration and 1496 wedding of his son.[13] Philip's tutors since arriving at Mechelen were Olivier de la Marche and François de Busleyden, who would later be his chancellor in Flanders.[14]

Ruler of Burgundian lands edit

 
16th century stained glass window in St George's Church (Georgskapelle): Philip the Handsome, Maximilian I, Bianca Maria Sforza, Mary of Burgundy with Archduchess Margaret (left to right)

In 1493, Frederick III died, thus Philip's father Maximilian I became de facto leader of the Holy Roman Empire. Burdened with his new responsibilities and personally exasperated by his relationship with the Burgundian lands, he decided to transfer power to the 15-year-old Philip.[15] The news was welcomed by Burgundian lands, as the new ruler was native-born, spoke the language, was peace-loving and trusted his advisors, while Maximilian was warlike and did not respect the Great Privilege. From this year, Philip was in control of the government.[16] As King of the Romans, Maximilian did not accept homage from Philip though, a signal that he intended to exercise direct control over the lands. His defeated subjects were too exhausted to resist.[8]

At his inauguration in 1494, one of Philip the Fair's first administrative acts was the abolition of the Great Privilege.[17] He swore to maintaining only the privileges granted at the time of Philip the Good.[8] As during the revolts, many of the rebels had claimed Philip as their rightful and natural prince (as opposed to his father), Philip capitalized on this to restore several of his great-grandfather and grandfather's centralizing policies, while abandoning their expansionism.[18]

 
Archduke Philip opening a session (1504) of the Great Council of Mechelen

Philip was an inexperienced ruler and had a reputation for accommodating and trusting advisors, but also had a backbone. Philip freed himself from his father's control. Although Busleyden was temporarily disgraced when Maximilian summoned his son in 1496 to Germany, he was soon restored. In 1497, Philip replaced Jean Carondelet, the chancellor Maximilian had appointed, with Thomas de Plaine, who was devoted to his interests.[6] His pursuit of peace with France frustrated Maximilian, who was waging war against Charles VIII of France. Philip reconciled the regionalism represented by the Great Privilege with the harsh centralization the country had experienced under Charles the Bold, softening the rigorous demands of both sides while giving in to neither. He reimposed the Parliament of Mechelen (renamed as the Great Council, which was placed in Mechelen in December 1501 – de jure from 1504) and reclaimed royal domains. He placated France while reopening the trade route with England in the Magnus Intercursus. His policies gained him the love of the country.[19] Patricia Carson opines, though, that it was clear from the beginning that this was not meant to last, as Philip would never be able to focus on Burgundian lands forever. He was the heir of his father as Holy Roman Emperor. What the Low Countries could not have foreseen, was that Philip would one day claim the throne in Spain as well, as the husband of Joanna.[20]

 
Philip by the Master of the Legend of the Magdalen

From the time of Philip, the government in the Low Countries constituted a compromise between the states and the Empire (although, at this time, Burgundian lands had not become part of imperial circles yet, which would be confirmed in 1512 and formalized in 1548). The chancellor of Burgundy became responsible for the government's practical work in the absence of the emperor while the Great Council (Hoge Raad) acted as the country's highest body of judicial power.[21]

Philip's policy was focused on maintaining peace and economic development for his Burgundian lands. Maximilian wanted to recover Guelders, but his son wanted to keep a neutral policy and thus the father was left fighting Charles of Egmond over Guelders on his own. Only at the end of his reign, Philip decided to deal with this threat together with his father.[22] Guelders had been weakened due to the continuous state of war and other problems. This would turn out to be the only campaign in Philip's life. The duke of Cleves and the bishop of Utrecht, hoping to share spoils, gave Philip aid. Maximilian invested his own son with Guelders and Zutphen. Within months, Philip conquered the whole land and Charles of Egmond was forced to prostrate himself in front of his sovereign at the palace of Rosendaal. Charles was then forced to follow Philip wherever he went. In October 1505, they were in Brussels. But after that, Charles was able to escape and start the war again. Philip was not in a good position to make good his claims yet, because by this time he needed to depart to Spain to claim the Castilian throne.[23][24]

At the same time, while he often carefully avoided direct confrontation with the French king, in promoting his Great Council, he slowly eroded the capacity of intervention of the Parlement of Paris in Flanders and Artois, lands under the sovereignty of France. This process would be completed by Charles V in 1521. In August 1505, this resulted in written protests from King Louis XII of France, who accused him of usurpation of the rights of the sovereign and threatened Philip with sanctions. To this, Maximilian, who at this time was with Philip after returning from Gelderland, angrily sent threats and stated that he would defend his son. Philip reacted in a concilliatory manner, stating that he had consulted Maximilian and did not mean to offend Louis.[25]

Philip (and later his son Charles V) joined his father in patronising the devotion of the Seven Sorrows that associated his own mother Mary of Burgundy, who had died young and been idealised in vernacular literature, with the Virgin Mary.[26] The devotion, with its strong current of patriotism and Burgundian nostalgia, successfully helped to rally loyalty to the ruling family in the turbulence after Mary's death. The same devotion was later used to promote dynastic and territorial unity.[27]

 
Fresco at the old Rathaus in Lindau, depicting the entry of Philip

He visited Germany several times:

  • On 31 August 1496, he came to Lindau to represent his father at the Reichstag of Lindau (1496– 1497) because Maximilian could not come to the Diet personally.[28]
  • In 1498, he accompanied his father to the Reichstag in Freiburg.[29]
  • In 1505, he attended the Reichstag at Hagenau, where he and his father met the minister of the king of France, the Cardinal of Amboise.[30]

The Castilian inheritance edit

 
Maximilian I paying attention to an execution instead of watching Philip the Handsome and Joanna of Castile's betrothal, much to his son's dismay. Satire created on behalf of the councilors of Augsburg. Plate 89 of Von der Arztney bayder Glück by the Petrarcameister.[31]

The marriage was one of a set of family alliances between the Habsburgs and the Trastámaras, designed to strengthen the two dynasties against growing French power, which had increased significantly thanks to the policies of Louis XI and the successful assertion of regal power after the war with the League of the Public Weal. The matter became more urgent after Charles VIII's invasion of Italy (known as the First Peninsular War). This was a matter of compromise for Philip. While assuring his pro-French advisors that he would maintain peaceful policies towards France, the marriage pleased Maximilian while allowing a partial, prudent emergence from France's shadow. Although, Philip did put efforts in safeguarding the 1493 Treaty of Senlis. His independent tendency frustrated both Maximilian and his new parents-in-law.[32]

On 20 October 1496, he married Joanna, daughter of King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I of Castile, in Lier, Belgium.[33]

Philip's sister Margaret married John, Prince of Asturias, only son of Ferdinand and Isabella and heir apparent to the unified crowns of Castile and Aragon.[34] The double alliance was never intended to let the Spanish kingdoms fall under Habsburg control. At the time of her marriage to Philip, Joanna was third in line to the throne, with John and their sister Isabella married and hopeful of progeny.[citation needed]

 
Philip the Fair and Joanna of Castile, stained glass, Basilica of the Holy Blood in Bruges, 1480-1490.

In 1500, shortly after the birth of Joanna and Philip's second child (the future Emperor Charles V), in Flanders, the succession to the Castilian and Aragonese crowns was thrown into turmoil. The heir apparent, John, had died in 1497 very shortly after his marriage to Margaret of Austria. The crown thereby seemed destined to devolve upon his and Joanna's elder sister Isabella, wife of Manuel I of Portugal. She died in 1498, while giving birth to a son named Miguel da Paz, to whom succession to the united crowns of Castile, Aragon and Portugal now fell; however, the infant was sickly and died during the summer of 1500.[citation needed]

The succession to the Castilian and Aragonese crowns now fell to Joanna. Because Ferdinand could produce another heir, the Cortes of Aragon refused to recognize Joanna as heir presumptive to the Kingdom of Aragon. In the Kingdom of Castile, however, the succession was clear. Moreover, there was no Salic tradition that the Castilian Cortes could use to thwart the succession passing to Joanna. At this point, the issue of Joanna's supposed mental incompetence moved from courtly annoyance to the center of the political stage, since it was clear that Philip and his Burgundian entourage would be the real power-holders in Castile.[citation needed]

 
Joanna of Castile

In 1502, Philip, Joanna, and a large part of the Burgundian court traveled to Spain to receive fealty from the Cortes of Castile as heirs, a journey chronicled in intense detail by Antoon I van Lalaing (French: Antoine de Lalaing), the future Stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland. Philip and the majority of the court returned to the Low Countries in the following year, leaving a pregnant Joanna behind in Madrid, where she gave birth to Ferdinand, later Holy Roman Emperor.[citation needed]

Although Joanna was deeply in love with Philip, their married life was rendered extremely unhappy by his infidelity and political insecurity, during which time he constantly attempted to usurp her legal birthright of power. This led in great part to the rumors of her insanity due to reports of depressive or neurotic acts committed while she was being imprisoned or coerced by her husband, rumors that benefited Philip politically. Most historians now agree she was merely clinically depressed at the time, not insane as commonly believed. Before her mother's death, in 1504, husband and wife were already living apart.[citation needed]

King of Castile edit

In 1504, Philip's mother-in-law, Queen Isabella of Castile, died, leaving the Crown of Castile to Joanna. Isabella I's widower and former co-monarch, King Ferdinand II, endeavored to lay hands on the regency of Castile, but the nobles, who disliked and feared him, forced him to withdraw. Philip was summoned to Spain, where he was recognized as king.

 
Phillip and Joanna, triptych, 1505 or 1506

However, en route to Spain in January 1506, Philip and Joanna were caught in a storm and shipwrecked off the Dorset coast, forcing them on the shore near Melcombe Regis. The nearest important gentleman in the locality was Sir Thomas Trenchard, seated at Wolfeton House, who gave shelter and entertainment to the royal couple. The future minister John Russell attended the couple on this occasion, after which Philip recommended him to Henry VII.[35] Having been conducted to the palace of King Henry VII by Russell, the couple stayed as the king's guests but were in fact hostages for the duration of their stay. To get released Philip was forced to sign a treaty with Henry VII–the so-called Malus Intercursus–which included a mutual defense pact, the extradition of rebels, including the Earl of Suffolk, Edmund de la Pole, who as an exile was a guest of Philip in the Low Countries, and a trade agreement which allowed English merchants to import cloth duty-free into the Low Countries. After handing over Edmund, Philip and Joanna were allowed to leave England after a stay of six weeks.[36]

Philip and Joanna landed at Corunna on 28 April 1506, accompanied by a body of German mercenaries. Father- and son-in-law mediated under Cardinal Cisneros at Remesal, near Puebla de Sanabria, and at Renedo, the only result of which was an indecent family quarrel, in which Ferdinand professed to defend the interests of his daughter, who he said was imprisoned by her husband. In meetings between 20 and 27 June, mediated by Cardinal Cisneros, the senior churchman in Spain, Ferdinand accepted that his 'most beloved children' (Joanna and Philip) should take over control of Castile.[37]

The two kings then agreed that Joanna was neither fit nor inclined to rule 'considering her infirmities and sufferings, which for the sake of honour are not expressed' and further that if 'the said most serene Queen, either from her own choice or from being persuaded by other persons should attempt to meddle in the government both would prevent it'. It suited both her father and her husband that she be regarded as incapable.

