Genealogy Wylie » Eleanor Princess of ADDED England [[Ch-Wikibio]] sss (1161-1214)

Personal data Eleanor Princess of ADDED England [[Ch-Wikibio]] sss 

  • Also known as Queen Leonora of Castille.
  • She was born on October 13, 1161 in Domfort, Normandy, Seine, Île de France, France.Sources 1, 2

    Waarschuwing Attention: Age at marriage (September 22, 1169) below 16 years (7).

  • She died on October 25, 1214 in Las Huelgas, Burgos, Spain, she was 53 years old.
  • She is buried in Cistercian Royal Abbey &, Nunnery of Santa Maria la Real de Las Huelgas, Burgos, Spain.
  • A child of Henry II "Curt Mantel" King of ADDed England and Eleanor of Aquitaine
  • This information was last updated on August 28, 2023.

Household of Eleanor Princess of ADDED England [[Ch-Wikibio]] sss

She is married to Alfonso VIII Sanchez "The Good" King of ADDED Castile.

They got married on September 22, 1169 at Burgos, Spain, she was 7 years old.


Child(ren):

  1. Urraca of Castile  1182-1220 


Notes about Eleanor Princess of ADDED England [[Ch-Wikibio]] sss

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor_of_England,_Queen_of_Castile

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other people with similar names, see Eleanor of England (disambiguation) and Eleanor of Castile (disambiguation).
Eleanor of England

Queen consort of Castile and Toledo
TenureSeptember 1170 – 5 October 1214
Bornc. 1161
Domfront Castle, Normandy
Died31 October 1214 (aged 53)
Burgos, Castile
BurialAbbey of Santa Maria la Real de Huelgas, Burgos
SpouseAlfonso VIII, King of Castile

​(m. 1170; died 1214)​
Issue
more...Berengaria I, Queen of Castile
Urraca, Queen of Portugal
Blanche, Queen of France
Eleanor, Queen of Aragon
Henry I, King of Castile
HousePlantagenet / Angevin[a]
FatherHenry II, King of England
MotherEleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine
Eleanor of England (Spanish: Leonor; c. 1161[1] – 31 October 1214[2][3]), was Queen of Castile and Toledo[4] as wife of Alfonso VIII of Castile.[5][6] She was the sixth child and second daughter of Henry II, King of England, and Eleanor of Aquitaine.[7][8] She served as Regent of Castile during the minority of her son Henry I between the death of her spouse until her own death in 1214.[9]

Early life and family
Eleanor was born in the castle at Domfront, Normandy c. 1161,[1] as the second daughter of King Henry II of England and his wife Eleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine, and was baptised by Henry of Marcy. Her half-siblings were Countess Marie of Champagne and Countess Alix of Blois. Her full siblings were Henry the Young King, Duchess Matilda of Saxony, King Richard I, Duke Geoffrey II of Brittany, Queen Joan of Sicily and King John. Eleanor had an older brother, William (17 August 1153 – April 1156), the first son of Henry II, and Eleanor of Aquitaine, who died of a seizure at Wallingford Castle, and was buried in Reading Abbey at the feet of his great-grandfather Henry I.

Queenship

The betrothal of Alfonso VIII of Castille and Eleanor of England.
In 1170 Eleanor married King Alfonso VIII of Castile in Burgos at the age of 9.[1] Her parents' purpose in arranging the marriage was to secure Aquitaine's Pyrenean border, while Alfonso sought an ally in his struggles with Sancho VI of Navarre. In 1177, this led to Henry overseeing arbitration of the border dispute.[10]

Around 1200, Alfonso began to claim that the duchy of Gascony was part of Eleanor's dowry, but there is no documented foundation for that claim. It is highly unlikely that Henry II would have parted with so significant a portion of his domains. At most, Gascony may have been pledged as security for the full payment of his daughter's dowry. Her husband went so far on this claim as to invade Gascony in her name in 1205. In 1206, her brother John granted her safe passage to visit him, perhaps to try opening peace negotiations. In 1208, Alfonso yielded on the claim.[11] Decades later, their great-grandson Alfonso X of Castile would claim the duchy on the grounds that her dowry had never been fully paid.

