(Redirected from Ferdinand I of Leon)
Illumination from a contemporary manuscript.
'Ferdinand I', called 'the Great' (in his time, ''El Magno'') (
1017–
León,
1065), was the
king of Castile from his father's death in
1035 and the
king of León—through his wife—after defeating his brother-in-law in
1037 until his death in
1065. He was crowned
Emperor of All Hispania in
1056.
Ferdinand was the second eldest legitimate son of
Sancho III of Navarre. He was barely in his teens when he was put in possession of Castile in
1028 or
1029 with his father's backing, on the murder of the last count, as the heir of his mother
Munia, daughter of a previous
count of Castile and sister of the deceased count. That count, Don García, was about to be married to Doña Sancha, sister of
Bermudo III, king of
León, but was assassinated as he was entering the church of
St John the Baptist in León by a party of Castilian nobles, exiles from their own land, who had taken refuge in León.
Ferdinand now married
Sancha of León instead. He reigned in Castile with the title of king from
1033, though his father, King Sancho, did not die until 1035. On
4 September 1037, when his brother-in-law Bermudo was killed in battle with him at
Tamarón, Ferdinand took possession of León as well, by right of his wife who was the heiress presumptive. He overran the
Moorish section of
Galicia, and set up his vassal as count in what is now northern
Portugal. With northern Iberia consolidated, Ferdinand, in
1039, proclaimed himself emperor of
Hispania. The use of the title was resented by the
Emperor Henry III and
Pope Victor II in
1055 as implying a claim to the headship of
Christendom and as a usurpation of the
Roman Empire. It did not, however, mean more than that the sovereign of León was the chief of the princes of the
Iberian peninsula, and that Iberia was independent of the Holy Roman Empire. Ferdinand's brothers
García V of Navarre and
Ramiro I of Aragón opposed his power, but were both killed in ensuing battles, leaving Ferdinand preeminent.
Ferdinand died on the feast of
Saint John the Baptist,
24 June 1065, in León, with many manifestations of ardent piety, having laid aside his crown and royal mantle, dressed in the robe of a monk and lying on a bier covered with ashes, which was placed before the altar of the church of
Saint Isidore. At his death, Ferdinand divided up his kingdom between his three sons:
Sancho, who received
Castile;
Alfonso, who received León; and
Garcia, who received Galicia. His two daughters each received cities:
Elvira received
Toro and
Urraca received
Zamora. By giving them his dominion, he wanted them to abide by the split in the kingdom and respect his wishes. However, Sancho (born
1032), being the oldest, believed that he deserved more of the kingdom, and therefore sought to gain possession of the divided parts of the kingdom that had been given to his siblings.
References
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