 
Meeting of Philip and Ferdinand II of Aragon in Remesal on 20 June 1506

On 27 June 1506, the Treaty of Villafáfila was signed between Ferdinand and Philip, with Philip being proclaimed King of Castile by the Cortes of Valladolid. Yet on the same day Ferdinand drew up secret documents repudiating all the agreements on the grounds of coercion, claiming that he would never otherwise have signed treaties that did 'such enormous damage to the said most serene Queen, my daughter, and me'. Having left his options for the future open, he departed for Aragon.[38] Philip appointed García Laso de la Vega (diplomat and commander, Comendador Mayor de Léon under the Catholic Monarch, died 1512) as President of the Royal Council.[39]

Even before leaving the Low Countries, Philip had ordered the total suspension of Spanish Inquisition activities. When he arrived in Spain, he proposed to the Cortes that the Inquisitor General should be deposed and the Council of Inquisition should be dissolved. His early death prevented the plan from materializing, but Ferdinand later reacted to this by splitting the Holy Tribunal, thus Castile and Aragon would each possess their own Inquisition organization.[40] The 4,000 landsknechte who followed him to Spain presumably helped to overcome the last opposition to the military reform started by Gonzalo de Cordoba and Gonzalo de Ayora.[41]

As Duke of Burgundy and King of Castile, Philip expanded the Habsburg postal system established by his father. In 1500, the centre of the system was transferred to Brussels by Franz von Taxis, whom Philip made his postmaster-general.[42][43] Shortly after becoming King of Castile, as he realized that his bureaucrats were unable to govern the postal system, he made an agreement (later renewed by Charles of Burgundy) with the Taxis that allowed them to operate unhampered by interference from the state, as long as they maintained standards in accordance with the Habsburgs' interests. Behringer notes that, "The terminology of the early modern communications system and the legal status of its participants were invented at these negotiations."[44] On 18 January 1505 Philip unified communication between Germany, the Netherlands, France and Spain by adding stations in Granada, Toledo, Blois, Paris and Lyon.[45]

His arrival introduced the Burgundian household model into Spain, although due to his early death, it had to wait until Charles V's reign to become a firmly established element of the Spanish court.[46][47]

After one month in La Coruña, he returned to Burgos and set about to appoint his men to strategic fortresses, the Royal Council as well as financial offices. He granted the Castle of Segovia and some other important fortresses to Don Juan Manuel (who was ironically Ferdinand's former servant, and had become Philip's favourite after the archbishop of Besançon died.[48][49]

He ran into financial troubles as parts of his army remained unpaid and he granted generous financial conditions to Ferdinand to hasten his departure.[50]

Cauchies writes that, in Spain, Philip found himself in the same situation his father had been during his Burgundian days. Until this day, he has been accused of being a foreign, spendthrift prince, a mere transitional monarch who was supported by bad advisors who disregarded the interests of the country. Philip would not live to see a better day like his father had, though.[51]

Patronage of the arts edit

 
Miniature of Philip in the Statutes of the Golden Fleece. Attributed to Simon Bening[52]

Philip was an important patron of Hieronymus Bosch. In 1504, he commissioned Bosch to paint a large triptych of The Last Judgement. The work cannot be found now, but likely had some relation to the smaller triptych of the same subject in Vienna (painted by the same artist), as the face of the saint on the right outer wing seems to be that of Philip.[53]

Philip's chapel had some of the most distinguished musicians in Europe: Henry Bredemers, Pierre de La Rue, Alexander Agricola, Marbrianus de Orto and Antoine Divitis. Josquin Desprez sometimes composed for him as well. The contemporary Venetian ambassador wrote home: "Three things [here] are of the highest excellence: silk..., tapestry..., [and] music, which certainly can be said to be perfect."[54] Perhaps influenced by Maximilian, Philip actively supported instrumental music. There seemed to be a lend-lease arrangement of some kind between the courts of father and son, as the trombonist Augustine Schubinger worked for both Maximilian and Philip. Other outstanding wind players supported by Philip included Hans Nagel and Jan Van den Winckel.[55]

 
Fol. 20r in Johannes de Vico's world chronicle (Chronicon, around 1495–1498). Cod. 325, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna

Philip realized the potential of the printing industry regarding its ability to disseminate information, but when it came to private taste, he had an aversion towards printed books and preferred manuscripts, especially musical manuscripts, which became popular diplomatic gifts under his reign. The chief musical scribe was the priest Martin Bourgeois. The court also employed other scribes and calligraphers. The grandees of the realm also adopted the taste of their sovereign.[56][57][58][59]

His patronage of manuscripts though could not compare with that of his ancestors Philip the Bold and Philip the Good, as he died young and manuscript production had declined overall by the end of the fifteenth century. One manuscript produced for him, a world chronicle by Johannes de Vico from Douai (Cod. 325, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek in Vienna, 660 × 430mm), is unrivalled in comparison with his predecessor's manuscripts though. The layout and content display many unique features. The heraldic program on fol.17v seems to correspond to the situation of the 1498 Treaty of Paris, when Philip sided with the French king and the papacy against his father (who is referred to as emperor in the lineage of Holy Roman Emperors and the inscription that introduces the commissioner, but otherwise appears not in his own right but as the consort of Mary of Burgundy and guardian of Philip; Frederick III, Philip's paternal grandfather, on the other hand, is given a lengthy section; also the book does not mention Philip's Burgundian ancestors or King Louis IX of France, who frequently features in French universal chronicles of the fifteenth century).[60]

Philip was a patron to Desiderius Erasmus, who praised him for making peace with France and advised him that after God, a prince's duty was owed first to patria (the nation) and not to pater (father, in this case Maximilian).[61]

Death and aftermath edit

 
Statue created by Sixt von Staufen in Basler Hof (Freiburg), around 1530–1531.[62]

However, Philip died suddenly at Burgos, apparently of typhoid fever,[63] on 25 September 1506, although a poisoning (assassination) was widely spoken of at the time,[64] and is what his wife believed to be the cause of Philip's death. His wife supposedly refused to allow his body to be buried or part from it for a while. Philip I is entombed at the Royal Chapel of Granada (Capilla Real de Granada), alongside his wife, and her parents Isabella I and Ferdinand II. Cauchies even proposes plague as a possible cause of death, as at this point Philip seemed to be exhausted, having overworked himself (the workload was so enormous that despite being a passionate hunter all his life, Philip was unable to exercise this hobby for just once, as he wrote to his father in July 1506) and there were known incidents of plague in the environment. Philip had shown a level of prudence about the food served to him: A letter of the experienced German commander Wolfgang von Fürstenberg (who commanded the Landsknechte and was attached to Philip's entourage by Maximilian) to Maximilian shows that in A Coruña, Philip only ate at Fürstenberg's table because he distrusted other sources of food. Nevertheless, Maximilian unhesitatingly and openly blamed Louis XII for his beloved son's death, in front of the Imperial Diet.[65]

In the aftermath, a delegation of the States General of the Netherlands was sent to Austria to offer the regency to Maximilian. The depressed emperor tried to evade them to their surprise. In 1507, he finally received them and decided that Philip's sister, Margaret of Austria, would become the governor. In April 1517, the States General welcomed the appointment of another native of the Netherlands.[66]

In Spain, hearing about Philip's death. the opponents of the Inquisition made a move. The marquis of Priego attacked the Inquisition's prison and liberated its prisoners. The procurator was arrested. Diego Rodríguez Lucero, the inquisitor of Cordoba, managed to flee. "The canons, the municipality and the nobility — the marquis of Priego and the count of Cabra — all denounced the excesses, corruption and abuses of the inquisitor". This later caused Ferdinand to declare Grand Inquisitor Deza to be responsible. Deza was forced to resign and was replaced with Cardinal Cisneros, who arrested Lucero in 1508.[67]

Epithets edit

 
"The members of the guild of the large crossbow in Mechelen" (c.1500), by the Master of the Mechelen Guild of Saint George, kmska 28-02-2010 13-43-37. As requested by the Guild, Saint George bears the features of Philip while the princess has the features of Joanna. Like his great-grandfather Philip the Good, Philip the Handsome participated in shooting competitions and kept a special relationship with guilds.[68][69]

His good looks earned him the nickname "the Handsome" or "the Fair".[70]

Many contemporaries noticed Philip's physical attractiveness. Vincenzo Querini, the Venetian ambassador, described Philip as "physically beautiful, vigorous and rich" (bello di corpo, gagliardo e prospero). Peter Martyr d'Anghiera and Lorenzo de Padilla also noted his good looks.[71][72] When Louis XII of France saw him, the king said, "What a handsome prince!" (Que voilà un beau prince)."[73]

He was a slim sportsman who liked to dress in a sumptuous style and knew how to impress women. His skills in knightly exercises and the hunt was such that even as a youth, he acted as teacher of the princes sent to his court.[74]

Joan-Lluis Palos suggests that the epithet might come also from his riding style and his behaviours as a sportsman. When he visited Castile in 1502, he astonished his hosts when he displayed his riding skills by leaping from one horse to another. He also admired a Spanish riding style (inspired by the Muslims), called "à la jineta", with bent knees and short stirrups. He learned this from Rámon of Cardona, Master of King Ferdinand's stable, in a matter of days. According to Lorenzo de Padilla [es], he "played all sports as a pastime, and was fonder of la pelota [handball] than any other." He also appeared to prefer the luxurious "Moorish" dressing style to the Spanish one.[75] A 1611 dictionary explains thus:

jinete [rider] might come from cinete, which is Cinetum in Arabic, and means ornament, from the word ceyene, to beautify or make beautiful ["hermosear o ser hermoso"], from the gallantry of riders when they rally to festivities with their turbans and feathers, fitted Moorish dresses and boots and the harnesses of their rich horses.

