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  1. Charles was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 1519, left Spain for Germany, and installed Pope Adrian VI as his regent in Spain. In 1520 , growing discontent with Charles I and his administration erupted into an uprising by the citizens of Castile, known as the Revolt of the Comuneros .

  2. Charles V (24 February 1500 – 21 September 1558) was Holy Roman Emperor from 1519, King of Castile and Aragon from 1516, and Lord of the Low Countries as Duke of Burgundy from 1506. Philip the Handsome (son of Maximilian I of Austria and Mary of Burgundy) and Joanna the Mad (daughter of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile ) were his parents.

  3. The Global Power. When Spain’s first Habsburg ruler, Charles I, became king of Spain in 1516, Spain became central to the dynastic struggles of Europe. After becoming king of Spain, Charles also became Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, and because of his widely scattered domains was not often in Spain. As he approached the end of his life he ...

  4. In Spain was known officially as Charles I of Spain. Gante, 1500-Yuste, 1558. He was the most powerful european monarch; in fact, he was the owner of a great empire. His government was characterized by constant bankruptcies brought about by many wars taking place because of his empire hegemony and religion.

  5. Charles I of Spain and V of the Holy Roman Empire (1500-1558) When Martin Luther’s writings were brought to the Emperor’s attention, he called for the Diet of Worms to try the “heretic.” Concluding that Luther was definitely outside accepted Roman Catholic doctrine, he declared him an outlaw, but honored the safe-conduct pass from Worms.

  6. Charles I of Spain was born on 24 February 1500 to Philip I of Castile and Queen Joanna I. In 1516 his maternal grandfather Ferdinand II of Aragon died, now his mother was Queen of Spain and he became co-ruler. In 1519 his paternal grandfather Maxmilian I died and he succeeded him as the Holy Roman Emperor. In 1523 he, Francis I and Henry VIII renewed the Treaty of London. During this time he ...

  7. Charles I was appointed to the throne of the Holy Roman Empire on June 28, 1519. One of the reasons that Charles I is so interesting is that he was the heir to three different kingdoms, only one of them being the Holy Roman Empire (which he inherited from his grandfather Maximilian I).