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An Anglo-Portuguese army (right) defeats the French vanguard of the Castilian army. From the Chronique d'Angleterre of Jean de Wavrin.. The Fernandine Wars (from the Portuguese Guerras Fernandinas) were a series of three conflicts (1369–70, 1372–73, 1381–82) between the Kingdom of Portugal under King Ferdinand I and the Crown of Castile under Kings Henry II and later John I.
First Fernandine War (1369–1370) Part of the Fernandine Wars; Location: Iberian Peninsula. Kingdom of Portugal Supported by: Crown of Aragon: Crown of Castile: Defeat: Second Fernandine War (1372–1373) Part of the Fernandine Wars; Location: Iberian Peninsula. Kingdom of Portugal: Crown of Castile: Defeat: Third Fernandine War (1381–1382 ...
The Third Fernandine War was the last conflict of the Fernandine Wars, and took place between 1381–1382, between the Crown of Castile and the Kingdoms of Portugal and England. When Henry II of Castile ( Henry of Trastamara ) died in 1379, John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster claimed their rights of the throne of the Kingdom of Castile , and ...
Deu-la-Deu Martins is a legendary character from the northern Portuguese town of Monção, known for having deceived the Castilian army during the Fernandine Wars in the 14th century, thereby saving the people of Monção.
Fernandine Wars (1369–1382), fought over king Ferdinand I of Portugal's claim to the Castilian succession after the death of king Peter of Castile in 1369 First Fernandine War (1369–1370) Second Fernandine War (1372–1373) Third Fernandine War (1381–1382) The 1388 Battle of Strietfield secured Lüneburg for the House of Welf.
Portuguese–Safavid wars; Portugal–Angoche conflict; Portuguese Colonial War; Portuguese conquest of Maranhão; Portuguese conquest of the Jaffna kingdom; Portuguese Restoration War; War of the Portuguese Succession; Mamluk–Portuguese conflicts; Portuguese–Castillian war of 1250–1253; Portuguese–Ovimbundu War
During the 1370s, when Portugal and Castile were engaged in the dynastic Fernandine Wars that followed the assassination of Peter I of Castile, Portuguese and Castilian privateers were dispatched against each other, several of which made detours to the Canary islands for shelter or slave-raiding jaunts. [citation needed]
First Fernandine War (1369–1370) Part of the Fernandine Wars; Location: Iberian Peninsula. Crown of Castile: Kingdom of Portugal. Supported by: Crown of Aragon. Castilian victory Battle of La Rochelle (1372) Part of the Hundred Years' War; Location: Modern France. Crown of Castile: Kingdom of England: Castilian victory Second Fernandine War ...