Philip also had the nickname "Croit-Conseil" (Believer of Counsel or Believer of Council), chosen for him by Olivier de La Marche. This nickname has sometimes been interpreted as portraying a malleable prince who allowed his advisors to control the country.[76][77] According to Catherine Emerson, attending to conseil is actually a cardinal virtue of a prince, which La March attributed to both Philip the Good and his great-grandson.[78] Anna Margarete Schlegelmilch also writes that the nickname is not derogative in any way. Both La March and other contemporaries like Jean Molinet thought that it was a good sign when a young ruler was open to the words of prudent and wise advisors. It corresponds to the ruling style of a prince who, out of the desire to attain peace and economic recovery for a country that had recently experienced too much turbulence, tried to balance his government between the rights of the prince, the nobles and the provinces, gave his Estates a say in the matters of war and peace, and relied upon confidants whose families had served his ancestors for generations (the conseil ducal had 14 members, including Engelbert II of Nassau, William de Croÿ, John III of Bergen).[79]

Legacy edit

 
Posthumous portrait by Peter Paul Rubens, frequently mistaken for a portrait of his father Maximilian I. The crown he was wearing was a royal crown, not an imperial crown. The style of the armour and the St. Andrew's Cross on the breastplate (added to his coat of arms after his marriage to Joanna of Castile) suggests that this was Philip I of Castile, the Handsome.[80]

Philip was a figure often eclipsed in history books by his parents, Mary and Maximilian, partly also by his tragic wife Joanna I, and even moreso by his son, Charles V. In his 2003 biography Philippe le Beau: le dernier duc de Bourgogne (Philip the Handsome: the last Duke of Burgundy), Belgian historian Jean-Marie Cauchies writes that Philip, who died young, still at the beginning of his political ascendancy, was not yet an aspirant for universal monarchy like his son later, but remained above all the heir and continuator of the dukes of Burgundy. Surrounded by ambitious ministers with very divergent views, facing his father–the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, his parents-in-law–the Catholic monarches, and the king of France, his choices as a leader presented him as the "enfant terrible" of international European politics. According to Cauchies, he was not a "great man", or had not lived long enough to show himself as such. He had not shown the stature or the creativity of his father, and could not claim the scope that Charles V reached either. But he personified the prince of peace and concord, the promise of better days, and his education, his manners, his court displayed the essence of Burgundian culture.[81]

Belgian historian Jonathan Dumont, while reviewing Le Royaume inachevé des ducs de Bourgogne (XIVe–XVe siècles) (translated into English as The Illusion of the Burgundian State) Élodie Lecuppre-Desjardin, notes that historiography dealing with the Burgundian state building project should not end with Charles the Bold, as attempts to build a monarchical and state-ideal became particularly visible under Philip the Handsome and extended into the early years of Charles of Habsburg. If there was a rupture, it only happened with the 1519 imperial election.[82]

James Kennedy notes that by most accounts, Philip was "an ideal prince, well acquainted with and well disposed toward the Low Countries."[83]

German historían Klaus Oschema argues that the Burgundian-Habsburg alliance's situation in the West, and especially their ascension in Spain, was far from being guaranteed in the beginning. It was the work of Philip and his sister Margaret that made their father's expansion strategy in the West possible and paved the way for the Habsburgs' ultimate success.[84]

Some criticize him for being a sadist in private life though, regarding his treatment of Joanna, that he "held Juana in a vicious cycle of affection, abuse, and intimidation from which she was constitutionally unable to escape."[85][86] He had a loving relationship with Margaret, who had been separated from him for a long time though. When they said goodbye to each other in 1497, Margaret told her brother these prophetic words, with a taste of gallows humour, "Don't make me cry, I will need to swallow enough salt water."[87]

Depictions in arts edit

 
Arrival of the statue of Notre-Dame to Brussels, from the tenture of Notre-Dame du Sablon, 1518, wool and silk - Cinquantenaire Museum - Brussels, Belgium. The kneeling figure wearing a crown on the left is Philip.[88]
  • Peter Frey, a composer active in the first half of the sixteenth century, wrote a song about Philip's 1506 journey and visit to Santiago.[89]
  • There are two "historical songs" in the Netherlands about Philip's journey and death, which also paint a negative picture of Joanna. One of them accuses her of poisoning Philip.[89]
  • Absalon, fili mi is a motet, possibly commissioned by Maximilian to commemorate Philip's death, and written by Pierre de la Rue, although there are controversies on the matter.[90][91]
  • Arch of Philip IV by Peter Paul Rubens, Jacob Jordaens and Cornelis de Vos (1614) features the marriage of Philip and Joanna on the main panel of one side.[92]
  • Maximilian's Cenotaph in Innsbruck features a large statue of Philip (measuring 272 cm (107 in)), also considered one of the most notable staues of the group.[93][94][95]
  • There are various depictions of the scene of Philip's death and Joanna in mourning. Doña Joanna the Mad (1877) by the Spanish painter Francisco Pradilla is a notable example.[96] Others include Juana la Loca (1836) by Charles de Steuben, Demencia de Doña Juana de Castilla (1866) by Lorenzo Vallés.[97][98]
  • Philip is depicted in a miniature in the Freydal tournament book jousting with his father, Maximilian, who is in the guise of the book's eponymous hero. The scene is anachronistic as the tournament book, commissioned by Maximilian between 1512 and 1515, tells a fictionalised story, through allegory, of how Maximilian met Philip's mother.[99]

Family edit

 
Children of Philip and Joanna

At the beginning of their marriage, Philip had genuine affection for Joanna. But his education, which was influenced by Franco-Burgundian traditions, contributed to a model of rulership "exclusively male", thus he never saw Joanna as his political equal and could not accept that she tried to forge her own political identity. Maximilian tried to reconcile the couple, telling Philip that he could only succeed as a ruler if husband and wife acted as "una cosa medesima" (one and the same), but despite Philip's efforts, Joanna would not cooperate in his power struggle against her own father. In the end, his controlling and manipulative behaviours, together with Ferdinand's ambitions and Joanna's depression, ruined the marriage and led to Joanna's personal tragedies.[100] Philip and Joanna of Castile had:

Ancestry edit

Male-line family tree edit

Titles edit

 
Coat of arms of Philip as an Archduke and Titular Duke of Burgundy
 
Coat of arms of Philip as Count Palatine of Burgundy
 
Coat of arms of Philip as King of Castile

Notes edit

  1. ^ Monarchs from the House of Habsburg ruled the Low Countries with the titular title of Duke/Duchess of Burgundy.
  2. ^ German: Philipp, Spanish: Felipe, French: Philippe, Dutch: Filips

References edit

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Sources edit

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External links edit

Philip I of Castile
Born: 22 February 1478 Died: 25 September 1506
Regnal titles
Preceded byas sole monarch King of Castile and León
1506
with Joanna I
Succeeded by
Preceded by Duke of Burgundy,
Brabant,
Limburg, Lothier and Duke of Luxemburg
Margrave of Namur
Count of Artois, Flanders,
Charolais, Hainaut, Holland and Zeeland;
Count Palatine of Burgundy

