Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Ramon Berenguer IV died on 6 August 1162 in Borgo San Dalmazzo, Piedmont, Italy. He was succeeded by Petronilla and then by his eldest surviving son, Ramon Berenguer, who also inherited the Kingdom of Aragon upon Petronilla's abdication in 1164. He changed his name to Alfonso as a nod to his Aragonese lineage, and became Alfonso II of Aragon.

  2. Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona (Juan Carlos Teresa Silverio Alfonso de Borbón y Battenberg; 20 June 1913 – 1 April 1993), was a claimant to the Spanish throne as Juan III. He was the third son and designated heir of King Alfonso XIII of Spain and Queen Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg .

  3. He became the Senescal of Ramon Berenguer III of Barcelona, Ramon Berenguer IV of Barcelona, and of Alfonso I of Aragón. During the governance of Ramon Berenguer IV, he negotiated the count's marriage with Petronilla of Aragon, the daughter of Ramiro I. This power move was the masterstroke in uniting the Kingdom of Aragon and the County of ...

  4. List of counts of Barcelona. Non-dynastic (appointed by the rulers of the Carolingian Empire), 801–878. House of Sunifred (Bellonids), 878–1162. Jiménez dynasty, 1162–1164. House of Barcelona, 1164–1410. House of Trastamara 1412-1462. Catalan Civil War 1462-1472. House of Trastamara (reinstated) 1472-1555.

  5. The so-called Bars of Aragon, Royal sign of Aragon, Royal arms of Aragon, Four Bars, Red Bars or Coat of arms of the Crown of Aragon, which bear four red pallets on gold background, depicts the familiar coat of the Kings of Aragon. [1] It differs from the flag because this latter instead uses bars. It is one of the oldest coats of arms in ...

  6. House of Aragon may refer to: the branch of the Jiménez dynasty that ruled Aragon as kings between 1035 and 1162. the House of Barcelona, which ruled Aragon between 1137 and 1410, united Aragon and Catalonia and ruled Sicily from 1282 until 1409. the branch of the House of Trastámara that ruled Aragon and Sicily between 1412 and 1555 and ...

  7. During the 13th and 14th centuries, the Principality would still be ruled by the kings of Aragon as counts of Barcelona, but the death of Martí l'humà without descendants in 1410 ended the House of Barcelona and, as a result of the Caspe Compromise (1412), principality's ownership passed to the Trastámara dynasty, native of Castile, in the person of Ferdinand I.