LIST OF SPANISH MONARCHS


This is a 'list of Spanish monarchs'—that is, rulers of the country of Spain in the modern sense of the word. The forerunners of the Spanish throne, as well as of the Portuguese throne, were the following:

Kings of the Visigoths

Suebi Kings of Gallaecia

Kings of Asturias

Kings of Aragon

Kings of Castile

Kings of Leon

Kings of Navarre

Counts of Barcelona
These lineages were eventually united by the marriage of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile. Although their kingdoms continued to be separate, with their personal union they ruled them together as one dominion. Ferdinand also conquered the southern part of Navarre and annexed it to what was to become Spain. Isabella left her kingdom to her daughter Joanna of Castile. Ferdinand served as her regent during her insanity; though rebuffed by the Castilian nobility and replaced with Joanna's husband Philip the Handsome, he resumed his regency after Philip's death. In 1516 Joanna's son, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, succeeded his grandfather Ferdinand as King of Aragon and also as regent (with the title of a King of Castille) for his mother, thereby uniting the thrones permanently.

Contents
Kings, Queens of Spain
House of Habsburg / House of Austria
House of Bourbon
House of Bonaparte
House of Bourbon (first restoration)
House of Savoy
The First Spanish Republic lasted from 1873 to 1874.
Second Spanish Republic
Francisco Franco's dictatorship
House of Bourbon (third restoration)
Notes
See also

Kings, Queens of Spain


In Roman Times, what is today Spain was a province of Rome which the Romans called Hispania. These lands were brought under the control of Rome by Julius Caesar before his conquest of Gaul. Spain from the time of the fall of the Roman Empire was a loose collection of kingdoms, duchies, feudal states and warlords which no one but the Moors were able to conquer. Charlemagne tried but was not able to make Spain part of his Holy Roman Empire and his nephew Roland was killed when it was attempted. Spain as a nation did not exist until Isabella I and Ferdinand II were married uniting the three most powerful parts of Spain (Leon, Castile, and Aragon), and was therefore able to conquer all of Spain.
Officially, the monarchy of "Spain" came into the Bourbon monarch's titulary as late as in 1837, when the regency of Isabella II of Spain adopted it to the place of the old, lengthy titularly (that had started "...of Castile, Leon, Aragon," and so on). Even then, it was in plural : ''Reina de las Españas'' - Queen of the Spains. Only in 1874 was the name ''Spain'' changed into singular in the Bourbon monarchical titulary. However, colloquial use of the name ''Spain'' (''Hispania'') as the name of the kingdom had already taken place around three centuries earlier. Where brevity was necessary, the state used it: beginning with Philip II Spanish coinage had regularly used the short ''rex Hispaniarum'' to exclusion of other, longer titles. Thus, the "birth of Spain" cannot be definitively dated. There are four alternative moments (and three different persons) where the Kingship of Spain is variously considered to have begun:

★ in 1479, when Ferdinand, already King Consort of Castile as husband of Isabel I of Castile, inherited the Kingdom of Aragon at his father John II of Aragon's death. However, after this, the kingdoms shortly became separate, as Joanna of Castile and her husband Philip the Handsome inherited Castile in 1504, but Aragon remained Ferdinand's; he even married again and had he produced a son, that son would have taken precedence in Aragon and kept that country separate in the future.

★ in 1516, when the future Emperor Charles V became the King of Aragon (after his grandfather Ferdinand) and guardian as well as co-king of Castile, in conjunction with his mother Joanna who was incapable to rule. However, the old Hispania was not united, as Portugal remained independent. And in Castile, Charles was not the sole monarch, only in Aragon. It has been reported that in a coinage of two silver reals, minted in Mexico, the son and mother were "Carolus et Johana, reges Hispaniarum et Indiarum".

★ in 1555 at the death of Joana, when Charles (already the sole King of Aragon) became also sole king of Castile, being elevated to full kingship in Castile after some four decades of "co-kingship". However, the old Hispania was not united, as Portugal was independent.

