Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sancho Garcés III (c. 992–996 – 18 October 1035), also known as Sancho the Great (Spanish: Sancho el Mayor, Basque: Antso Gartzez Nagusia), was the King of Pamplona from 1004 until his death in 1035. He also ruled the County of Aragon and by marriage the counties of Castile, Álava and Monzón.
Sancho III the Great 1004–1035: 985 son of García Sánchez II and Jimena Fernández of Cea: Muniadona of Castile 1010 4 children: 18 October 1035 García Sánchez III 1035–1054: 1016 son of Sancho III the Great and Muniadona of Castile: Estefanía of Barcelona 1038 9 children: 15 September 1054 Atapuerca: Sancho IV Garcés 1054–1076: 1039
Bascle de Lagreze, La Navarre française (Paris, 1881) Blade, Les Vascons espagnols (Agen, 1891) Boissonade, Pierre, Histoire de la reunion de la Navarre à la Castille (Paris, 1893) Chappuys, Histoire du royaume de Navarre (Paris, 1590; 1616) Collins, Roger (1989). The Arab Conquest of Spain 710-797. Oxford, UK / Cambridge, USA: Blackwell.
Margaret of Navarre c. 1135 –1183: Sancho VI the Wise 1132–1194 King of Navarre r. 1150–1194: Sancha of Castile 1139–1179: Blanche of Navarre aft. 1133–1156: Sancho III c. 1134 –1158 King of Castile r. 1157–1158: Richard I the Lionheart King of England 1157–1199: Berengaria of Navarre c. 1165 /1170–1230: Blanche Countess of ...
García Sánchez III married Stephanie of Foix in Barcelona in 1038. Stephanie was the youngest daughter of either Bernard-Roger, Count of Bigorre [4] or Berenguer Ramon I, Count of Barcelona. [5] They had nine children: Sancho Garcés, nicknamed Sancho the Noble, who became King of Pamplona and ruled as Sancho IV from
Sancho III (c. 1134 – 31 August 1158), called the Desired (el Deseado), [a] was King of Castile and Toledo for one year, from 1157 to 1158. He was the son of Alfonso VII of León and Castile and his wife Berengaria of Barcelona, and was succeeded by his son Alfonso VIII. His nickname was due to his position as the first child of his parents ...
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.
Sancho of Castile was covetous of the lands of Bureba and Alta Rioja. Ferdinand had helped reconquer them from the Caliphate, but then had ceded them to his elder brother García Sánchez III of Navarre, the father of Sancho IV. After an initial series of frontier raids, Sancho IV of Navarre asked for an alliance from Sancho Ramírez of Aragon.