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THE CATHOLIC MONARCHS

María Jesús Campos
learningfromhistory.wikispaces.com


The 15th century is considered to be a period
of transition between the Middle Ages and the
Early Modern Age.



The Early Modern Age was a period full of
changes but most of these changes were
seeded during the 15th century.
ISABEL OF CASTILE





Trastamara dynasty.
The Crown of Castile suffered
continuous revolts of the
nobles. They tried to control
the monarch.
When King Henry IV died
(1474) the Crown suffered a
civil war between the king’s
daughter, Juana “la
Beltraneja” and the king’s
sister, Isabel,
Juana, “la Beltraneja”
was supported by
Portugal as she was
married with the king of
Portugal.
 Isabel was supported by
the Crown of Aragon as
she had married prince
Ferdinand of Aragon
(1469)

Isabel was proclaimed
Queen of Castile in
1479 in the Alcaçovas
Treaty.
 Juana secluded
herself at a convent.

FERNANDO OF ARAGON





Trastamara dynasty.
Son of King Juan II
and his second wife
Juana Enriquez.
Married with princess
Isabel of Castile in
1469. As they were
cousins they had to
obtain a Papal bull.
THE CREATION OF SPAIN? WAS IT A REAL
UNION?
In 1477 Isabel was proclaimed Queen of
Castile as Isabel I.
 In 1479 Fernando was proclaimed King of
Aragon as Fernando II.
 They decided to govern together over the two
Crowns, and to have similar power in both:
“tanto monta, monta tanto”
 They were going to be known as the Catholic
Monarchs



The “Concordia of
Segovia” (1475) set up
the terms of the
Catholic Monarchs’
government over the
two Crowns:
 Ferdinand

was named
King of Castile as
Ferdinand V as he would
cogovern with his wife
Queen Isabel I






Nevertheless it was not a real union. It was only a
dynastic union.
Although Isabel and Fernando both would rule over
the two Crowns, each kingdom would keep its
independence, its own laws, institutions and
customs.
And after the death of any of the monarchs, the
survivor would go to its own Crown to rule while the
other Crown would be inherited by their first
descendant.
THE CATHOLIC MONARCHS: COMMON AIMS


Although the Crowns were, in
fact, independent, the
Catholic Monarchs
established some common
aims for both Crowns:




Religious unity
Territorial expansion
Sthrengthening of the
monarchs authority
The Crown of Castile






The monarch was the
highest authority.
The monarch’s power
came from God’s desire.
He/she had been
chosen by God to
govern and protect the
kingdom’s subjects.
Divine right of
kings/queens.

God

Monarch

Laws

Government

Subjects

Justice
Domestic
Policy

Foreign
Policy

•To assert the monarch’s
authority over the nobility
and the clergy
•To unify their subjects on
common grounds

•To build a strong system
of alliances to increase
its influence over Europe
THE CROWN OF CASTILE: DOMESTIC POLICY


To assert the monarch’s authority over the nobility
and the clergy:






Professional and centralized administration
Holy Brotherhood and Corregidores
Audiencias and Chancillerías
Professional Army
Royal Treasury
Professional and centrilized
Professional army
administration

The path to
Authoritarian
Monarchies

Royal Treaury

Diplomatic system
Administration
• Professional:
officials and
jurists of the Third
Estate
(bourgeoisie) or
lesser nobles that
had studied in the
recently created
universities.
• Centralized:
depends directly
on the monarchs
• Objective: not to
need the noblity or
clergy when ruling
and controlling the
territories.

Audiencias and
Chancillerías
• Supreme judicial
bodies to impart
justice on the
territories.
• Objective: to get
rid of the nobles’
and clergy’s
influence on
justice

Professional Army
• Professional
soldiers trained
for war.
• Depend on the
monarch’s
authority and
follow only his/her
orders.
• Objective: not to
need the nobility’s
armies anymore
Royal Treasury

• To collect and
organize taxes.
• The monarchs
created new taxes
and reorganized
the existing ones to
make taxation
more effective.
• Objective: to pay
the rest of the
institutions, not to
need the nobility’s
and the clergy’s
support any more.

Corregidores
• Officials from the
administration that
represented the
monarchs in the
cities.
• To supervise City
Councils, collect
taxes for the Royal
Treasury, make
sure that law was
being followed, etc.

Holy Brotherhood

• Santa Hermandad.
• Judicial police force
that worked in the
municipalities
fighting against
bandits and
defending
peasants and
workers from the
abuses of the
nobility.
• Objective: to
defend the land
and its inhabitants
and to stop the
nobles’ inferences.