Of all Eleanor of Aquitaine's daughters, her namesake was the only one who was enabled, by political circumstances, to wield the kind of influence her mother had exercised.[12] In her marriage treaty, and in the first marriage treaty for her daughter Berengaria, Eleanor was given direct control of many lands, towns, and castles throughout the kingdom.[13] She was almost as powerful as Alfonso, who specified in his will in 1204 that she was to rule alongside their son in the event of his death, including taking responsibility for paying his debts and executing his will.[14] It was she who persuaded him to marry their daughter Berengaria to Alfonso IX of León. Troubadours and sages were regularly present in Alfonso VIII's court due to Eleanor's patronage.[15]

Eleanor took a particular interest in supporting religious institutions. In 1179, she took responsibility to support and maintain a shrine to St. Thomas Becket in the cathedral of Toledo. She also created and supported the Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas, which served as a refuge and tomb for her family for generations, and its affiliated hospital.[16]

Regent
When Alfonso died, Eleanor was reportedly so devastated with grief that she was unable to preside over the burial. Their eldest daughter Berengaria instead performed these honours. In accordance with the will of her late spouse, Eleanor became regent of Castile during the minority of her son, in which her daughter acted as her advisor.[17] Her reign was not to be long, however; she was reportedly not in good enough health and left most of the affairs of state to her daughter, which created fear and opposition among the nobles that she was planning to leave the regency to her daughter.[18]

Eleanor later became sick and died only twenty-six days after her husband, and was buried at Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas.[19]

Children
NameBirthDeathNotes
BerengariaBurgos,
1 January/
June 1180Las Huelgas near Burgos,
8 November 1246Married firstly in Seligenstadt on 23 April 1188 with Duke Conrad II of Swabia, but the union (only by contract and never solemnised) was later annulled. Married in Valladolid between 1/16 December 1197 with King Alfonso IX of León as his second wife.[20] After their marriage was dissolved on grounds of consanguinity in 1204, she returned to her homeland and became regent of her minor brother King Henry I. Although Queen of Castile in her own right, after the death of Henry I in 1217, Berengaria quickly abdicated in favour of her son Ferdinand III of Castile who would re-unite the kingdoms of Castile and León.
SanchoBurgos,
5 April 118126 July 1181Robert of Torigny records the birth "circa Pascha" in 1181 of "filium Sancius" to "Alienor filia regis Anglorum uxor Anfulsi regis de Castella".[21] "Aldefonsus...Rex Castellæ et Toleti...cum uxore mea Alienor Regina et cum filio meo Rege Sancio" donated property to the bishop of Segovia by charter dated 31 May 1181.[22] "Adefonsus...Rex Castellæ et Toleti...cum uxore mea Alienor Regina et cum filio meo Rege Sancio" donated property to the monastery of Rocamador by charter dated 13 July 1181.[23]
Sancha20/28 March 11823 February 1184/
16 October 1185King Alfonso VIII "cum uxore mea Alionor regina et cum filiabus meis Berengaria et Sancia Infantissis" exchanged property with the Templars by charter dated 26 January 1183.[24]
Henrybefore July 1182before January 1184The dating clause of a charter dated July 1182 records "regnante el Rey D. Alfonso...con su mugier Doña Lionor, con su fijo D. Anric".[25] The dating of the document in which his sister Sancha is named suggests that they may have been twins.
Ferdinandbefore January 1184Died young, ca. 1184?The dating clause of a charter dated January 1184 ("V Kal Feb Era 1222") records "regnante rege Alfonso cum uxore sua regina Eleonor et filio suo Fernando".[26]
Urraca1186/
28 May 1187Coimbra,
3 November 1220Married in 1206 to Infante dom Afonso of Portugal, who succeeded his father as King Afonso II on 26 March 1212.
BlanchePalencia,
4 March 1188Paris,
27 November 1252Married on 23 May 1200 to Prince Louis of France, who succeeded his father as King Louis VIII on 14 July 1223. Crowned Queen at Saint-Denis with her husband on 6 August 1223. Regent of the Kingdom of France during 1226–1234 (minority of her son) and during 1248–1252 (absence of her son on Crusade).
FerdinandCuenca,
29 September 1189Madrid,
14 October 1211Heir of the throne since his birth. On whose behalf Diego of Acebo and the future Saint Dominic travelled to Denmark in 1203 to secure a bride.[27] Ferdinand was returning through the San Vicente mountains from a campaign against the Muslims when he contracted a fever and died.[28]
MafaldaPlasencia,
1191Salamanca,
1204Szabolcs de Vajay says that she "died at the point of becoming the fiancée of the Infante Fernando of León" (without citing the primary source on which this information is based) and refers to her burial at Salamanca Cathedral.[29] Betrothed in 1204 to Infante Ferdinand of Leon, eldest son of Alfonso IX and stepson of her oldest sister.
Eleanor1200[30]Las Huelgas,
1244Married on 6 February 1221 with King James I of Aragon. They became separated on April 1229 on grounds of consanguinity.
Constancec. 1202[30]Las Huelgas,
1243A nun at the Cistercian monastery of Santa María la Real at Las Huelgas in 1217, she became known as the Lady of Las Huelgas, a title shared with later royal family members who joined the community.[30]
HenryValladolid,
14 April 1204Palencia,
6 June 1217Only surviving son, he succeeded his father in 1214 aged ten under the regency firstly of his mother and later his oldest sister. He was killed when he was struck by a tile falling from a roof.[31]
Later depictions
Eleanor was praised for her beauty and regal nature by the poet Ramón Vidal de Besalú after her death.[32] Her great-grandson Alfonso X referred to her as "noble and much loved".[33]

