'García V of Nájera' (in Spanish, 'García V El de Nájera'), was
king of Navarre from
1035 to
1054. He was the eldest legitimate son and heir of
Sancho the Great, thus he succeeded in his father's inheritance of
Navarre. He not only received the patrimony of his family, he was given a seniority amongst his brothers, a sort of "High Kingship". However, his father divided his many conquests among García's brothers:
Ramiro, the eldest but illegitimate son, received the petty
kingdom of Aragón;
Ferdinand, the second eldest legitimate son, received
Castile (which his father received through marriage to his mother); and his youngest surviving son (legitimate),
Gonzalo, received the kingdoms of
Sobrarbe and
Ribagorza.
In
1037, Ferdinand requested García's aid against his brother-in-law,
Bermudo III of León, in battle near
Pisuerga. The two brothers defeated Bermudo, who died in battle, the final descendant of
Pedro de Cantabria, and Ferdinand succeeded in
León.
By aiding Ferdinand, García received his brother's favour and, in a repartition of Castile, he expanded Navarre to the bay of
Santander and incorporating the entire
Basque Country.
Soon he was confronted by his brother Ramiro at
Tafalla (
1043) and defeated him.
He was one of the Christian kings to profit greatly from the weakened
taifa kingdoms inhabiting the "vacuum" that was the
Caliphate of Córdoba. In
1045, he conquered
Calahorra.
Relations eventually soured with Ferdinand and war broke out between the fraternal kingdoms, García dying in the
Battle of Atapuerca,
15 September, 1054.
His nickname comes from his foundation of the monastery of
Santa María la Real in
Nájera.
Family
He was married, in
1038, to
Estefanía, daughter of
Ramon Borrell, Count of Barcelona, an hereditary
count of Barcelona (her dowry was the
Cameros), and they produced nine children (four sons, five daughters):
★
Sancho "El de Peñalén", king of Navarre, married Placencia
★ Ramiro (d.
1083), lord of Calahorra, married Teresa
★ Ferdinand, lord of Bucesta, married Nuña de Vizcaya
★ Raymond the Fraticide (Ramón el Fratricida), lord of Murillo and Cameros
★ Ermesinda, married Fortún Sánchez de Yarnoz
★ Mayor, married Guy II of Masón.
★ Urraca (d.
1108), married García Ordóñez
★ Jimena
★ Mencia (d.
1106), married Lope de Nájera
He also had bastard sons:
★ Sancho, lord of Uncastillo and Sangüesa, married Constanza, grandfather of
García VI Ramírez, king of Navarre
★ Ramiro
After García's death, Estefanía is said to have remarried to
Roger de Tosny, a Norman adventurer. Estefanía may have been a widow at the time of her marriage to García. A traditional poem tells of the marriage of an illegitimate son of García (presumed to be Sancho) to his step-sister, a daughter of Estefanía by a former husband.
He is sometimes numbered García III or García IV, depending on whether the patronymics, (e.g. Sánchez), are taken into account, whether one counts regents or just monarchs, and whether separate numbering is used for the
Íñiguez and
Jiménez dynasties.
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Sancho III'
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King of Navarre'
1035–1054
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Sancho IV'