Difference between revisions of "Alfonso VIII of Castile" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
Line 17: Line 17:
 
After founding [[Plasencia]] ([[Cáceres (province)|Cáceres]]) in 1186, he embarked on a major initiative to unite the Castilian nobility around the Reconquista. In that year, he recuperated part of [[La Rioja (Spain)|La Rioja]] from the [[Kingdom of Navarre]].  
 
After founding [[Plasencia]] ([[Cáceres (province)|Cáceres]]) in 1186, he embarked on a major initiative to unite the Castilian nobility around the Reconquista. In that year, he recuperated part of [[La Rioja (Spain)|La Rioja]] from the [[Kingdom of Navarre]].  
  
In 1195, he went to the defense of [[Alarcos]] on the river [[Guadiana]], then the principal Castilian town in the region. At the subsequent [[Battle of Alarcos]], he was roundly defeated by the [[caliph]] [[Abu Yaqub Yusuf al-Mansur]]. The reoccupation of the surrounding territory by the [[Almohad Dynasty|Almohads]] was quickly commenced with [[Calatrava]] falling first. For the next seventeen years, the frontier between [[Moors|Moor]] and Castilian was fixed in the hill country just outside Toledo.
+
In 1195, he went to the defense of [[Alarcos]] on the river [[Guadiana]], then the principal Castilian town in the region.<ref>Jayyusi, page 74.</ref> At the subsequent [[Battle of Alarcos]], he was roundly defeated by the [[caliph]] [[Abu Yaqub Yusuf al-Mansur]]. Following the Battle, Alfonso and al-Mansur signed a truce. The reoccupation of the surrounding territory by the Almohads was quickly commenced with [[Calatrava]] falling first. For the next seventeen years, the frontier between [[Moors|Moor]] and Castilian was fixed in the hill country just outside Toledo.
  
Finally, in 1212, through the mediation of [[Pope Innocent III]], a crusade was called against the Almohads. Castilians under Alfonso, Aragonese and Catalans under [[Peter II of Aragon|Peter II]], Navarrese under [[Sancho VII of Navarre|Sancho VII]], and Franks under the archbishop [[Arnold of Narbonne]] all flocked to the effort. The military orders also lent their support. Calatrava first, then Alarcos, and finally [[Benavente]] were captured before a final battle was fought at [[Las Navas de Tolosa]] near [[Santa Elena, Jaén|Santa Elena]] on July 16. The caliph [[Muhammad an-Nasir]] was routed and Almohad power broken.
+
Finally, in 1212, through the mediation of [[Pope Innocent III]], a crusade was called against the Almohads. Castilians under Alfonso, Aragonese and Catalans under [[Peter II of Aragon|Peter II]], Navarrese under [[Sancho VII of Navarre|Sancho VII]], and Franks under the archbishop [[Arnold of Narbonne]] all flocked to the effort. The military orders also lent their support. Calatrava first, then Alarcos, and finally [[Benavente]] were captured before a final battle was fought at [[Las Navas de Tolosa]] near [[Santa Elena, Jaén|Santa Elena]] on July 16. The caliph [[Muhammad an-Nasir]] was routed and Almohad power broken.  This marked the beginning of the end of the Muslim presence in Spain; for here on the Reconquista picked up momentum.
  
 
==Cultural legacy==
 
==Cultural legacy==
Line 28: Line 28:
  
 
Alfonso was the subject for [[Lion Feuchtwanger]]'s novel ''Die Jüdin von Toledo'' ''(The Jewess of Toledo)'', in which is narrated an affair with a Jewish subject in medieval Toledo in a time when Spain was known to be the land of [[toleration|tolerance]] and learning for [[Jews]], Christians, and [[Islam|Muslims]]. The titular Jewish woman of the novel is based on Alfonso's historical paramour, [[Rahel la Fermosa]].
 