Eleanor was played by actress Ida Norden in the silent film The Jewess of Toledo.[citation needed]

Notes
Historians are divided in their use of the terms "Plantagenet" and "Angevin" for Henry II and his sons. Some classify Henry II as the first Plantagenet King of England; others place Henry, Richard and John in the Angevin dynasty, and consider Henry III to be the first Plantagenet ruler.
References
Vann 1993, p. 128.
David Williamson (1986). Debrett's Kings and Queens of Britain. Salem House. p. 53. ISBN 9780881622133.
Annales Compostellani
Fraser 2000.
Crónica Latina, Anales Toledanos
Cerda 2012.
José Manuel Cerda, The marriage of Alfonso VIII of Castile and Leonor Plantagenet: the first bond between Spain and England in the Middle Ages
Gillingham 2005.
"Leonor Plantagenet | Real Academia de la Historia".
Shadis 2010, p. 25-31.
Shadis 2010, p. 31-32.
Wheeler & Parsons 2002.
Shadis 2010, p. 27-30.
Shadis 2010, p. 38-39.
Mila y Fontanels 1966, p. 112.
Shadis 2010, p. 35-41.
"Leonor Plantagenet | Real Academia de la Historia".
"Leonor Plantagenet | Real Academia de la Historia".
Arco y Garay, Ricardo (1954): Sepulcros de la Casa Real de Castilla. Madrid: Instituto Jerónimo Zurita. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, p. 248.
New International Encyclopedia, Vol.13, (Dodd, Mead and Company, 1915), 782.
Robert de Torigny, Vol. II, pp. 103–4.
Colmenares, D. de (1846): Historia de Segovia (Segovia), Tomo I, p. 268.
Berganza, F. de: Antiguedades de España (1721) Secunda parte, Appendice CLIII, p. 466.
Castan Lanaspa, G. (1984): San Nicolás del Real Camino, un Hospital de Leprosos Castellano-Leones en la Edad Media (Siglos XII-XIV), Publicaciones de la Institución Tello Téllez de Meneses, no. 2, p. 136.
Berganza, F. de: Antiguedades de España (1721) Secunda parte, Appendice CLVI, p. 468.
Florez, H. (1770): Memorias de las reynas cathólicas, 2nd edn. Tomo I, p. 409, quoting Archivo de Arlanza letra S. n. 428, and Nuñez Alfonso VIII, p. 140.
Vicaire, pp. 89–98.
Osma 1997, p. 55-56, vol.20.
Szabolcs de Vajay (1989): From Alfonso VII to Alfonso X, the first two centuries of the Burgundian dynasty in Castile and Leon – a prosopographical catalogue in social genealogy, 1100–1300, Studies in Genealogy and Family History in tribute to Charles Evans, edited Lindsay L Brook (Association for the Promotion of Scholarship in Genealogy Ltd, Occasional Publication no 2), pp. 379 and 406, note 72, quoting Arco y Garay (1954), p. 246.
Shadis 2010, p. 4.
Charles William Previté-Orton, The shorter Cambridge Medieval History, Cambridge University Press, 1952, p. 87.
Mila y Fontanels 1966, p. 126.
Shadis 2010, p. 48.
Sources
Andrews, J.F. (2023) The Families of Eleanor of Aquitaine: A Female Network of Power in the Middle Ages (The History Press, ISBN 9781803991214)
Bowie, Colette (2014), The Daughters of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine (Brepols, ISBN 978-2-503-54971-2)
Cerda, José Manuel (2011), La dot gasconne d'Aliénor d'Angleterre. Entre royaume de Castille, royaume de France et royaume d'Angleterre, Cahiers de civilisation médiévale, ISSN 0007-9731, Vol. 54, Nº 215, 2011.
Cerda, José Manuel (2012). "Leonor Plantagenet y la consolidación castellana en el reinado de Alfonso VIII". Anuario de Estudios Medievales. 42 (2): 629–652. doi:10.3989/aem.2012.42.2.04. ISSN 0066-5061.
Cerda, José Manuel (2013), "The marriage of Alfonso VIII of Castile and Leonor Plantagenet : the first bond between Spain and England in the Middle Ages", Les stratégies matrimoniales dans l’aristocratie (xe-xiiie siècles), ed. Martin Aurell.