1482–1506
Succeeded by
Duke of Guelders;
Count of Zutphen

1482–1492
Succeeded by

philip, castile, philip, handsome, redirects, here, other, philip, known, philip, handsome, philip, fair, philip, france, philip, handsome, july, 1478, september, 1506, also, called, fair, ruler, burgundian, netherlands, titular, duke, burgundy, from, 1482, 15. Philip the Handsome redirects here For the other Philip known as Philip the Handsome or Philip the Fair see Philip IV of France Philip the Handsome b 22 July 1478 25 September 1506 also called the Fair was ruler of the Burgundian Netherlands and titular Duke of Burgundy from 1482 to 1506 as well as the first Habsburg King of Castile as Philip I for a brief time in 1506 Philip the HandsomePortrait by Juan de Flandes c 1500King of Castile and Leon jure uxoris Reign12 July 25 September 1506Proclamation12 July 1506PredecessorJoannaSuccessorJoannaLord of the NetherlandsDuke of Burgundy a Reign27 March 1482 25 September 1506PredecessorMary and Maximilian ISuccessorCharles IIGovernorsSee list Margaret of York 1489 1493 Engelbert II Count of Nassau Breda 1501 1504 William de Croy 1504 1506 RegentMaximilian of Austria 1482 1494 Born22 July 1478Bruges Flanders Burgundian NetherlandsDied25 September 1506 1506 09 25 aged 28 Burgos Castile SpainBurialRoyal Chapel of GranadaSpouseJoanna Queen of Castile m 1496 wbr IssueEleanor Queen of France and Portugal Charles V Holy Roman Emperor Isabella Queen of Denmark Ferdinand I Holy Roman Emperor Mary Queen of Hungary Catherine Queen of PortugalHouseHabsburgFatherMaximilian of AustriaMotherMary Duchess of BurgundyReligionRoman CatholicismSignatureThe son of Maximilian of Austria later Holy Roman Emperor as Maximilian I and Mary of Burgundy Philip was not yet four years old when his mother died as a result of a riding accident and upon her death he inherited the Burgundian Netherlands Despite his young age Philip quickly proved himself an effective ruler beloved by his people in the Low Countries pursuing policies that favored peace and economic development while maintaining a steady course of the government building In 1496 Philip s father arranged for him to marry Joanna the second daughter of Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon 1 Around the same time Philip s sister Margaret was given in marriage to Joanna s brother John Prince of Asturias After the deaths of her brother John sister Isabella and nephew Miguel Joanna became heiress presumptive to the thrones of Castile and Aragon Most of Philip s time in Spain was spent consolidating his power often leading to conflicts with his wife and her father Joanna became queen of Castile when her mother died in 1504 Philip was proclaimed king in 1506 but died a few months later leaving his wife distraught with grief Joanna s father Ferdinand II of Aragon and her own son Charles V Holy Roman Emperor were quick to seize power confining the queen for the rest of her life on account of her alleged insanity 2 Philip was the first Habsburg monarch in Spain and every Spanish monarch since his son Charles V has been one of his descendants Philip died before his father and therefore never inherited his father s territories or became Holy Roman Emperor However his son Charles eventually united the Habsburg Burgundian Castilian and Aragonese inheritances By inheriting the Burgundian Netherlands and acquiring much of Spain and its possessions in the New World by marriage to Joanna Philip was instrumental in vastly enhancing the territories of the Habsburgs and his progeny would rule over European territories for the next five centuries Holland gold florin Philippus Goudgulden struck in Dordrecht under the reign of Philip the Fair Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Ruler of Burgundian lands 1 3 The Castilian inheritance 1 4 King of Castile 1 5 Patronage of the arts 1 6 Death and aftermath 1 7 Epithets 1 8 Legacy 1 9 Depictions in arts 2 Family 3 Ancestry 4 Male line family tree 5 Titles 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksBiography editEarly life edit nbsp Boys racing armour of Philip made around 1490 by unknown armourer from Southern Germany Philip was born in Bruges on 22 July 1478 the son of the future Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor by his first wife Mary Duchess of Burgundy 3 He was born in the County of Flanders today in Belgium during the reign of his grandfather Frederick III When Philip was born King Louis XI of France the chief opponent of his parents spread the rumour that the child was actually a girl not a boy When Philip s baptism was organized his step grandmother Margaret of York showed the boy naked to the populace so that any doubt about the child s sex would disappear The child was named in honour of his maternal great grandfather Philip the Good paternal grandfather of his mother Mary In his first presentation to the father the parents expressed double dynastic pride Mary said Sir look at your son and our child young Philip of imperial seed Maximilian kissed the baby and replied O noble Burgundian blood my offspring named after Philip of Valois 4 Philip was only four years old when his mother died in 1482 resulting in him succeeding her as ruler of the Burgundian possessions under the guardianship of his father A period of turmoil ensued which witnessed sporadic hostilities between principally the large towns of Flanders especially Ghent and Bruges and the supporters of Maximilian Philip became caught up in events and his custody was taken away by a council appointed by the Netherlandish Estates 5 as part of the larger Flemish campaign to support their claims of greater autonomy which they had wrested from Mary of Burgundy in an agreement known as the Great Privilege of 1477 It was only in the summer of 1485 that Maximilian marching into Ghent with German troops and forcing its leader Jan Coppenhole to flee could embrace his son again Young Philip was then brought to Mechelen and delivered to the loving care of Margaret of York 6 By 1492 the rebellions were completely suppressed Maximilian revoked the Great Privilege and established a strong ducal monarchy undisturbed by particularism But he would not reintroduce Charles the Bold s centralizing ordinances Since 1489 after his departure the government under Albert III Duke of Saxony had made more efforts in consulting representative institutions and showed more restraint in subjugating recalcitrant territories Notables who had previously supported rebellions returned to city administrations The Estates General continued to develop as a regular meeting place of the central government 7 8 By the time Maximilian handed over the government to Philip Habsburg rule was a matter of fact 9 Despite tumultuous political conditions the early death of Philip s mother as well as the separation from his father and sister Philip s young life did not lack luxuries He was educated for the needs of a person of his social class He became accomplished in archery tennis stick fighting hunting He also proved a valiant knight like his father He was a good dancer and conversationalist He also inherited his parents passion for music Although this boisterousness would not manifest in his manners as a politician 10 11 12 Due to constant campaigning Maximilian the father tended to be absent in the young Philip s life he returned to battles only two months after Philip s birth Later due to emotional problems Maximilian tried to avoid returning to the Netherlands and would miss both the 1494 inauguration and 1496 wedding of his son 13 Philip s tutors since arriving at Mechelen were Olivier de la Marche and Francois de Busleyden who would later be his chancellor in Flanders 14 Ruler of Burgundian lands edit nbsp 16th century stained glass window in St George s Church Georgskapelle Philip the Handsome Maximilian I Bianca Maria Sforza Mary of Burgundy with Archduchess Margaret left to right In 1493 Frederick III died thus Philip s father Maximilian I became de facto leader of the Holy Roman Empire Burdened with his new responsibilities and personally exasperated by his relationship with the Burgundian lands he decided to transfer power to the 15 year old Philip 15 The news was welcomed by Burgundian lands as the new ruler was native born spoke the language was peace loving and trusted his advisors while Maximilian was warlike and did not respect the Great Privilege From this year Philip was in control of the government 16 As King of the Romans Maximilian did not accept homage from Philip though a signal that he intended to exercise direct control over the lands His defeated subjects were too exhausted to resist 8 At his inauguration in 1494 one of Philip the Fair s first administrative acts was the abolition of the Great Privilege 17 He swore to maintaining only the privileges granted at the time of Philip the Good 8 As during the revolts many of the rebels had claimed Philip as their rightful and natural prince as opposed to his father Philip capitalized on this to restore several of his great grandfather and grandfather s centralizing policies while abandoning their expansionism 18 nbsp Archduke Philip opening a session 1504 of the Great Council of Mechelen Philip was an inexperienced ruler and had a reputation for accommodating and trusting advisors but also had a backbone Philip freed himself from his father s control Although Busleyden was temporarily disgraced when Maximilian summoned his son in 1496 to Germany he was soon restored In 1497 Philip replaced Jean Carondelet the chancellor Maximilian had appointed with Thomas de Plaine who was devoted to his interests 6 His pursuit of peace with France frustrated Maximilian who was waging war against Charles VIII of France Philip reconciled the regionalism represented by the Great Privilege with the harsh centralization the country had experienced under Charles the Bold softening the rigorous demands of both sides while giving in to neither He reimposed the Parliament of Mechelen renamed as the Great Council which was placed in Mechelen in December 1501 de jure from 1504 and reclaimed royal domains He placated France while reopening the trade route with England in the Magnus Intercursus His policies gained him the love of the country 19 Patricia Carson opines though that it was clear from the beginning that this was not meant to last as Philip would never be able to focus on Burgundian lands forever He was the heir of his father as Holy Roman Emperor What the Low Countries could not have foreseen was that Philip would one day claim the throne in Spain as well as the husband of Joanna 20 nbsp Philip by the Master of the Legend of the Magdalen From the time of Philip the government in the Low Countries constituted a compromise between the states and the Empire although at this time Burgundian lands had not become part of imperial circles yet which would be confirmed in 1512 and formalized in 1548 The chancellor of Burgundy became responsible for the government s practical work in the absence of the emperor while the Great Council Hoge Raad acted as the country s highest body of judicial power 21 Philip s policy was focused on maintaining peace and economic development for his Burgundian lands Maximilian wanted to recover Guelders but his son wanted to keep a neutral policy and thus the father was left fighting Charles of Egmond over Guelders on his own Only at the end of his reign Philip decided to deal with this threat together with his father 22 Guelders had been weakened due to the continuous state of war and other problems This would turn out to be the only campaign in Philip s life The duke of Cleves and the bishop of Utrecht hoping to share spoils gave Philip aid Maximilian invested his own son with Guelders and Zutphen Within months Philip conquered the whole land and Charles of Egmond was forced to prostrate himself in front of his sovereign at the palace of Rosendaal Charles was then forced to follow Philip wherever he went In October 1505 they were in Brussels But after that Charles was able to escape and start the war again Philip was not in a good position to make good his claims yet because by this time he needed to depart to Spain to claim the Castilian throne 23 24 At the same time while he often carefully avoided direct confrontation with the French king in promoting his Great Council he slowly eroded the capacity of intervention of the Parlement of Paris in Flanders and Artois lands under the sovereignty of France This process would be completed by Charles V in 1521 In August 1505 this resulted in written protests from King Louis XII of France who accused him of usurpation of the rights of the sovereign and threatened Philip with sanctions To this Maximilian who at this time was with Philip after