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  1. The Expulsion of the Moriscos (Spanish: Expulsión de los moriscos) was decreed by King Philip III of Spain on April 9, 1609. The Moriscos were descendants of Spain's Muslim population who had been forced to convert to Christianity.

  2. Philip III Bartolomé González: Archduchess Margaret as Queen of Spain with a child holding a golden marmoset, painting, c. 1603/1609 Philip was married to Archduchess Margarete (1584–1611) from the Styrian line of the Habsburgs.

  3. Philip III of Spain* Patrick Williams Portsmouth Polytechnic Don Francisco Gömez de Sandoval y Rojas, fifth Marquis of Denia and first Duke of Lerma was the first and greatest of the favourites (validos or privados) of the Spanish seventeenth century. For 20 years (1598-1618) he was the valido of Philip III, the

  4. Request artworks available in our catalogue in digital format. Velázquez never saw Philip III, who died in 1621 before the artist arrived at court in Madrid. When he was required to include the monarch in The Expulsion of the Moriscos, a now lost work, he made this preliminary study.

  5. Habsburg. Philip III. as Philip III king of Spain from 1598, as Philip II king of Portugal from 1598. Born in Madrid on 14 April 1578. Died in Madrid on 31 March 1621. During his reign Spain was still one of the dominant powers in Europe, a position maintained only through enormous levels of national debt.

  6. (1578-1621). An indifferent ruler, King Philip III of Spain allowed other men to govern in his place. The pattern he set would continue throughout the 17th century, with a line of royal favorites controlling Spain. Philip’s reign was mostly peaceful, though it also saw the expulsion of the Moriscos (Christians of Moorish ancestry) from Spain.

  7. Overview. Philip III. (1578—1621) Quick Reference. (1578–1621), King of Spain and (as Felipe II) king of Portugal, was born in Madrid on 14 April 1578, the son of King Philip II and his fourth wife Anna ... From: Philip III in The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance » Subjects: History — Early Modern History (1500 to 1700)