Cerda, José Manuel (2016), "Matrimonio y patrimonio. La carta de arras de Leonor Plantagenet, reina consorte de Castilla", Anuario de Estudios Medievales, vol. 46.
Cerda, José Manuel (2016), Leonor Plantagenet and the cult of Thomas Becket in Castile, The cult of St Thomas Becket in the Plantagenet World, ed. P. Webster and M.P. Gelin, Boydell Press.
Cerda, José Manuel (2018), "Diplomacia, mecenazgo e identidad dinástica. La consorte Leonor y el influjo de la cultura Plantagenet en la Castilla de Alfonso VIII", Los modelos anglonormandos en la cultura letrada de Castilla, ed. Amaia Arizaleta y Francisco Bautista (Toulouse).
Cerda, José Manuel (2019), "Un documento inédito y desconocido de la cancillería de la reina Leonor Plantagenet", En la España Medieval, vol. 42.
Cerda, José Manuel (2021), Leonor de Inglaterra. La reina Plantagenet de Castilla (1161-1214), Gijón, Trea ediciones.
Fraser, Antonia (2000). The Middle Ages, A Royal History of England. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-22799-9.
Gillingham, John (2005). "Events and Opinions: Norman and English Views of Aquitaine, c.1152–c.1204". In Bull, Marcus; Léglu, Catherine (eds.). The World of Eleanor of Aquitaine: Literature and Society in Southern France between the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 1-84383-114-7.
Mila y Fontanels, Manuel (1966). "De los trovadores en España". In Martinez, C.; Manrique, F. R. (eds.). Obras de Manuel Mila y Fontanels. Vol. 2. CSIC, Barcelona.
Osma, Juan (1997). "Chronica latina regum Castellae". In Brea, Luis Charlo (ed.). Chronica Hispana Saeculi XIII. Turnhout: Brepols.
Rada Jiménez, Rodrigo. Historia de los hechos de España.
Shadis, Miriam (2010). Berenguela of Castile (1180–1246) and Political Women in the High Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23473-7.
Vann, Theresa M., ed. (1993). Queens, Regents and Potentates. Vol. I. Boydell Press.
Wheeler, Bonnie; Parsons, John Carmi (2002). Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-230-60236-3.
External links

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Adrian Fletcher’s Paradoxplace – Leonora’s Tomb in the Cistercian Nunnery of Santa Maria de Real Huelgas in Burgos, Spain
Eight hundredth anniversary of Alfonso and Leonor's deaths
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Preceded by
Richeza of Poland
Queen consort of Castile
1177–1214Succeeded by
Mafalda of Portugal
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Sources

  1. Wikipedia
    Leonora of England
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    (Redirected from Leonora of Aquitaine)
    Jump to: navigation, search
    For other Eleanors of England, see Eleanor of England (disambiguation)
    Leonora
    Queen consort of Castile

    Consort September 1180 – 5 October 1214
    Consort to Alfonso VIII of Castile
    DetailIssue
    Berenguela, Queen of Castile
    Urraca, Queen of Portugal
    Blanche, Queen of France
    Fernando of Castile
    Leonor, Queen of Aragon
    Princess Constance of Castile
    Henry I of Castile
    Royal house House of Burgundy-Spain
    House of Plantagenet
    Father Henry II of England
    Mother Eleanor of Aquitaine
    Born 13 October 1162(1162-10-13)
    Domfront Castle, Normandy
    Died 31 October 1214 (aged 52)
    Burgos, Castile
    Burial Las Huelgas, Burgos
    Princess Eleanor of England and Aquitaine (later Leonora; 13 October 1162 – 31 October 1214) was Queen of Castile as wife of Alfonso VIII of Castile.

