Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Petronilla (29 June [1] /11 August [2] 1136 – 15 October 1173), whose name is also spelled Petronila or Petronella (Aragonese: Peyronela or Payronella, [3] and Catalan: Peronella), was Queen of Aragon (1137–1164 [4]) from the abdication of her father, Ramiro II, in 1137 until her own abdication in 1164.
Coat of Arms of the Crown of Aragon. This is a list of the kings and queens of Aragon.The Kingdom of Aragon was created sometime between 950 and 1035 when the County of Aragon, which had been acquired by the Kingdom of Navarre in the tenth century, was separated from Navarre in accordance with the will of King Sancho III (1004–35).
Alfonso II (1–25 March 1157 [1] [2] [3] – 25 April 1196), called the Chaste or the Troubadour, was the King of Aragon and, as Alfons I, the Count of Barcelona from 1164 until his death. [1] [4] The eldest son of Count Ramon Berenguer IV of Barcelona and Queen Petronilla of Aragon, [5] he was the
Dulce was the eldest daughter of Queen Petronila of Aragon and Count Ramon Berenguer IV of Barcelona.She was the sister of the future King Alfonso II of Aragon.. Dulce's bethrothal to infante Sancho, son of Afonso Henriques, the first king of Portugal, was celebrated when she was eleven years old and the marriage in 1174.
The Crown of Aragon originated in 1137, when the Kingdom of Aragon and the County of Barcelona (along with the County of Provence, Girona, Cerdanya, Osona and other territories) merged by dynastic union [10] [11] upon the marriage of Petronilla of Aragon and Raymond Berenguer IV of Barcelona; their individual titles combined in the person of ...
This is a family tree of the monarchs of the Kingdom of Aragon. ... Petronilla Queen of Aragon 1136-1173 r.1137–1164: Alfonso VII the Emperor King of Castile
On 11 August 1137, at the age of about 24, he was betrothed to the infant Petronilla of Aragon, aged one at the time. [6] Petronilla's father, King Ramiro II of Aragon, who sought Barcelona's aid against King Alfonso VII of Leon, withdrew from public life on 13 November 1137, leaving his kingdom to Petronilla and Ramon Berenguer. [6]
Agnes of Aquitaine (French: Agnès, Spanish: Inés; c. 1105 – c. 1159) [1] was Queen of Aragon during her brief marriage to King Ramiro II, a former monk.The couple separated after the birth of their only child, Queen Petronilla, and retired to monasteries.