★ in 1580, when, after the Portuguese dynastic crisis, at the moment of personal union between Portugal and all other Iberian monarchies, it is said the old Hispania, became a united realm. Charles's son Philip II of Spain who already was King of Castile and Aragon (directly from his father) also became King of Portugal, and no longer there was any other monarchy in the Iberian Peninsula. Later, in 1640, Portugal rebelled and separated from this union under the House of Braganza (recognized by Spain only in 1668), and thenceforth the name of Spain does not refer to the whole of the Iberian peninsula (ancient Hispania), but only to this one of its two constituent countries.
The Spanish monarchs traditionally sign ''Yo El Rey'' (I the King), or ''Yo La Reina'' (I the Queen).
England cricketer Ashley Giles is nicknamed the King of Spain after a consignment of mugs was erroneously produced with that name on it. (They should have said 'King of Spin', in reference to his style of bowling)
==House of Trastámara==
In 1479 King John II of Aragon died, passing the throne to Ferdinand, who already ruled in Aragon while Isabella I of Castile ruled in Castile and Leon. However, they did not rule the whole of Spain until 1492, when they conquered the Nasrid Kingdom of Granada, a southern muslim state.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Ferdinand V of Castile, II of Aragon, 1492January 23, 1516

House of Habsburg / House of Austria


The House of Habsburg (or "of Austria", as it was known to contemporaries) descended from Charles I of Spain (who was also the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V). He left behind a Spanish monarchy that also, for some time, retained control of the Netherlands; however, the title of Holy Roman Emperor did not pass to these Spanish monarchs.
Picture Coat of arms Name King From King Until
Charles IJanuary 23, 1516January 16, 1556
Philip IIJanuary 16, 1556September 13, 1598
Philip IIISeptember 13, 1598March 31, 1621
Philip IVMarch 31, 1621September 17, 1665
Charles IISeptember 17, 1665November 1, 1700

House of Bourbon


After Charles II died without heirs, the crown of Spain passed to his nephew Philip V, a grandson of Louis XIV of France.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Philip VNovember 16, 1700January 14, 1724
Louis IJanuary 14, 1724August 31, 1724
Philip VSeptember 6, 1724July 9, 1746
Ferdinand VIJuly 9, 1746August 10, 1759
Charles IIIAugust 10, 1759December 14, 1788
Charles IVDecember 14, 1788March 19, 1808
Ferdinand VIIMarch 19, 1808May 6, 1808
Charles IVMay 6, 1808June 6, 1808

House of Bonaparte


The only king from this dynasty was Joseph I, imposed by his brother Napoleon I of France after he conquered Spain. The title used by Joseph was ''King of the Spains and the Indias, by divine grace''. He was also later given all of the titles of the deposed King.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Joseph I NapoleonJune 6, 1808December 11, 1813

House of Bourbon (first restoration)


Again the title used was ''king of Castile, Leon, Aragon,… by divine grace''.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Ferdinand VIIDecember 11, 1813September 29, 1833
Isabella IISeptember 29, 1833September 30, 1868[1]

House of Savoy


The only king of this dynasty was Amadeo I, elected by the Cortes after the Spanish revolution deposed Isabella II. The new title used was ''King of Spain, by divine grace and will of nation''.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Amadeus IJanuary 2, 1871February 11, 1873

==First Spanish Republic


The First Spanish Republic lasted from 1873 to 1874.

House of Bourbon (second restoration)==
''Constitutional king of Spain''.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Alfonso XIIDecember 29, 1874November 25, 1885
Alfonso XIIIMay 17, 1886April 14, 1931

Second Spanish Republic


The Second Spanish Republic lasted from 1931 to 1939.

Francisco Franco's dictatorship


Francisco Franco ruled parts of Spain from 1 October 1936 and the entire country from 1 April 1939 until his death on 20 November 1975. In 1947, Franco proclaimed the restoration of the monarchy, but did not allow the pretender, Juan de Borbón, Count of Barcelona, to take the throne. In 1969, Franco declared that Juan Carlos, the Count of Barcelona's son, would be his successor. The Count renounced his claims in favor of his son in 1977, two years after Franco's death and Juan Carlos's accession.

House of Bourbon (third restoration)


The title is ''King of Spain''.
Picture Coat of Arms Name King From King Until
Juan Carlos INovember 22, 1975Incumbent

Notes


1. Following Isabel's abdication, there was a more than two year interregnum, during which time the government sought a new monarch from abroad.



See also



Royal Consorts of Spain

Kings of Spain family tree

Line of Succession to the Spanish Throne

Spanish monarchy

War of the Spanish Succession

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