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List of Aragonese monarchs

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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). In 1164, the marriage of the Aragonese princess Petronila (Kingdom of Aragon) and the Catalan count Ramon Berenguer IV (County of Barcelona) created a dynastic union from which what modern historians call the Crown of Aragon was born. In the thirteenth century the kingdoms of Valencia, Majorca and Sicily were added to the Crown, and in the fourteenth the Kingdom of Sardinia and Corsica. The Crown of Aragon continued to exist until 1713 when its separate constitutional systems (Catalan Constitutions, Aragon Fueros, and Furs of Valencia) were swept away in the Nueva Planta decrees at the end of the War of the Spanish Succession.

Jiménez dynasty, 1035–1164

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With the death of Sancho III of Pamplona, Aragon was inherited by his son Ramiro as an autonomous state.

Name Birth Marriages Death
Ramiro I
February 1035 – 8 May 1063
1007
son of Sancho III of Pamplona and Sancha de Aybar
Ermesinda of Bigorre
22 August 1036
5 children
8 May 1063
Graus
Sancho Ramírez
(also King of Pamplona from 1076)
8 May 1063 – 4 June 1094
1042
son of Ramiro I of Aragon and Ermesinda of Bigorre
Isabella of Urgell
1065
1 child

Felicia of Roucy
1076
3 children
4 June 1094
Huesca
aged 48
Peter I
(also King of Pamplona)
4 June 1094 – 28 September 1104
1068
son of Sancho Ramírez and Isabella of Urgell
Agnes of Aquitaine, Queen of Aragon and Navarre
1086
2 children

Bertha of Aragon
1097
No children
28 September 1104
Aran Valley
aged 36
Alfonso I
(also King of Pamplona)
28 September 1104 – 8 September 1134
1073
son of Sancho Ramírez, King of Aragón and Navarre and Felicia of Roucy
Urraca of León
1109
No children
8 September 1134
Huesca
aged 61
Ramiro II the Monk
8 September 1134 – 13 November 1137
24 April 1086
son of Sancho Ramírez, King of Aragón and Navarre and Felicia of Roucy
Agnes of Aquitaine
1 child
16 August 1157
Huesca
aged 71
Petronilla
13 November 1137 – 18 July 1164
29 July 1136
Huesca
daughter of Ramiro II of Aragon and Agnes of Aquitaine
Ramon Berenguer IV of Barcelona
11 August 1137
5 children
16 October 1174
Barcelona
aged 38

House of Barcelona, 1164–1410

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Nominally co-monarch of her son Charles I, Joanna I was confined for alleged insanity during her whole reign.

Claimants against John II, 1462–1472

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During the Catalan Civil War, there were three who claimed his throne, though this never included the Kingdom of Valencia.

House of Habsburg, 1516–1700

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Aragon itself stayed loyal to Philip IV during the Reapers' War while Catalonia switched allegiance to Louis XIII and Louis XIV the Sun-King (see List of counts of Barcelona). Portugal seceded in 1640. Charles II died without heirs.

House of Bourbon, 1700–1705

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House of Habsburg, 1705–1707

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Austrian control of the Aragon between 1705 and 1707 determines the establishment of the Council of Aragon.[3]

House of Bourbon, 1707–1707

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After the Battle of Almansa in April 1707, Philip V of Spain recovered the Aragon, but imposed the Nueva Planta decrees in June 1707, by which the territory lost its privileges.

During the war (officially in 1707) Philip V of Spain, the first of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain, disbanded the Crown of Aragon. After this time, there are no more Aragonese monarchs. Nevertheless, Spanish monarchs up to Isabella II, while styling themselves king/queen of Spain on coins, still used some of the traditional nomenclature of the defunct Crown of Aragon in their official documents: King/Queen of Castile, Leon, Aragon, both Sicilies, Jerusalem, Navarra, Granada, Toledo, Valencia, Galicia, Majorca, Sevilla, Sardinia, Cordova, Corsica, Murcia, Jaen, the Algarve, Algeciras, Gibraltar, the Canary Islands, the Eastern & Western Indias, the Islands & Mainland of the Ocean sea; Archduke of Austria; Duke of Burgundy, Brabant, Milan; Count of Habsburg, Flanders, Tyrol, Barcelona; Lord of Biscay, Molina.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Alfonso II el Casto, hijo de Petronila y Ramón Berenguer IV, nació en Huesca en 1157;". Cfr. Josefina Mateu Ibars, María Dolores Mateu Ibars, Colectánea paleográfica de la Corona de Aragon: Siglo IX–XVIII, Universitat Barcelona, 1980, p. 546. ISBN 978-84-7528-694-5.
  2. ^ Antonio Ubieto Arteta, Creación y desarrollo de la Corona de Aragón, Zaragoza, Anubar (Historia de Aragón), 1987, págs. 187–188. ISBN 84-7013-227-X.
  3. ^ Micó, Remedios Ferrero; Marín, Lluís Guia, eds. (2008). Corts i Parlaments de la Corona d'Aragó: Unes institucions emblemàtiques en una monarquia composta (in Spanish). Universitat de València. p. 243. ISBN 978-84-370-7092-6.
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