    She was born in the castle at Domfront, Normandy, and was baptised by Henry of Marcy. She was the sixth child and second daughter of King Henry II of England and his wife Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine. Her godfather was the chronicler Robert of Torigny, who had a special interest in her and recorded her life as best he could. She received her first name as a namesake of her mother, whose name "Eleanor" (or Alienor) had previously been unrecorded though may have been related to the Greek Helen or the Italian Elena. Another view holds that in the Occitan language, Eleanor simply meant "the other Aenor," since Eleanor of Aquitaine was named for her mother, called Aenor.

    Eleanor was a younger maternal half-sister of Marie de Champagne and Alix of France. She was a younger sister of William, Count of Poitiers, Henry the Young King, Matilda of England, Richard I of England and Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany. She was also an older sister of Joan of Sicily and John of England.

    When she was eighteen years old, in September 1180, she was married to Alfonso VIII. The marriage was arranged to secure the Pyrennean border, with Gascony offered as her dowry.

    Of all Eleanor of Aquitaine's daughters, her namesake Eleanor (who was called Leonor by her Spanish subjects) best inherited her mother's political influence. She reigned alongside her husband, who specified in his will that she was to rule alongside their son in the event of his death. It was she who persuaded him to marry their daughter Berenguela to the king of Leon in the interest of peace.

    When Alfonso died, his queen was reportedly so devastated with grief that she was unable to preside over the burial. Their daughter Berenguela instead performed these honors. Leonora then took sick and died only twenty-eight days after her husband, and was buried at Las Huelgas abbey in Burgos.


    [edit] Children
    Berenguela, Queen of Castile (August 1180 - 8 November 1246), married King Alfonso IX of Leon
    Sancho of Castile (born & died 1181)
    Sancha of Castile (1182 - 3 February 1184)
    Henry of Castile (born & died 1184)
    Urraca, princess of Castile (1186-1220), married King Alfonso II of Portugal
    Blanca of Castile (4 March 1188 - 26 November 1252), married King Louis VIII of France
    Fernando of Castile (29 September 1189 - 1211)
    Mafalda of Castile (1191-1204)
    Constance of Castile (1195-1198)
    Leonor of Castile (1200-1244), married King James I of Aragon
    Constanza, nun at Las Huelgas (1201-1243)
    Henry I, King of Castile (14 April 1204 - 1217)

    [edit] Sources
    Fraser, Antonia. The Middle Ages, A Royal History of England.
    Gillingham, John. "Events and Opinions: Norman and English Views of Aquitaine, c.1152–c.1204." The World of Eleanor of Aquitaine: Literature and Society in Southern France between the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries, edd. Marcus Bull and Catherine Léglu. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2005. ISBN 1 84383 114 7.
    Rada Jiménez, Rodrigo. Historia de los hechos de España.
    Wheeler, Bonnie. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady. 2002

    [edit] External links
    Adrian Fletcher’s Paradoxplace – Leonora’s Tomb in the Cistercian Nunnery of Santa Maria de Real Huelgas in Burgos, Spain
    Preceded by
    Richeza of Poland Queen consort of Castile
    1170–1214 Succeeded by
    Mafalda of Portugal

    Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonora_of_England"
    Categories: 1162 births | 1214 deaths | English and British princesses | Castilian queen consorts | House of Plantagenet

    This page was last modified on 10 August 2008, at 20:56
  2. Wikipedia
    Leonora of England
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    (Redirected from Leonora of Aquitaine)
    Jump to: navigation, search
    For other Eleanors of England, see Eleanor of England (disambiguation)
    Leonora
    Queen consort of Castile