returning from Gelderland angrily sent threats and stated that he would defend his son Philip reacted in a concilliatory manner stating that he had consulted Maximilian and did not mean to offend Louis 25 Philip and later his son Charles V joined his father in patronising the devotion of the Seven Sorrows that associated his own mother Mary of Burgundy who had died young and been idealised in vernacular literature with the Virgin Mary 26 The devotion with its strong current of patriotism and Burgundian nostalgia successfully helped to rally loyalty to the ruling family in the turbulence after Mary s death The same devotion was later used to promote dynastic and territorial unity 27 nbsp Fresco at the old Rathaus in Lindau depicting the entry of Philip He visited Germany several times On 31 August 1496 he came to Lindau to represent his father at the Reichstag of Lindau 1496 1497 because Maximilian could not come to the Diet personally 28 In 1498 he accompanied his father to the Reichstag in Freiburg 29 In 1505 he attended the Reichstag at Hagenau where he and his father met the minister of the king of France the Cardinal of Amboise 30 The Castilian inheritance edit nbsp Maximilian I paying attention to an execution instead of watching Philip the Handsome and Joanna of Castile s betrothal much to his son s dismay Satire created on behalf of the councilors of Augsburg Plate 89 of Von der Arztney bayder Gluck by the Petrarcameister 31 The marriage was one of a set of family alliances between the Habsburgs and the Trastamaras designed to strengthen the two dynasties against growing French power which had increased significantly thanks to the policies of Louis XI and the successful assertion of regal power after the war with the League of the Public Weal The matter became more urgent after Charles VIII s invasion of Italy known as the First Peninsular War This was a matter of compromise for Philip While assuring his pro French advisors that he would maintain peaceful policies towards France the marriage pleased Maximilian while allowing a partial prudent emergence from France s shadow Although Philip did put efforts in safeguarding the 1493 Treaty of Senlis His independent tendency frustrated both Maximilian and his new parents in law 32 On 20 October 1496 he married Joanna daughter of King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I of Castile in Lier Belgium 33 Philip s sister Margaret married John Prince of Asturias only son of Ferdinand and Isabella and heir apparent to the unified crowns of Castile and Aragon 34 The double alliance was never intended to let the Spanish kingdoms fall under Habsburg control At the time of her marriage to Philip Joanna was third in line to the throne with John and their sister Isabella married and hopeful of progeny citation needed nbsp Philip the Fair and Joanna of Castile stained glass Basilica of the Holy Blood in Bruges 1480 1490 In 1500 shortly after the birth of Joanna and Philip s second child the future Emperor Charles V in Flanders the succession to the Castilian and Aragonese crowns was thrown into turmoil The heir apparent John had died in 1497 very shortly after his marriage to Margaret of Austria The crown thereby seemed destined to devolve upon his and Joanna s elder sister Isabella wife of Manuel I of Portugal She died in 1498 while giving birth to a son named Miguel da Paz to whom succession to the united crowns of Castile Aragon and Portugal now fell however the infant was sickly and died during the summer of 1500 citation needed The succession to the Castilian and Aragonese crowns now fell to Joanna Because Ferdinand could produce another heir the Cortes of Aragon refused to recognize Joanna as heir presumptive to the Kingdom of Aragon In the Kingdom of Castile however the succession was clear Moreover there was no Salic tradition that the Castilian Cortes could use to thwart the succession passing to Joanna At this point the issue of Joanna s supposed mental incompetence moved from courtly annoyance to the center of the political stage since it was clear that Philip and his Burgundian entourage would be the real power holders in Castile citation needed nbsp Joanna of Castile In 1502 Philip Joanna and a large part of the Burgundian court traveled to Spain to receive fealty from the Cortes of Castile as heirs a journey chronicled in intense detail by Antoon I van Lalaing French Antoine de Lalaing the future Stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland Philip and the majority of the court returned to the Low Countries in the following year leaving a pregnant Joanna behind in Madrid where she gave birth to Ferdinand later Holy Roman Emperor citation needed Although Joanna was deeply in love with Philip their married life was rendered extremely unhappy by his infidelity and political insecurity during which time he constantly attempted to usurp her legal birthright of power This led in great part to the rumors of her insanity due to reports of depressive or neurotic acts committed while she was being imprisoned or coerced by her husband rumors that benefited Philip politically Most historians now agree she was merely clinically depressed at the time not insane as commonly believed Before her mother s death in 1504 husband and wife were already living apart citation needed King of Castile edit In 1504 Philip s mother in law Queen Isabella of Castile died leaving the Crown of Castile to Joanna Isabella I s widower and former co monarch King Ferdinand II endeavored to lay hands on the regency of Castile but the nobles who disliked and feared him forced him to withdraw Philip was summoned to Spain where he was recognized as king nbsp Phillip and Joanna triptych 1505 or 1506 However en route to Spain in January 1506 Philip and Joanna were caught in a storm and shipwrecked off the Dorset coast forcing them on the shore near Melcombe Regis The nearest important gentleman in the locality was Sir Thomas Trenchard seated at Wolfeton House who gave shelter and entertainment to the royal couple The future minister John Russell attended the couple on this occasion after which Philip recommended him to Henry VII 35 Having been conducted to the palace of King Henry VII by Russell the couple stayed as the king s guests but were in fact hostages for the duration of their stay To get released Philip was forced to sign a treaty with Henry VII the so called Malus Intercursus which included a mutual defense pact the extradition of rebels including the Earl of Suffolk Edmund de la Pole who as an exile was a guest of Philip in the Low Countries and a trade agreement which allowed English merchants to import cloth duty free into the Low Countries After handing over Edmund Philip and Joanna were allowed to leave England after a stay of six weeks 36 Philip and Joanna landed at Corunna on 28 April 1506 accompanied by a body of German mercenaries Father and son in law mediated under Cardinal Cisneros at Remesal near Puebla de Sanabria and at Renedo the only result of which was an indecent family quarrel in which Ferdinand professed to defend the interests of his daughter who he said was imprisoned by her husband In meetings between 20 and 27 June mediated by Cardinal Cisneros the senior churchman in Spain Ferdinand accepted that his most beloved children Joanna and Philip should take over control of Castile 37 The two kings then agreed that Joanna was neither fit nor inclined to rule considering her infirmities and sufferings which for the sake of honour are not expressed and further that if the said most serene Queen either from her own choice or from being persuaded by other persons should attempt to meddle in the government both would prevent it It suited both her father and her husband that she be regarded as incapable nbsp Meeting of Philip and Ferdinand II of Aragon in Remesal on 20 June 1506 On 27 June 1506 the Treaty of Villafafila was signed between Ferdinand and Philip with Philip being proclaimed King of Castile by the Cortes of Valladolid Yet on the same day Ferdinand drew up secret documents repudiating all the agreements on the grounds of coercion claiming that he would never otherwise have signed treaties that did such enormous damage to the said most serene Queen my daughter and me Having left his options for the future open he departed for Aragon 38 Philip appointed Garcia Laso de la Vega diplomat and commander Comendador Mayor de Leon under the Catholic Monarch died 1512 as President of the Royal Council 39 Even before leaving the Low Countries Philip had ordered the total suspension of Spanish Inquisition activities When he arrived in Spain he proposed to the Cortes that the Inquisitor General should be deposed and the Council of Inquisition should be dissolved His early death prevented the plan from materializing but Ferdinand later reacted to this by splitting the Holy Tribunal thus Castile and Aragon would each possess their own Inquisition organization 40 The 4 000 landsknechte who followed him to Spain presumably helped to overcome the last opposition to the military reform started by Gonzalo de Cordoba and Gonzalo de Ayora 41 As Duke of Burgundy and King of Castile Philip expanded the Habsburg postal system established by his father In 1500 the centre of the system was transferred to Brussels by Franz von Taxis whom Philip made his postmaster general 42 43 Shortly after becoming King of Castile as he realized that his bureaucrats were unable to govern the postal system he made an agreement later renewed by Charles of Burgundy with the Taxis that allowed them to operate unhampered by interference from the state as long as they maintained standards in accordance with the Habsburgs interests Behringer notes that The terminology of the early modern communications system and the legal status of its participants were invented at these negotiations 44 On 18 January 1505 Philip unified communication between Germany the Netherlands France and Spain by adding stations in Granada Toledo Blois Paris and Lyon 45 His arrival introduced the Burgundian household model into Spain although due to his early death it had to wait until Charles V s reign to become a firmly established element of the Spanish court 46 47 After one month in La Coruna he returned to Burgos and set about to appoint his men to strategic fortresses the Royal Council as well as financial offices He granted the Castle of Segovia and some other important fortresses to Don Juan Manuel who was ironically Ferdinand s former servant and had become Philip s favourite after the archbishop of Besancon died 48 49 He ran into financial troubles as parts of his army remained unpaid and he granted generous financial conditions to Ferdinand to hasten his departure 50 Cauchies writes that in Spain Philip found himself in the same situation his father had been during his Burgundian days Until this day he has been accused of being a foreign spendthrift prince a mere transitional monarch who was supported by bad advisors who disregarded the interests of the country Philip would not live to see a better day like his father had though 51 Patronage of the arts edit nbsp Miniature of Philip in the Statutes of the Golden Fleece Attributed to Simon Bening 52 Philip was an important patron of Hieronymus Bosch In 1504 he commissioned Bosch to paint a large triptych of The Last Judgement The work cannot be found now but likely had some relation to the smaller triptych of the same subject in Vienna painted by the same artist as the face of the saint on the right outer wing seems to be that of Philip 53 Philip s chapel had some of the most distinguished musicians in Europe Henry Bredemers Pierre de La Rue Alexander Agricola Marbrianus de Orto and Antoine Divitis Josquin Desprez sometimes composed for him as well The contemporary Venetian ambassador wrote home Three things here are of the highest excellence silk tapestry and music which certainly can be said to be perfect 54 Perhaps influenced by Maximilian Philip actively supported instrumental music There seemed to be a lend lease arrangement of some kind between the courts of father and son as the trombonist Augustine Schubinger worked for both Maximilian and Philip Other outstanding wind players supported by Philip included Hans Nagel and Jan Van den Winckel 55 nbsp Fol 20r in Johannes de Vico s world chronicle Chronicon around 1495 1498 Cod 325 Osterreichische Nationalbibliothek Vienna Philip realized the potential of the printing industry regarding its ability to disseminate information but when it came to private taste he had an aversion towards printed books and preferred manuscripts especially musical manuscripts which became popular diplomatic gifts under his reign The chief musical scribe was the priest Martin Bourgeois