Alfonso was the subject for [[Lion Feuchtwanger]]'s novel ''Die Jüdin von Toledo'' ''(The Jewess of Toledo)'', in which is narrated an affair with a Jewish subject in medieval Toledo in a time when Spain was known to be the land of [[toleration|tolerance]] and learning for [[Jews]], Christians, and [[Islam|Muslims]]. The titular Jewish woman of the novel is based on Alfonso's historical paramour, [[Rahel la Fermosa]].
 +
 +
On the one hand, Alfonso is credited with turning the Christian tide against the Muslim emirs in Spain.  On the other hand, relations between the two sides were always complex. Alfonso himself signed a treaty with the Muslims after the battle of Alarcos. Even as Alfonso was turning the tide at Navas de Tolosa, King Alfonso IX of León was not only "standing aloof" but almost certainly did so because he enjoyed very warm relations with [[Morocco]].  He is rumored to have accepted Muslim [[gold]].  Dom Pedro, a [[ortugal|Portuguese]] prince who spent time in exile at Alfonso IX's court, captained a regiment for the Almohad's from 1216-1228 then returned to Iberia and served the king of Aragon.<ref>Fletcher. 2003. page 88.</ref> Fletcher remarks on the similarity between the side-changing careers of Dom Pedro and [[El Cid]]. Representations of Christian-Muslim encounter at this time as only hostile flies in the face of historical fact. There was inter-marriage even at the highest levels of society, alliances across the [[faith]] divide and a flourishing academic interchange, of which a future Alfonso, Alfonso X of Castille, was a prominent patron.<ref>Fletcher. 2003. page 120-121.</ref>
  
 
==Children==
 
==Children==
Line 54: Line 56:
 
* da Costa, Ricardo. "Love and Crime, Chastisement and Redemption in Glory in the Crusade of Reconquest: Alfonso VIII of Castile in the battles of Alarcos (1195) and Las Navas de Tolosa (1212)", in Marco Aurelio Machado de Oliveira and Carlos Genaro G. Fernandez eds. 2004. ''[http://www.ricardocosta.com/pub/love_crime.htm Guerras e Imigrações]''. Campo Grande, BR: Editora da UFMS. ISBN 8576130238. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
 
* da Costa, Ricardo. "Love and Crime, Chastisement and Redemption in Glory in the Crusade of Reconquest: Alfonso VIII of Castile in the battles of Alarcos (1195) and Las Navas de Tolosa (1212)", in Marco Aurelio Machado de Oliveira and Carlos Genaro G. Fernandez eds. 2004. ''[http://www.ricardocosta.com/pub/love_crime.htm Guerras e Imigrações]''. Campo Grande, BR: Editora da UFMS. ISBN 8576130238. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
 
* Feuchtwanger, Lion. 1996. ''La Judía de toledo.'' Madrid: EDAF. ISBN 9788476406427.
 
* Feuchtwanger, Lion. 1996. ''La Judía de toledo.'' Madrid: EDAF. ISBN 9788476406427.
 +
* Fletcher, Richard. 2003. ''The Cross and the Crescent.'' NY: Viking. ISBN 9780670032716.
 +
* Fletcher, Richard A. 2006. ''Moorish Spain.'' Berkeley, CA: Univ. of California Press. ISBN 9780520248403.
 +
* Jayyusi, Salma Khadra, and Manuela Marín. 1992. ''The legacy of Muslim Spain.'' Leiden: E.J. Brill. ISBN 9789004095991.
 +
* Riley-Smith, Jonathan Simon Christopher. 2005. ''The crusades: a short history.'' London: Continuum. ISBN 9780826472694.
 
* Rozn, Val. [http://www.geocities.com/eurprin/castile.html Titles of the European kings]. eurprin. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
 
* Rozn, Val. [http://www.geocities.com/eurprin/castile.html Titles of the European kings]. eurprin. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
 
* Vicaire, M.H. "Une ambassade dans les Marches", in Pierre Mandonnet. 1938. ''Saint Dominique: l'idée, l'homme et l'oeuvre Vol. 1''. Paris, FR: Desclée De Brouwer.
 
* Vicaire, M.H. "Une ambassade dans les Marches", in Pierre Mandonnet. 1938. ''Saint Dominique: l'idée, l'homme et l'oeuvre Vol. 1''. Paris, FR: Desclée De Brouwer.

