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Sancho III of Castile and Ferdinand II of León and Galicia, from a Privilegium Imperatoris of Alfonso VII of León and Castile. Ferdinand's education was entrusted to a Galician magnate, Count Fernando Pérez de Traba, member of the same lineage as the former knights of his grandmother, Queen Urraca, and of the tutors and defenders of his father, King Alfonso VII.
In December 1160, Ferdinand II of Leon met with Afonso I of Portugal in Celanova and this meeting seems to have resulted in a pact or alliance between the two monarchs, [6] through the marriage of the king of León with Afonso's daughter, which guaranteed the Leonese king security on his western border while he took care of Castilian issues in ...
In September 1162, King Alfonso II of Aragon and King Ferdinand II of León signed a treaty at Ágreda. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It affirmed the treaty of Tudilén signed by their fathers in 1151. [ 1 ] The two kings committed themselves to the conquest and division of the Kingdom of Navarre .
Ferdinand I the Great King of León 1015-1065 r.1037–1065: Sancha of León?–1067: Sancho Garcés Lord of Uncastillo ≈1038–1083: Alfonso: Alberta: Sancho II the Strong King of León ≈1037-1072 r.1072: Urraca of Zamora 1033/4–1101: Elvira of Toro 1038/9–1101: García II King of Galicia ≈1042-1090 r.1065–1071: Sancho V Ramírez ...
The Portuguese-Leonese rivalry started with the Battle of Valdevez, in which Portuguese forces defeated the Leonese army.The successor of king Alfonso VII of León and Castile, king Ferdinand II of León, refused to acknowledge the Portuguese kingdom, as he proclaimed his right over Portugal, which led to the establishment of a fortress to conduct raids against the Portuguese.
Ferdinand II is the name of: Ferdinand II of León (1132–1188), king from 1157; Fernando II, Duke of Braganza (1430–1483), also known as Ferdinand II (1430–e.1483) Ferdinand II of Aragon (1452–1516), the Catholic, king of Aragon from 1479, of Sicily from 1468; Ferdinand V of Castile 1474–1504 and Ferdinand III of Naples 1504–1516
Two years later, in 1037, he defeated the king of León who died in the battle and, because Fernando was married to the Leonese king's sister, he became king of León and Galicia. For nearly 30 years, until his death in 1065, he ruled over the kingdom of León and the county of Castile as Ferdinand I of León .
Ferdinand of León may refer to: Ferdinand I of León and Castile (died 1056), king; Ferdinand II of León (died 1188), king; Ferdinand of León (died 1214), infante;