The court also employed other scribes and calligraphers The grandees of the realm also adopted the taste of their sovereign 56 57 58 59 His patronage of manuscripts though could not compare with that of his ancestors Philip the Bold and Philip the Good as he died young and manuscript production had declined overall by the end of the fifteenth century One manuscript produced for him a world chronicle by Johannes de Vico from Douai Cod 325 Osterreichische Nationalbibliothek in Vienna 660 430mm is unrivalled in comparison with his predecessor s manuscripts though The layout and content display many unique features The heraldic program on fol 17v seems to correspond to the situation of the 1498 Treaty of Paris when Philip sided with the French king and the papacy against his father who is referred to as emperor in the lineage of Holy Roman Emperors and the inscription that introduces the commissioner but otherwise appears not in his own right but as the consort of Mary of Burgundy and guardian of Philip Frederick III Philip s paternal grandfather on the other hand is given a lengthy section also the book does not mention Philip s Burgundian ancestors or King Louis IX of France who frequently features in French universal chronicles of the fifteenth century 60 Philip was a patron to Desiderius Erasmus who praised him for making peace with France and advised him that after God a prince s duty was owed first to patria the nation and not to pater father in this case Maximilian 61 Death and aftermath edit nbsp Statue created by Sixt von Staufen in Basler Hof Freiburg around 1530 1531 62 However Philip died suddenly at Burgos apparently of typhoid fever 63 on 25 September 1506 although a poisoning assassination was widely spoken of at the time 64 and is what his wife believed to be the cause of Philip s death His wife supposedly refused to allow his body to be buried or part from it for a while Philip I is entombed at the Royal Chapel of Granada Capilla Real de Granada alongside his wife and her parents Isabella I and Ferdinand II Cauchies even proposes plague as a possible cause of death as at this point Philip seemed to be exhausted having overworked himself the workload was so enormous that despite being a passionate hunter all his life Philip was unable to exercise this hobby for just once as he wrote to his father in July 1506 and there were known incidents of plague in the environment Philip had shown a level of prudence about the food served to him A letter of the experienced German commander Wolfgang von Furstenberg who commanded the Landsknechte and was attached to Philip s entourage by Maximilian to Maximilian shows that in A Coruna Philip only ate at Furstenberg s table because he distrusted other sources of food Nevertheless Maximilian unhesitatingly and openly blamed Louis XII for his beloved son s death in front of the Imperial Diet 65 In the aftermath a delegation of the States General of the Netherlands was sent to Austria to offer the regency to Maximilian The depressed emperor tried to evade them to their surprise In 1507 he finally received them and decided that Philip s sister Margaret of Austria would become the governor In April 1517 the States General welcomed the appointment of another native of the Netherlands 66 In Spain hearing about Philip s death the opponents of the Inquisition made a move The marquis of Priego attacked the Inquisition s prison and liberated its prisoners The procurator was arrested Diego Rodriguez Lucero the inquisitor of Cordoba managed to flee The canons the municipality and the nobility the marquis of Priego and the count of Cabra all denounced the excesses corruption and abuses of the inquisitor This later caused Ferdinand to declare Grand Inquisitor Deza to be responsible Deza was forced to resign and was replaced with Cardinal Cisneros who arrested Lucero in 1508 67 Epithets edit nbsp The members of the guild of the large crossbow in Mechelen c 1500 by the Master of the Mechelen Guild of Saint George kmska 28 02 2010 13 43 37 As requested by the Guild Saint George bears the features of Philip while the princess has the features of Joanna Like his great grandfather Philip the Good Philip the Handsome participated in shooting competitions and kept a special relationship with guilds 68 69 His good looks earned him the nickname the Handsome or the Fair 70 Many contemporaries noticed Philip s physical attractiveness Vincenzo Querini the Venetian ambassador described Philip as physically beautiful vigorous and rich bello di corpo gagliardo e prospero Peter Martyr d Anghiera and Lorenzo de Padilla also noted his good looks 71 72 When Louis XII of France saw him the king said What a handsome prince Que voila un beau prince 73 He was a slim sportsman who liked to dress in a sumptuous style and knew how to impress women His skills in knightly exercises and the hunt was such that even as a youth he acted as teacher of the princes sent to his court 74 Joan Lluis Palos suggests that the epithet might come also from his riding style and his behaviours as a sportsman When he visited Castile in 1502 he astonished his hosts when he displayed his riding skills by leaping from one horse to another He also admired a Spanish riding style inspired by the Muslims called a la jineta with bent knees and short stirrups He learned this from Ramon of Cardona Master of King Ferdinand s stable in a matter of days According to Lorenzo de Padilla es he played all sports as a pastime and was fonder of la pelota handball than any other He also appeared to prefer the luxurious Moorish dressing style to the Spanish one 75 A 1611 dictionary explains thus jinete rider might come from cinete which is Cinetum in Arabic and means ornament from the word ceyene to beautify or make beautiful hermosear o ser hermoso from the gallantry of riders when they rally to festivities with their turbans and feathers fitted Moorish dresses and boots and the harnesses of their rich horses Philip also had the nickname Croit Conseil Believer of Counsel or Believer of Council chosen for him by Olivier de La Marche This nickname has sometimes been interpreted as portraying a malleable prince who allowed his advisors to control the country 76 77 According to Catherine Emerson attending to conseil is actually a cardinal virtue of a prince which La March attributed to both Philip the Good and his great grandson 78 Anna Margarete Schlegelmilch also writes that the nickname is not derogative in any way Both La March and other contemporaries like Jean Molinet thought that it was a good sign when a young ruler was open to the words of prudent and wise advisors It corresponds to the ruling style of a prince who out of the desire to attain peace and economic recovery for a country that had recently experienced too much turbulence tried to balance his government between the rights of the prince the nobles and the provinces gave his Estates a say in the matters of war and peace and relied upon confidants whose families had served his ancestors for generations the conseil ducal had 14 members including Engelbert II of Nassau William de Croy John III of Bergen 79 Legacy edit nbsp Posthumous portrait by Peter Paul Rubens frequently mistaken for a portrait of his father Maximilian I The crown he was wearing was a royal crown not an imperial crown The style of the armour and the St Andrew s Cross on the breastplate added to his coat of arms after his marriage to Joanna of Castile suggests that this was Philip I of Castile the Handsome 80 Philip was a figure often eclipsed in history books by his parents Mary and Maximilian partly also by his tragic wife Joanna I and even moreso by his son Charles V In his 2003 biography Philippe le Beau le dernier duc de Bourgogne Philip the Handsome the last Duke of Burgundy Belgian historian Jean Marie Cauchies writes that Philip who died young still at the beginning of his political ascendancy was not yet an aspirant for universal monarchy like his son later but remained above all the heir and continuator of the dukes of Burgundy Surrounded by ambitious ministers with very divergent views facing his father the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire his parents in law the Catholic monarches and the king of France his choices as a leader presented him as the enfant terrible of international European politics According to Cauchies he was not a great man or had not lived long enough to show himself as such He had not shown the stature or the creativity of his father and could not claim the scope that Charles V reached either But he personified the prince of peace and concord the promise of better days and his education his manners his court displayed the essence of Burgundian culture 81 Belgian historian Jonathan Dumont while reviewing Le Royaume inacheve des ducs de Bourgogne XIVe XVe siecles translated into English as The Illusion of the Burgundian State Elodie Lecuppre Desjardin notes that historiography dealing with the Burgundian state building project should not end with Charles the Bold as attempts to build a monarchical and state ideal became particularly visible under Philip the Handsome and extended into the early years of Charles of Habsburg If there was a rupture it only happened with the 1519 imperial election 82 James Kennedy notes that by most accounts Philip was an ideal prince well acquainted with and well disposed toward the Low Countries 83 German historian Klaus Oschema argues that the Burgundian Habsburg alliance s situation in the West and especially their ascension in Spain was far from being guaranteed in the beginning It was the work of Philip and his sister Margaret that made their father s expansion strategy in the West possible and paved the way for the Habsburgs ultimate success 84 Some criticize him for being a sadist in private life though regarding his treatment of Joanna that he held Juana in a vicious cycle of affection abuse and intimidation from which she was constitutionally unable to escape 85 86 He had a loving relationship with Margaret who had been separated from him for a long time though When they said goodbye to each other in 1497 Margaret told her brother these prophetic words with a taste of gallows humour Don t make me cry I will need to swallow enough salt water 87 Depictions in arts edit nbsp Arrival of the statue of Notre Dame to Brussels from the tenture of Notre Dame du Sablon 1518 wool and silk Cinquantenaire Museum Brussels Belgium The kneeling figure wearing a crown on the left is Philip 88 Peter Frey a composer active in the first half of the sixteenth century wrote a song about Philip s 1506 journey and visit to Santiago 89 There are two historical songs in the Netherlands about Philip s journey and death which also paint a negative picture of Joanna One of them accuses her of poisoning Philip 89 Absalon fili mi is a motet possibly commissioned by Maximilian to commemorate Philip s death and written by Pierre de la Rue although there are controversies on the matter 90 91 Arch of Philip IV by Peter Paul Rubens Jacob Jordaens and Cornelis de Vos 1614 features the marriage of Philip and Joanna on the main panel of one side 92 Maximilian s Cenotaph in Innsbruck features a large statue of Philip measuring 272 cm 107 in also considered one of the most notable staues of the group 93 94 95 There are various depictions of the scene of Philip s death and Joanna in mourning Dona Joanna the Mad 1877 by the Spanish painter Francisco Pradilla is a notable example 96 Others include Juana la Loca 1836 by Charles de Steuben Demencia de Dona Juana de Castilla 1866 by Lorenzo Valles 97 98 Philip is depicted in a miniature in the Freydal tournament book jousting with his father Maximilian who is in the guise of the book s eponymous hero The scene is anachronistic as the tournament book commissioned by Maximilian between 1512 and 1515 tells a fictionalised story through allegory of how Maximilian met Philip s mother 99 Family edit nbsp Children of Philip and Joanna At the beginning of their marriage Philip had genuine affection for Joanna But his education which was influenced by Franco Burgundian traditions contributed to a model of rulership exclusively male thus he never saw Joanna as his political equal and could not accept that she tried to forge her own political identity Maximilian tried to reconcile the couple telling Philip that he could only succeed as a ruler if husband and wife acted as una cosa medesima one and the same but despite Philip s efforts Joanna would not cooperate in his power struggle against her own father In the end his controlling and manipulative behaviours together with Ferdinand s ambitions and Joanna s depression ruined the marriage and led to Joanna s personal tragedies 100 Philip and Joanna