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Period: 1451 to 1504
Isabel I
Isabel I of Castile was Queen of Castile from 1474 to 1504, Queen Consort of Sicily from 1469 and of Aragon from 1479, due to her marriage to Ferdinand of Aragon. She also served as a lady of Vizcaya -
Period: 1452 to 1516
Fernando II
Ferdinand II of Aragon, called "the Catholic", was king of Aragon, Castile, Sicily, Naples, Sardinia and Navarre. He was also regent of the Castilian Crown between 1507 and 1516, due to the disqualification of his daughter Juana I, after the death of Felipe el Hermoso. -
1468
Toros de Guisando
Meeting that took place on the Guisando hill, where Enrique IV king of Castilla and his sister Isabel reached an agreement. -
1469
Marriage of Isabel and Fernando II
The destiny of the kingdoms of Aragon and Castile was united through the marriage of their princes, Fernando and Isabel, who would go down in history as the Catholic Monarchs -
Period: 1469 to 1521
Manuel el Afortunado
Manuel I of Portugal, nicknamed the Fortunate, was King of Portugal. In 1495 he succeeded to the throne of Portugal his cousin Juan II who, at the time, was also his brother-in-law, being married to his sister Eleanor de Viseu. -
Period: 1470 to 1498
Isabel de Aragón
Isabel de Aragón, was the eldest daughter of Fernando II of Aragon and Isabel I of Castile. She was twice Princess of Asturias, Infanta of Castile and Aragon and, later, Queen Consort of Portugal. -
Period: 1474 to 1479
War for the trone of Castilla
The war of Castilian Succession is called the warlike conflict that occurred from 1475 to 1479 by the succession of the Crown of Castile between the supporters of Juana de Trastámara, daughter of the late King Enrique IV of Castile, and those of Isabel, his half-sister. -
Period: 1475 to 1491
Alfonso de Portugal
Alfonso from Portugal. Infant of Portugal, he was the only son of John II the Perfect Prince and his wife and cousin Leonor de Viseu and baptized with the name of his grandfather King Alfonso V. He was named heir to the throne of the Portuguese kingdom on March 8, 1476. -
Period: 1478 to 1506
Felipe de Austria
Felipe I of Castile, called "the Fair", was titular duke of Burgundy, like Felipe IV, Brabant, Limburg and Luxembourg, count of Flanders, Habsburg, Hainaut, Holland and Zealand, Tyrol and Artois -
Period: 1478 to 1497
Juan de Aragón
Juan de Aragón was the second son of the Catholic Monarchs, Fernando II and Isabel I. He was the heir to the crowns of Aragon and Castile, Duke of Montblanch, Count of Cervera and Lord of Balaguer. -
1479
Fernando II de Aragón becomes king
Recognized heir to the Aragonese crown on the death of his half brother, Carlos, prince of Viana, he was crowned as heir apparent king of Aragon in Calatayud, he was appointed general lieutenant of Catalonia and in 1468, king of Sicily. -
Period: 1479 to 1555
Juana I de Castilla
Juana I of Castilla, called "La Loca", was the third daughter of the Catholic kings. She was queen of Castile from 1504 to 1555, and of Aragon and Navarre, from 1516 to 1555. -
Period: 1482 to 1517
María de Aragón
Juana I of Castile, called "La Loca", was the third daughter of the Catholic kings. She was queen of Castile from 1504 to 1555, and of Aragon and Navarre, from 1516 to 1555. -
Period: 1485 to 1536
Catalina de Aragón / Trastámara
Catherine of Aragon and Castile, or Catherine of Trastamara and Trastamara was queen consort of England from 1509 to 1533 as the first wife of King Henry VIII and mother of Mary I of England. -
Period: 1491 to 1547
Enrique VIII
Henry VIII was King of England and Lord of Ireland from April 22, 1509 until his death. He was the second monarch of the Tudor house, heir to his father, Henry VII. He was married six times and wielded the most absolute power among all the English monarchs -
Period: 1500 to 1558
Carlos I
Carlos I of Spain and V of the Holy Roman Empire, called the Emperor or Caesar, reigned together with his mother, Juana I of Castilla. -
Period: 1503 to 1539
Isabel de Portugal
Isabel of Portugal was the only wife of Carlos I of Spain, and therefore Empress of the Holy Roman Empire and Queen of Spain. She acted as governor of the Spanish kingdoms during her husband's travels through Europe. -
Period: 1516 to 1558
María Tudor
Mary I was Queen of England and Ireland from July 6 or 19, 1553 until her death. She is known for her attempt to repeal the Anglican Reformation, which she had started during the reign of her father, Henry VIII.