Revision as of 04:00, 25 January 2009

Alfonso VIII, centre, and Queen Eleanor, left.

Alfonso VIII (November 11, 1155 – October 5, 1214), called the Noble or Él de las Navas, was the King of Castile from 1158 to his death and King of Toledo. He is most remembered for his part in the Reconquista and the downfall of the Almohad Caliphate. After having suffered a great defeat with his own army at Alarcos against the Almohads, he led the coalition of Christian princes and foreign crusaders who broke the power of the Almohads in the Battle of the Navas de Tolosa in 1212, an event which marked the arrival of an irreversible tide of Christian supremacy on the Iberian peninsula.

His reign saw the domination of Castile over León and, by his alliance with Aragon, he drew those two spheres of Christian Iberia into close connection.

Regency and civil war

Alfonso was born to Sancho III of Castile and Blanca, daughter of García Ramírez of Navarre, in Soria on November 11, 1155. He was named after his grandfather Alfonso VII. His early life resembled that of other medieval kings. His father died in 1158 when his mother was also dead. Though proclaimed king when only three years of age, he was regarded as a mere name by the unruly nobles to whom a minority was convenient. Immediately, Castile was plunged into conflicts between the various noble houses vying for ascendancy in the inevitable regency. The devotion of a squire of his household, who carried him on the pommel of his saddle to the stronghold of San Esteban de Gormaz, saved him from falling into the hands of the contending factions. The Lara and Castro both claimed the regency, as did the boy's uncle, Ferdinand II of León. In March 1160 the former two families met at the Battle of Lobregal and the Castro were victorious.

Alfonso was put in the custody of the loyal village Ávila. At barely fifteen, he came forth to do a man's work by restoring his kingdom to order. It was only by a surprise that he recovered his capital Toledo from the hands of the Laras.

Reconquista

In 1174, he ceded Uclés to the Order of Santiago, which became the order's principal seat. From Uclés, he began a campaign which culminated in the reconquest of Cuenca in 1177. The city surrendered on September 21, the feast of Saint Matthew, ever afterwards celebrated by the citizens of the town.

Alfonso took the initiative to ally all the major Christian kingdoms of the peninsula — Navarre, León, Portugal, and Aragon — against the Almohads. By the Treaty of Cazola of 1179, the zones of expansion of each kingdom were defined.

After founding Plasencia (Cáceres) in 1186, he embarked on a major initiative to unite the Castilian nobility around the Reconquista. In that year, he recuperated part of La Rioja from the Kingdom of Navarre.

In 1195, he went to the defense of Alarcos on the river Guadiana, then the principal Castilian town in the region.[1] At the subsequent Battle of Alarcos, he was roundly defeated by the caliph Abu Yaqub Yusuf al-Mansur. Following the Battle, Alfonso and al-Mansur signed a truce. The reoccupation of the surrounding territory by the Almohads was quickly commenced with Calatrava falling first. For the next seventeen years, the frontier between Moor and Castilian was fixed in the hill country just outside Toledo.

Finally, in 1212, through the mediation of Pope Innocent III, a crusade was called against the Almohads. Castilians under Alfonso, Aragonese and Catalans under Peter II, Navarrese under Sancho VII, and Franks under the archbishop Arnold of Narbonne all flocked to the effort. The military orders also lent their support. Calatrava first, then Alarcos, and finally Benavente were captured before a final battle was fought at Las Navas de Tolosa near Santa Elena on July 16. The caliph Muhammad an-Nasir was routed and Almohad power broken. This marked the beginning of the end of the Muslim presence in Spain; for here on the Reconquista picked up momentum.

Cultural legacy

Alfonso was the founder of the first Spanish university, a studium generale at Palencia, which, however, did not survive him. His court also served as an important instrument for Spanish cultural achievement. His marriage (Burgos, September 1180) with Eleanor (Leonora), daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine, brought him under the influence of the greatest governing intellect of his time. Troubadours and sages were always present, largely due to the influence of Eleanor.

Alfonso died at Gutierre-Muñoz and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Henry I, named after his maternal grandfather.