of Castile had Eleanor 1498 1558 queen consort of Portugal and France Charles V 1500 1558 king of Spain emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 101 Isabella 1501 1526 queen consort of Denmark Norway and Sweden Ferdinand 1503 1564 emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1556 1564 Mary 1505 1558 queen consort of Hungary and Bohemia governor of the Spanish Netherlands Catherine 1507 1578 queen consort of PortugalAncestry editAncestors of Philip I of Castile8 Ernest Duke of Austria 104 4 Frederick III Holy Roman Emperor 102 9 Cymburgis of Masovia 105 2 Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor10 Edward King of Portugal 106 5 Eleanor of Portugal 102 11 Eleanor of Aragon 106 1 Philip I of Castile12 Philip III Duke of Burgundy 103 6 Charles I Duke of Burgundy 103 13 Isabella of Portugal 103 3 Mary Duchess of Burgundy14 Charles I Duke of Bourbon 107 7 Isabella of Bourbon 103 15 Agnes of Burgundy 107 Male line family tree editHabsburg n 1 Original line Albertinian line Leopoldian line Max and Philip line Spanish Iberian line Austrian HRE line AlbertCount of Habsburg c 1188 1239 Rudolf Iof Germany c 1218 1291 Albert Iof Germany 1255 1308 Hartmann 1263 1281 Rudolf IIDuke of Austria 1270 1290 Rudolf Iof Bohemia 1281 1307 Frederickthe Fair c 1289 1330 Leopold IDuke of Austria 1290 1326 Albert IIDuke of Austria 1298 1358 Henrythe Friendly 1299 1327 OttoDuke of Austria 1301 1339 JohnParricida c 1290 1312 13 Rudolf IVDuke of Austria 1339 1365 Frederick IIIDuke of Austria 1347 1362 Albert IIIDuke of Austria 1349 1395 Leopold IIIDuke of Austria 1351 1386 Frederick IIDuke of Austria 1327 1344 Leopold IIDuke of Austria 1328 1344 Albert IVDuke of Austria 1377 1404 WilliamDuke of Austria c 1370 1406 Leopold IVDuke of Austria 1371 1411 ErnestDuke of Austria 1377 1424 Frederick IVDuke of Austria 1382 1439 Albert IIof Germany 1397 1439 Frederick IIIHRE 1415 1493 Albert VIArchduke of Austria 1418 1463 SigismundArchduke of Austria 1427 1496 Ladislausthe Posthumous 1440 1457 Maximilian IHRE 1459 1519 Philip Iof Castile 1478 1506 Charles VHRE 1500 1558 Ferdinand IHRE 1503 1564 Philip IIof Spain 1527 1598 Maximilian IIHRE 1527 1576 Ferdinand IIArchduke of Austria 1529 1595 Charles IIArchduke of Austria 1540 1590 CarlosPrince of Asturias 1545 1568 Philip IIIof Spain 1578 1621 Rudolf IIHRE 1552 1612 Ernestof Austria 1553 1595 MatthiasHRE 1557 1619 Maximilian IIIArchduke of Austria 1558 1618 Albert VIIArchduke of Austria 1559 1621 WenceslausArchduke of Austria 1561 1578 AndrewMargrave of Burgau 1558 1600 CharlesMargrave of Burgau 1560 1618 Ferdinand IIHRE 1578 1637 Maximilian Ernestof Austria 1583 1616 Leopold VArchduke of Austria 1586 1632 Charlesof Austria 1590 1624 Philip IVof Spain 1605 1665 Charlesof Austria 1607 1632 Ferdinandof Austria 1609 1641 John Charlesof Austria 1605 1619 Ferdinand IIIHRE 1608 1657 Leopold Wilhelmof Austria 1614 1662 Ferdinand CharlesArchduke of Austria 1628 1662 Sigismund FrancisArchduke of Austria 1630 1665 Balthasar CharlesPrince of Asturias 1629 1646 Charles IIof Spain 1661 1700 Ferdinand IVKing of the Romans 1633 1654 Leopold IHRE 1640 1705 Charles Josephof Austria 1649 1664 Joseph IHRE 1678 1711 Charles VIHRE 1685 1740 Notes Habsburg family tree Habsburg family website 28 October 2023 Retrieved 28 October 2023 Titles edit nbsp Coat of arms of Philip as an Archduke and Titular Duke of Burgundy nbsp Coat of arms of Philip as Count Palatine of Burgundy nbsp Coat of arms of Philip as King of Castile nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Titular Duke of Burgundy as Philip IV nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Duke of Brabant as Philip III nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Duke of Limburg as Philip III nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Duke of Lothier as Philip III nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Duke of Luxemburg as Philip II nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Margrave of Namur as Philip V nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count Palatine of Burgundy as Philip VI nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count of Artois as Philip VI nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count of Charolais as Philip III nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count of Flanders as Philip IV nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count of Hainaut as Philip II nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count of Holland as Philip II nbsp 27 March 1482 25 September 1506 Count of Zeeland as Philip II nbsp 27 March 1482 1492 Duke of Guelders as Philip I nbsp 27 March 1482 1492 Count of Zutphen as Philip I nbsp 26 November 1504 25 September 1506 jure uxoris King of Castile as Philip INotes edit Monarchs from the House of Habsburg ruled the Low Countries with the titular title of Duke Duchess of Burgundy German Philipp Spanish Felipe French Philippe Dutch FilipsReferences edit Joanna or Juana was also the sister of Catherine of Aragon who was Henry VIII s first wife Fox Julia Sister Queens The Noble Tragic Lives of Katherine of Aragon and Juana Queen of Castile New York Ballantine Books 2011 Bietenholz amp Deutscher 1987 p 229 Blockmans Willem Pieter Blockmans Wim Prevenier Walter 1999 The Promised Lands The Low Countries Under Burgundian Rule 1369 1530 University of Pennsylvania Press p 210 ISBN 978 0 8122 1382 9 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Terjanian Pierre Bayer Andrea Brandow Adam B Demets Lisa Kirchhoff Chassica Krause Stefan Messling Guido Morrison Elizabeth Nogueira Alison Manges Pfaffenbichler Matthias Sandbichler Veronika Scheffer Delia Scholz Peter Sila Roland Silver Larry Spira Freyda Wlattnig Robert Wolf Barbara Zenz Christina 2 October 2019 The Last Knight The Art Armor and Ambition of Maximilian I Metropolitan Museum of Art p 42 ISBN 978 1 58839 674 7 Retrieved 3 November 2021 a b The New Cambridge Modern History 1713 63 The Old Regime volume VII CUP Archive 1957 p 234 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Tracy James D 14 November 2002 Emperor Charles V Impresario of War Campaign Strategy International Finance and Domestic Politics Cambridge University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0 521 81431 7 Retrieved 26 October 2021 a b c Blockmans Blockmans amp Prevenier 1999 p 207 Arblaster Paul 13 June 2012 A History of the Low Countries Macmillan International Higher Education p 79 ISBN 978 1 137 29444 9 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Drees Clayton J 2001 The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal 1300 1500 A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 395 ISBN 978 0 313 30588 7 Retrieved 2 November 2021 Lerner Edward R 1975 Review Reviewed Work s The Emperor Maximilian I and Music by Louise Cuyler The Musical Quarterly 61 1 139 JSTOR 741689 Retrieved 5 October 2021 Doorslaer Dr Georges Van 1934 La Chapelle musicale de Philippe le Beau Signe in French publisher unknown Retrieved 2 November 2021 Bietenholz Peter G Deutscher Thomas Brian 1 January 2003 Contemporaries of Erasmus A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation University of Toronto Press p 229 ISBN 978 0 8020 8577 1 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Wijsman Hanno Wijsman Henri Willem Kelders Ann Sutch Susie Speakman 2010 Books in Transition at the Time of Philip the Fair Manuscripts and Printed Books in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century Low Countries Brepols p 31 ISBN 978 2 503 52984 4 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Koenigsberger amp 2001 pp 67 69 102 Limm P 12 May 2014 The Dutch Revolt 1559 1648 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 88057 8 Retrieved 14 March 2022 Darby Graham 2 September 2003 The Origins and Development of the Dutch Revolt Routledge p 10 ISBN 978 1 134 52483 9 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Arblaster Paul 26 October 2018 A History of the Low Countries Bloomsbury Publishing p 11 ISBN 978 1 350 30714 8 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Carson Patricia 1969 The Fair Face of Flanders Lannoo Uitgeverij p 120 ISBN 9789020943856 Retrieved 25 October 2021 He could reconcile the centralization so harshly imposed under Charles the Bold with the regionalism of the Great Privilege He could soften the harsh demands of both and give in to neither He reconstructed the Parliament of Mechelen under the name of the Great Council reclaimed the royal domains and above all insist on peace In spite of his father Philip managed to placate Charles VIII of France and to re tie the commercial knots with England in the Magnus Intercursus which released Anglo Flemish trade from many of its crippling regulations Carson 1969 p 120 But all this was too good to last The probability that Philip would one day inherit the Habsburg lands from his father had been disregarded by the Low Countries in 1504 Philip took the title of king of Spain This was an ominous moment for the Low Countries As the bells tolled for one Spanish Infant after another so sounded the death knell of an independent united Netherlands Krahn Cornelius 6 December 2012 Dutch Anabaptism Origin Spread Life and Thought 1450 1600 Springer p 5 ISBN 978 94 015 0609 0 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Gunn Steven Grummitt David Cools Hans 15 November 2007 War State and Society in England and the Netherlands 1477 1559 OUP Oxford p 13 ISBN 978 0 19 920750 3 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Edmundson George 21 September 2018 History of Holland BoD Books on Demand p 21 ISBN 978 3 7340 5543 0 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Blok Petrus Johannes 1970 History of the People of the Netherlands From the beginning of the fifteenth century to 1559 AMS Press pp 188 191 ISBN 978 0 404 00900 7 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Cauchies 2003 p 151 Stein Robert Pollmann Judith 2010 Networks Regions and Nations Shaping Identities in the Low Countries 1300 1650 BRILL p 138 ISBN 978 90 04 18024 6 Retrieved 8 November 2021 The devotion of the Seven Sorrows very cleverly played upon the popular sentiments of war weariness and Burgundian patriotism by encouraging worshippers to fuse the image of the Virgin Mary mourning for her only son with that of the late duchess Mary of Burgundy Stein amp Pollmann 2010 p 139 In a vernacular privilege issued in 1511 by Maximilian and his grandson Charles to the confraternity of the Seven Sorrows in Brussels it was related How during the tribulation and discord that came to our Low Countries soon after the decease of lady Mary of Burgundy the devout confraternity of the Seven Sorrows of Our Blessed Lady the mother of God sprang up and arose to which many good people immediately adhered in protection of us Maximilian of our children and for the common welfare of our territories and they had such a devotion for it that by virtue of the aforementioned mother of God were ended all the afore mentioned tribulations and discord and were united our subjects in good obedience and concord Umgebung Verein fur Geschichte des Bodensees und Seiner 1886 Schriften des Vereins fur Geschichte des Bodensees und seiner Umgebung in German Bodenseegeschichtsvereins p 168 Retrieved 7 March 2022 Fischer William B 3 January 1989 Annotated Instructors Edition to Accompany Wie Bit Te First Year German for Proficiency J Wiley p 344 ISBN 978 0 471 84922 3 Retrieved 7 March 2022 Grill Heinz 1977 Maximilian I und seine Zeit in German Tyrolia Verlag p 68 ISBN 978 3 7022 1285 8 Retrieved 7 March 2022 Hodnet Andrew Arthur 2018 The Othering of the Landsknechte North Carolina State University p 81 Archived from the original on 29 October 2021 Retrieved 29 October 2021 Fleming Gillian B 2018 Juana I Legitimacy and Conflict in Sixteenth Century Castile Springer p 29 ISBN 9783319743479 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Sicking 2004 p 315 Hutchinson 2011 p 269 John Hutchins History of Dorset Vol I 1774 p 453 1 Penn Thomas 2011 Winter King The Dawn of Tudor England London Allen Lane pp 213 226 ISBN 9781439191569 Elliott John 1977 Imperial Spain ISBN 9780452006140 Heath Richard 2018 Charles V Duty and Dynasty The Emperor and his Changing World 1500 1558 p 17 ISBN 9781725852785 Boase Roger 6 June 2017 Secrets of Pinar s Game 2 vols Court Ladies and Courtly Verse in Fifteenth Century Spain BRILL p 272 ISBN 978 90 04 33836 4 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Prudlo Donald S 27 March 2019 A Companion to Heresy Inquisitions BRILL p 201 ISBN 978 90 04 39387 5 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Delbr ck Hans 1 January 1990 The Dawn of Modern Warfare U of Nebraska Press p 16 ISBN 978 0 8032 6586 8 