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Alfonso VIII of Castile

A Wisdom Archive on Alfonso VIII of Castile

Alfonso VIII of Castile

A selection of articles related to Alfonso VIII of Castile

Alfonso VIII of Castile

ARTICLES RELATED TO Alfonso VIII of Castile

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Dominican Order - List of Dominicans

See also: Category:Dominicans Important Dominicans include: St. Thomas Aquinas St. Dominic St. Albertus Magnus St. Catherine of Siena St. Rose of Lima Bartolome de las Casas Tomas de Torquemada Giordano Bruno Bernard Gui Andrew of Longjumeau Girolamo Savonarola Edward Fenwick, first Bishop of Cincinnati, OH John Bromyard Nicolau Aymerich Meister Eckhart Jean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire Timothy Radcliffe Felix Faber Joseph Sadoc Aleman ...

See also:

Dominican Order, Dominican Order - History of the Order, Dominican Order - Middle Ages, Dominican Order - Modern Period, Dominican Order - Contemporary Period, Dominican Order - Mottos, Dominican Order - List of Dominicans

Read more here: » Dominican Order: Encyclopedia II - Dominican Order - List of Dominicans

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Moors - Present-day Moors

In modern usage, Moor or Moorish (Italian and Spanish: moro, French: maure, Portuguese: mouro) is used to designate people whose native tongue is the Hassaniya dialect of Arabic. These Moors live mainly in Western Sahara and the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, from which the latter country derives its name. Ethnically, the Moors ar divided into two main groups: White Moors and Black Moors. White Moors (Arabic: البيضان, transliterated: al-bīḍānī) are nomads of Arabo-Berber origin with rela ...

See also:

Moors, Moors - Origins of the name, Moors - Moorish Empire, Moors - Present-day Moors, Moors - Trivia

Read more here: » Moors: Encyclopedia II - Moors - Present-day Moors

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Navarre - Later history

The last independent king of Navarre, Henry III (reigned 1572–1610), succeeded to the throne of France as Henry IV in 1589, founding the Bourbon dynasty. In 1620, French Navarre and Béarn were incorporated into France proper by Henry's son, Louis XIII of France. The title of King of Navarre continued to be used by the Kings of France until 1791, and was revived again during the Restoration, 1814 – 1830. As the Kingdom of Navarre was originally organized, it was divided into merindades, districts governed by a merino ...

See also:

Kingdom of Navarre, Kingdom of Navarre - Early history, Kingdom of Navarre - Kingdom, Kingdom of Navarre - Navarre annexed to Aragon then to Castile, Kingdom of Navarre - Later history, Kingdom of Navarre - Territory today, Kingdom of Navarre - External link

Read more here: » Kingdom of Navarre: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Navarre - Later history

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Castilians

Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Burgundy. Isabella, daughter of King Pedro I of Castile and Maria of Padilla. King Pedro I of Castile, son of King Alfonso IX of Castile and Maria of Portugal. King Alfonso IX of Castile, son of King Ferdinand IV of Castile and Constance of Portugal. King Ferdinand IV of Castile, son of King Sancho IV of Castile and Maria de Molina. King Sancho IV of Castile, son of King Alfonso X of Castile and Violante of Aragon, daughter ...

See also:

Genealogy of the British Royal Family, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Mountbatten-Windsors, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Windsor, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Oldenburg, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Hanovers, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Palatine / Wittelsbach, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Stuarts, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Ancestors of Mary I of Scotland, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Bruces, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Huntingdons, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Celtic Kings, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Tudors, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Yorkists, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Castilians, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Burgundy, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Jiménez Dynasty, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Beauforts, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Plantagenets/Angevins, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Hainault, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Avesnes, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Flanders, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Aquitaines, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Franks, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Normans, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Vikings

Read more here: » Genealogy of the British Royal Family: Encyclopedia II - Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Castilians

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Hainault

Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Avesnes. Philippa of Hainault, daughter of William III, Count of Hainaut and Jeanne of Valois. William III, Count of Hainaut, son of John II, Count of Hainaut and Philippine of Luxemburg. John II, Count of Hainaut, son of John I, Count of Hainaut and Adelaide of Holland. John I, Count of Hainaut, son of Countes ...

See also:

Genealogy of the British Royal Family, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Mountbatten-Windsors, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Windsor, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Oldenburg, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Hanovers, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Palatine / Wittelsbach, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Stuarts, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Ancestors of Mary I of Scotland, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Bruces, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Huntingdons, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Celtic Kings, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Tudors, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Yorkists, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Castilians, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Burgundy, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Jiménez Dynasty, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Beauforts, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Plantagenets/Angevins, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Hainault, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Avesnes, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - House of Flanders, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Aquitaines, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Franks, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Normans, Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Vikings

Read more here: » Genealogy of the British Royal Family: Encyclopedia II - Genealogy of the British Royal Family - Hainault

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Navarre - Early history

The kingdom of Pamplona and then Navarre formed part of the traditional territory of the Vascones— a pre-roman tribe; who occupied the southern slope of the western Pyrenees and part of the shore of the Bay of Biscay. Little is known of the earliest history of the country, but it is certain that neither the Romans nor the Visigoths nor the Arabs ever succeeded in permanently subjugating the inhabitants of the Western Pyrenees, who had always retained their own language. In the course of the 6th century there was a considerable emigration o ...

See also:

Kingdom of Navarre, Kingdom of Navarre - Early history, Kingdom of Navarre - Kingdom, Kingdom of Navarre - Navarre annexed to Aragon then to Castile, Kingdom of Navarre - Later history, Kingdom of Navarre - Territory today, Kingdom of Navarre - External link

Read more here: » Kingdom of Navarre: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Navarre - Early history

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Navarre - Navarre annexed to Aragon then to Castile

King Ferdinand the Catholic, after defeating Jean d'Albret, annexed most of Navarre in 1515. In 1511 or 1516 Spanish Navarra, the part of Navarre south of the Pyrenees (the majority of the kingdom), was finally annexed by Ferdinand the Catholic. He later ceded it to his daughter Queen Joanna I of Castile whereby Spanish Navarre was regarded as a dominion of Castile, not of Aragon. Spanish Navarre was governed as a viceroyalty and not formally annexed to the kingdom of Spain until 1833. The history of the two divisions of the country is identical until the year 1512, when Spanish Nava ...

See also:

Kingdom of Navarre, Kingdom of Navarre - Early history, Kingdom of Navarre - Kingdom, Kingdom of Navarre - Navarre annexed to Aragon then to Castile, Kingdom of Navarre - Later history, Kingdom of Navarre - Territory today, Kingdom of Navarre - External link

Read more here: » Kingdom of Navarre: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Navarre - Navarre annexed to Aragon then to Castile

Alfonso VIII of Castile: Encyclopedia II - Moors - Present-day Moors

In modern usage, Moor or Moorish (Italian and Spanish: moro, French: maure, Portuguese: mouro) is used to designate people whose native tongue is the Hassaniya dialect of Arabic. These Moors live mainly in Western Sahara and the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, from which the latter country derives its name. Ethnically, the Moors are divided into two main groups: White Moors and Black Moors. White Moors (Arabic: البيضان, transliterated: al-bīḍānī) are nomads of Arabo-Berber origin with rel ...

See also:

Moors, Moors - Origins of the name, Moors - Moorish Empire, Moors - Present-day Moors

Read more here: » Moors: Encyclopedia II - Moors - Present-day Moors

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