Alfonso was the subject for Lion Feuchtwanger's novel Die Jüdin von Toledo (The Jewess of Toledo), in which is narrated an affair with a Jewish subject in medieval Toledo in a time when Spain was known to be the land of tolerance and learning for Jews, Christians, and Muslims. The titular Jewish woman of the novel is based on Alfonso's historical paramour, Rahel la Fermosa.

On the one hand, Alfonso is credited with turning the Christian tide against the Muslim emirs in Spain. On the other hand, relations between the two sides were always complex. Alfonso himself signed a treaty with the Muslims after the battle of Alarcos. Even as Alfonso was turning the tide at Navas de Tolosa, King Alfonso IX of León was not only "standing aloof" but almost certainly did so because he enjoyed very warm relations with Morocco. He is rumored to have accepted Muslim gold. Dom Pedro, a Portuguese prince who spent time in exile at Alfonso IX's court, captained a regiment for the Almohad's from 1216-1228 then returned to Iberia and served the king of Aragon.[2] Fletcher remarks on the similarity between the side-changing careers of Dom Pedro and El Cid. Representations of Christian-Muslim encounter at this time as only hostile flies in the face of historical fact. There was inter-marriage even at the highest levels of society, alliances across the faith divide and a flourishing academic interchange, of which a future Alfonso, Alfonso X of Castille, was a prominent patron.[3]

Children

With Eleanor, (Leonora of England) he had 11 children:

  • Berenguela, or Berengaria, (August 1180 – November 8, 1246), married Alfonso IX of Leon
  • Sancho (1181)
  • Sancha (1182 – February 3, 1184)
  • Henry (1184)
  • Urraca (1186 – 1220), married Alfonso II of Portugal
  • Blanch (March 4, 1188 – November 26, 1252), married Louis VIII of France
  • Ferdinand (September 29, 1189 – 1211), on whose behalf Diego of Acebo and the future Saint Dominic travelled to Denmark in 1203 to secure a bride[4]
  • Mafalda (1191 – 1204)
  • Constance (1195 – 1243), abbess of Santa María la Real of Las Huelgas
  • Eleanor (1200 – 1244), married James I of Aragon
  • Henry I (April 14, 1204 – 1217), successor
Preceded by:
Sancho III
King of Castile
1158–1214
Succeeded by:
Henry I

Notes

  1. Jayyusi, page 74.
  2. Fletcher. 2003. page 88.
  3. Fletcher. 2003. page 120-121.
  4. Vicaire. 1938. pages 89–98.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • "Alfonso VIII of Castile, marriage and issues." Foundation for Medieval Genealogy and Charles Cawley. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
  • da Costa, Ricardo. "Love and Crime, Chastisement and Redemption in Glory in the Crusade of Reconquest: Alfonso VIII of Castile in the battles of Alarcos (1195) and Las Navas de Tolosa (1212)", in Marco Aurelio Machado de Oliveira and Carlos Genaro G. Fernandez eds. 2004. Guerras e Imigrações. Campo Grande, BR: Editora da UFMS. ISBN 8576130238. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
  • Feuchtwanger, Lion. 1996. La Judía de toledo. Madrid: EDAF. ISBN 9788476406427.
  • Fletcher, Richard. 2003. The Cross and the Crescent. NY: Viking. ISBN 9780670032716.
  • Fletcher, Richard A. 2006. Moorish Spain. Berkeley, CA: Univ. of California Press. ISBN 9780520248403.
  • Jayyusi, Salma Khadra, and Manuela Marín. 1992. The legacy of Muslim Spain. Leiden: E.J. Brill. ISBN 9789004095991.
  • Riley-Smith, Jonathan Simon Christopher. 2005. The crusades: a short history. London: Continuum. ISBN 9780826472694.
  • Rozn, Val. Titles of the European kings. eurprin. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
  • Vicaire, M.H. "Une ambassade dans les Marches", in Pierre Mandonnet. 1938. Saint Dominique: l'idée, l'homme et l'oeuvre Vol. 1. Paris, FR: Desclée De Brouwer.

External links

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.