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Knox Paul 24 August 2014 Atlas of Cities Princeton University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 691 15781 8 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Hamelink Cees J 1 December 2014 Global Communication SAGE p 57 ISBN 978 1 4739 1159 8 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Behringer Wolfgang 2011 Core and Periphery The Holy Roman Empire as a Communication s Universe The Holy Roman Empire 1495 1806 PDF Oxford Oxford University Press p 351 ISBN 9780199602971 Retrieved 7 August 2022 Brisman Shira 20 January 2017 Albrecht Durer and the Epistolary Mode of Address University of Chicago Press p 48 ISBN 978 0 226 35489 7 Retrieved 16 December 2021 The Connecticut Nutmegger Connecticut Society of Genealogists 1986 p 5 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Martinez Millan Jose 2013 The Triumph of the Burgundian Household in the Monarchy of Spain From Philip the Handsome 1502 to Ferdinand VI 1759 In Paravicini Werner Hiltmann Torsten Viltart Frank eds La cour de Bourgogne et l Europe Le rayonnement et les limites d un mode le culturel PDF Jan Thorbecke Verlag pp 745 771 ISBN 978 3 7995 7464 8 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Palos Joan Lluis Sanchez Magdalena S 15 May 2017 Early Modern Dynastic Marriages and Cultural Transfer Taylor amp Francis pp 106 107 ISBN 978 1 317 20044 4 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Loades David 2009 The Six Wives of Henry VIII Amberley Publishing p 19 ISBN 978 1 84868 335 8 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Boase Roger 6 June 2017 Secrets of Pinar s Game 2 vols Court Ladies and Courtly Verse in Fifteenth Century Spain BRILL p 272 ISBN 978 90 04 33836 4 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Cauchies 2003 pp 248 Burchard Ludwig 1972 Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard The decorations for the Pompa Introitus Ferdinandi Arcade Press pp 81 272 ISBN 9780714814339 Retrieved 20 March 2022 Buttner Nils 15 June 2016 Hieronymus Bosch Visions and Nightmares Reaktion Books p 41 ISBN 978 1 78023 614 8 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Fenlon Iain 15 February 1990 The Renaissance From the 1470s to the end of the 16th century Springer p 221 ISBN 978 1 349 20536 3 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Polk Keith January 2019 Scribes Patrons Performers and Spies Petrus Alamire and the Instrumentalist Network in Renaissance Flanders Journal of the Alamire Foundation 11 1 2 130 doi 10 1484 J JAF 5 118995 S2CID 212851431 Weduwen Arthur der Pettegree Andrew 14 October 2021 The Library A Fragile History Profile Books p 68 ISBN 978 1 78816 344 6 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Adam Renaud Imprimeurs en Brabant et en Flandre au temps de Philippe le Beau Wijsman Hanno 2010 Books in Transition at the Time of Philip the Fair Manuscripts and Printed Books in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century Low Countries Turnhout Brepols pp 273 285 ISBN 9782503529844 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Blockmans Blockmans amp Prevenier 1999 p 229 Fenlon 1990 pp 221 223 Nagy Eszter 1 January 2021 A World Chronicle for Philip the Fair Codices Manuscripti amp Impressi 43 64 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Tracy James D 1 January 1996 Erasmus of the Low Countries University of California Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 520 08745 3 Retrieved 3 November 2021 Reinle Adolf 1984 Das stellvertretende Bildnis Plastiken und Gemalde von der Antike bis ins 19 Jahrhundert in German Artemis p 91 ISBN 978 3 7608 0632 7 Retrieved 20 March 2022 Campbell 2016 p 184 Winder 2014 p 68 Cauchies 2003 pp 138 206 208 Koenigsberger H G 22 November 2001 Monarchies States Generals and Parliaments The Netherlands in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries Cambridge University Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 521 80330 4 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Perez Joseph 1 January 2005 The Spanish Inquisition A History Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11982 4 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Bleyerveld Yvonne 2005 Women of Distinction Margaret of York Margaret of Austria Brepols p 40 ISBN 978 2 503 51917 3 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Curry Anne Bell Adrian R September 2011 Journal of Medieval Military History Volume IX Soldiers Weapons and Armies in the Fifteenth Century Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p 91 ISBN 978 1 84383 668 1 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Griffis William Elliot 1903 Young People s History of Holland Houghton Mifflin p 126 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Philippe Joseph 1956 L Evangeliaire de Notger et la chronologie de l art mosan des epoques pre romane et romane miniatures ivoires orfevreries in Dutch Palais des Academies p 45 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Belgique Bibliotheque royale de 2006 Philippe le Beau 1478 1506 les tresors du dernier duc de Bourgogne catalogue in French Bibliotheque Royale de Belgique ISBN 978 2 87093 160 8 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Bertiere Simone 1994 Les reines de France au temps des Valois Le beau XVIe siecle in French Editions de Fallois p 143 ISBN 978 2 87706 204 6 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Kahl Christian 2018 Lehrjahre eines Kaisers Stationen der Personlichkeitsentwicklung Karls V 1500 1558 eine Betrachtung habsburgischer Furstenerziehung bildung zum Ende des Mittelalters PDF Thesis Universitat Trier p 108 doi 10 25353 ubtr xxxx e013 d28d Retrieved 3 December 2021 Palos 2017 pp 129 131 Palos Joan Lluis 15 May 2017 Introduction Bargaining Chips Strategic Marriages and Cultural Circulation in Early Modern Europe In Palos Joan Lluis Sanchez Magdalena S eds Early Modern Dynastic Marriages and Cultural Transfer Taylor amp Francis p 96 ISBN 978 1 317 20044 4 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Aram Bethany 24 February 2005 Juana the Mad Sovereignty and Dynasty in Renaissance Europe Johns Hopkins University Press p 36 ISBN 978 0 8018 8072 8 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Emerson Catherine 2004 Olivier de La Marche and the Rhetoric of Fifteenth century Historiography Boydell Press p 140 ISBN 978 1 84383 052 8 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Schlegelmilch Anna Margarete 2011 Die Jugendjahre Karls V Lebenswelt und Erziehung des burgundischen Prinzen in German Bohlau Verlag Koln Weimar p 60 ISBN 978 3 412 20525 6 Retrieved 30 July 2023 Philip der Schone 1478 1506 www khm at in German Retrieved 3 November 2021 Cauchies 2003 pp 55 89 245 Dumont Jonathan 1 January 2016 Review of Elodie Lecuppre Desjardin Le royaume inacheve des ducs de Bourgogne XIVe XVe siecles Paris Belin 2016 Le Moyen Age t 122 3 4 2016 p 722 727 727 Retrieved 21 March 2022 Kennedy James C 13 July 2017 A Concise History of the Netherlands Cambridge University Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 521 87588 2 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Kuhn Matthias Potzuweit Laura 16 May 2022 Konig Rudolf I und der Aufstieg des Hauses Habsburg im Mittelalter H Soz Kult Kommunikation und Fachinformation fur die Geschichtswissenschaften Geschichte im Netz History in the web H Soz Kult Kommunikation und Fachinformation fur die Geschichtswissenschaften in German Retrieved 16 May 2022 Jansen S 17 October 2002 The Monstrous Regiment of Women Female Rulers in Early Modern Europe Springer p 72 ISBN 978 0 230 60211 3 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Downey Kirstin 28 October 2014 Isabella The Warrior Queen Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 382 ISBN 978 0 385 53412 3 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Leitner Thea 1994 Schicksale im Hause Habsburg Habsburgs verkaufte Tochter Habsburgs vergessene Kinder in German Ueberreuter p 65 ISBN 978 3 8000 3541 0 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Campbell Thomas P Ainsworth Maryan Wynn N Y Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 2002 Tapestry in the Renaissance Art and Magnificence Metropolitan Museum of Art p 171 ISBN 978 1 58839 022 6 Retrieved 1 February 2022 a b Honemann Volker 13 October 2015 Der heilige Jakobus als Retter aus Meeresgefahr Spanienzug und Santiagobesuch Philipps des Schonen von Habsburg 1506 in einem Lied des Peter Frey im Weisskunig Kaiser Maximilians und in zwei niederlandischen Historienliedern Mit einer Neuedition von Freys Lied In Honemann Volker Rockelein Hedwig eds Jakobus und die Anderen in German Narr Francke Attempto Verlag pp 101 122 ISBN 978 3 8233 6981 3 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Tingle Elizabeth C Willis Jonathan 9 March 2016 Dying Death Burial and Commemoration in Reformation Europe Routledge p 84 ISBN 978 1 317 14749 7 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Elders Willem 1994 Symbolic Scores Studies in the Music of the Renaissance BRILL p 127 ISBN 978 90 04 09970 8 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Rooses Max 1908 Jacob Jordaens His Life and Work J M Dent amp Company p 114 ISBN 978 0 7222 3023 7 Retrieved 1 February 2022 University The Open Staff Open University 1 January 2007 Viewing Renaissance Art Yale University Press p 242 ISBN 978 0 300 12343 2 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Writer Henry David INGLIS Miscellaneous 1833 The Tyrol with a Glance at Bavaria Whittaker Treacher amp Company p 199 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Baily J T Herbert 1947 The Connoisseur National Magazine Company Retrieved 1 February 2022 Hagen Rose Marie Hagen Rainer 2003 What Great Paintings Say Taschen p 409 ISBN 978 3 8228 1372 0 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Osuna Javier Manso 25 April 2019 Breve historia de Juana I de Castilla in Spanish Ediciones Nowtilus S L pp 11 85 ISBN 978 84 1305 007 2 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Andres Roberto Blanco Clavero Mariano Gonzalez 2020 Historia de Espana 2º Bachillerato 2020 in Spanish Editex p 86 ISBN 978 84 1321 246 3 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Krause Stefan ed 2019 Freydal Medieval Games the Book of Tournaments of Emperor Maximilian I Taschen p 402 ISBN 978 3 8365 7681 9 Fleming 2018 pp 24 28 65 90 Ingrao 2000 p 4 a b Holland Arthur William 1911 Maximilian I emperor In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press a b c d Poupardin Rene 1911 Charles called The Bold duke of Burgundy In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Frederick III Roman Emperor Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press Urban William 2003 Tannenberg and After Chicago Lithuanian Research and Studies Center p 191 ISBN 0 929700 25 2 a b Stephens Henry Morse 1903 The story of Portugal G P Putnam s Sons p 139 ISBN 9780722224731 Retrieved 11 July 2018 a b Kiening Christian 1994 Rhetorique de la perte L exemple de la mort d Isabelle de Bourbon 1465 PDF Medievales in French 13 27 15 24 doi 10 3406 medi 1994 1307 Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philip I of Castile Bietenholz Peter G Deutscher Thomas B 1987 Contemporaries of Erasmus University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 2575 3 Campbell Anna 2016 Colette of Corbie Cult and Canonization In Mueller Joan Warren Nancy Bradley eds A Companion to Colette of Corbie Vol 66 Brill Cauchies Jean Marie 2003 Philippe le Beau le dernier duc de Bourgogne Turnhout Brepols Hutchinson Robert 2011 Young Henry The Rise of Henry VIII St Martin s Press Ingrao Charles W 2000 The Habsburg Monarchy 1618 1815 2nd ed Cambridge University Press Sicking L H J 2004 Neptune and the Netherlands State Economy and War at Sea in the Renaissance Brill Winder Simon 2014 Danubia A Personal History of Habsburg Europe Farrar Straus and Giroux External links edit Philip I of Castile and Aragon Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XVIII 9th ed 1885 p 743 Philip I of CastileHouse of HabsburgBorn 22 February 1478 Died 25 September 1506 Regnal titles Preceded byJoanna Ias sole monarch King of Castile and Leon1506with Joanna I Succeeded byJoanna I and Ferdinand V Preceded byMary Duke of Burgundy Brabant Limburg Lothier and Duke of LuxemburgMargrave of NamurCount of Artois Flanders Charolais Hainaut Holland and Zeeland Count Palatine of Burgundy1482 1506 Succeeded byCharles II amp III Duke of Guelders Count of Zutphen1482 1492 Succeeded byCharles II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philip I of Castile amp oldid 1217552594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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