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The Kingdom of Navarre remained in personal union with the Kingdom of France until the death of King Charles I (Charles IV of France) in 1328, and on March 13 of the same year, Don Juan Martínez de Medrano and Don Juan Corbaran de Lehet were appointed regents of the Kingdom of Navarre for 11 months (February 27, 1329) until the succession in ...
Coat of arms of the monarchs of Navarre since 1580–1700. This is a list of the kings and queens of Pamplona, later Navarre. Pamplona was the primary name of the kingdom until its union with Aragon (1076–1134). However, the territorial designation Navarre came into use as an alternative name in the late tenth century, and the name Pamplona ...
The kingdom struggled to maintain its separate identity in 14th and 15th centuries, and after King Ferdinand V forcibly conquered Navarre after the death of his wife Queen Isabella, he extended the Castilian expulsion and forcible integration orders applicable to conversos and mudejars of 1492 to the former kingdom.
Despite Navarre being considered an "earned good" for the free disposition of Ferdinand, the pactum subjections was applied—taking an oath to respect the Navarrese law and identity. Navarre was no Granada, which was considered not only a legitimate conquest by Roman Catholic standards but a "reconquest" of the Visigoth Kingdom.
King of Navarre r. 1284–1305: Joan I 1273–1305 Queen of Navarre r. 1274–1305: Robert II 1248–1306 Duke of Burgundy r. 1272–1306: Jeanne of Évreux 1310–1371: Charles I(IV) 1294–1328 King of France and Navarre r. 1322–1328: Margaret of Burgundy 1290–1315: Louis I (X) 1289–1316 King of France r. 1314–1316 King of Navarre r ...
The Kingdom of Navarre became a fully independent kingdom in 905 and, under the reign of Sancho III of Pamplona, became the most powerful Christian state on the Iberian Peninsula in the 11th century. In 1164 the name "Kingdom of Navarre" was definitively abandoned and renamed the Kingdom of Navarre, a name that had been used before.
The titles of the Spanish kings include the title "King of Navarre". All monarchs since 1841 use this as a subsidiary title. The pretenders recognized by Carlism also use "King of Navarre" as a subsidiary title. The heirs-general to the Kingdom of Navarre currently belong to the House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies. They do not use the title.
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