    Consort September 1180 – 5 October 1214
    Consort to Alfonso VIII of Castile
    DetailIssue
    Berenguela, Queen of Castile
    Urraca, Queen of Portugal
    Blanche, Queen of France
    Fernando of Castile
    Leonor, Queen of Aragon
    Princess Constance of Castile
    Henry I of Castile
    Royal house House of Burgundy-Spain
    House of Plantagenet
    Father Henry II of England
    Mother Eleanor of Aquitaine
    Born 13 October 1162(1162-10-13)
    Domfront Castle, Normandy
    Died 31 October 1214 (aged 52)
    Burgos, Castile
    Burial Las Huelgas, Burgos
    Princess Eleanor of England and Aquitaine (later Leonora; 13 October 1162 – 31 October 1214) was Queen of Castile as wife of Alfonso VIII of Castile.

    She was born in the castle at Domfront, Normandy, and was baptised by Henry of Marcy. She was the sixth child and second daughter of King Henry II of England and his wife Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine. Her godfather was the chronicler Robert of Torigny, who had a special interest in her and recorded her life as best he could. She received her first name as a namesake of her mother, whose name "Eleanor" (or Alienor) had previously been unrecorded though may have been related to the Greek Helen or the Italian Elena. Another view holds that in the Occitan language, Eleanor simply meant "the other Aenor," since Eleanor of Aquitaine was named for her mother, called Aenor.

    Eleanor was a younger maternal half-sister of Marie de Champagne and Alix of France. She was a younger sister of William, Count of Poitiers, Henry the Young King, Matilda of England, Richard I of England and Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany. She was also an older sister of Joan of Sicily and John of England.

    When she was eighteen years old, in September 1180, she was married to Alfonso VIII. The marriage was arranged to secure the Pyrennean border, with Gascony offered as her dowry.

    Of all Eleanor of Aquitaine's daughters, her namesake Eleanor (who was called Leonor by her Spanish subjects) best inherited her mother's political influence. She reigned alongside her husband, who specified in his will that she was to rule alongside their son in the event of his death. It was she who persuaded him to marry their daughter Berenguela to the king of Leon in the interest of peace.

    When Alfonso died, his queen was reportedly so devastated with grief that she was unable to preside over the burial. Their daughter Berenguela instead performed these honors. Leonora then took sick and died only twenty-eight days after her husband, and was buried at Las Huelgas abbey in Burgos.


    [edit] Children
    Berenguela, Queen of Castile (August 1180 - 8 November 1246), married King Alfonso IX of Leon
    Sancho of Castile (born & died 1181)
    Sancha of Castile (1182 - 3 February 1184)
    Henry of Castile (born & died 1184)
    Urraca, princess of Castile (1186-1220), married King Alfonso II of Portugal
    Blanca of Castile (4 March 1188 - 26 November 1252), married King Louis VIII of France
    Fernando of Castile (29 September 1189 - 1211)
    Mafalda of Castile (1191-1204)
    Constance of Castile (1195-1198)
    Leonor of Castile (1200-1244), married King James I of Aragon
    Constanza, nun at Las Huelgas (1201-1243)
    Henry I, King of Castile (14 April 1204 - 1217)

    [edit] Sources
    Fraser, Antonia. The Middle Ages, A Royal History of England.
    Gillingham, John. "Events and Opinions: Norman and English Views of Aquitaine, c.1152–c.1204." The World of Eleanor of Aquitaine: Literature and Society in Southern France between the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries, edd. Marcus Bull and Catherine Léglu. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2005. ISBN 1 84383 114 7.
    Rada Jiménez, Rodrigo. Historia de los hechos de España.
    Wheeler, Bonnie. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady. 2002

    [edit] External links
    Adrian Fletcher’s Paradoxplace – Leonora’s Tomb in the Cistercian Nunnery of Santa Maria de Real Huelgas in Burgos, Spain
    Preceded by
    Richeza of Poland Queen consort of Castile
    1170–1214 Succeeded by
    Mafalda of Portugal

    Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonora_of_England"
    Categories: 1162 births | 1214 deaths | English and British princesses | Castilian queen consorts | House of Plantagenet

    This page was last modified on 10 August 2008, at 20:56

Historical events



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Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia


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Kin Mapper, "Genealogy Wylie", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-wylie/I367821.php : accessed June 16, 2024), "Eleanor Princess of ADDED England [[Ch-Wikibio]] sss (1161-1214)".