To govern the different
territories and attend the
different issues, the Catholic
Monarchs created a
polisinodyal system.
Different Councils in charge
of different territories and
matters.

ROYAL COUNCIL




To give advice to the
monarchs in all matters
connected to the
government of Castiled and
legal and political disputes
within the Crown.
Formed by nobles, clergy and
jurists. The nobles and clergy
position in the council was
only honorary. The jurists
were the ones helping the
monarchs in all
governmental matters.
THE CROWN OF CASTILE: DOMESTIC POLICY


To unify their subjects on common grounds:




Ordenanzas Reales: New legal code. Same laws for the
whole Crown.
Religious unity:
Conquest of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada (1492)
 The Tribunal of Inquisition (1478) to prosecute heretics. It didn’t
have authority over Muslims or Jews.
 Compulsory Conversion: 1492 Jews were forced to convert or to
migrate (the Expulsion of the Jews). Around 80,000 Jews left the
country, the ones that converted were known as conversos
 Compulsory Conversion: 1512, Mudejars (Spanish Muslims) were
forced to convert or migrate. Muslims who converted were known
as moriscos.

THE CROWN OF CASTILE: FOREING POLICY


To build a strong system of alliances to increase their
influence over Europe and obtain support:







Council of State: to deal with foreign negotiations, hear
embassies, etc.
Diplomatic System: to represent the monarchs in other
kingdoms and negotiate the Crown’s interests, set up
alliances, avoid war, establish alliances, etc.
Alliances through marriages.
To expand their territories
Professional and centrilized administration

Professional army

The path to Authoritarian
Monarchies

Royal Treaury

Diplomatic system
Territorial expansion of the Crown of Castile


Focused in finishing the
Reconquest, expanding
through the Atlantic Ocean
and protecting trade with
Flanders:






1492 Conquest of the Nasrid
kingdom of Granada
1512 Conquest of Navarra who
was annexed to Castile in 1515.
Conquests in the North of
Africa: Canary Islands, Melilla,
Orán, Bugía, Tunis…
The Crown of Aragon






The monarch was the
highest authority.
The monarch’s power
came from a pact with
the subjects who gave
them authority to govern
and organize the
territories but
respecting their natural
rights and customs.
Pactist monarchy

Monarch

Laws

Government

Subjects

Justice
THE CROWN OF ARAGON

Domestic
Policy

Foreign
Policy

• It was difficult to strengthen
the monarch’s authority
because of the pactist system.
• Unity on common grounds

• To build a strong system of
alliances to increase its
influence over Europe
THE CROWN OF ARAGON: DOMESTIC POLICY




The monarchs tried to
assert their power over
the nobility by reducing
some feudal rights
(Sentencia Arbitral de
Guadalupe)
Their government was a
constant struggle with
the nobility to try to
establish an
authoritarian monarchy.

CORTES
Aragon

Cataluña

Professional and
centrilized
administration

Valencia

Professional army

The path to
Authoritarian
Monarchies

Royal Treaury

Diplomatic system






Because of that Fernando spent
more time in Castile attending
Castilian bussiness as he was
able to implement decisions
easily.
Lugartenientes: represented the
king in the different territories of
the Crown of Aragon. Then a
viceroy, Alonso de Aragon
(ilegitimate son of Fernando)
represented him.
Polisinodyal system: Counsil of
Aragon,
COUNSIL OF ARAGON





Formed by nobles, clergy and
jurists from the Crown of
Aragon
Located in Castile
Advised the monarchs in
governmental matters
connected to the Crown of
Aragon but needed their
approval to implement
measures

Monarch
THE CROWN OF ARAGON: DOMESTIC POLICY


To unify their subjects on
common grounds:


Religious unity:


The Tribunal of Inquisition
(1478) to prosecute
heretics. It didn’t have
authority over Muslims or
Jews.
THE CROWN OF ARAGON: FOREIGN POLICY


To build a strong system of alliances to increase their
influence over Europe and obtain support:







Council of State: to deal with foreign negotiations, hear
embassies, etc.
Diplomatic System: to represent the monarchs in other
kingdoms and negotiate the Crown’s interests, set up
alliances, avoid war, establish alliances, etc.
Alliances through marriages.
To expand their territories
Territorial expansion of the Crown of Aragon






Focused in its
Mediterranean interests.
Struggle with France for
influence over Italy.
Naples, Sicily and Sardinia
were kept as an Aragonese
possesion.
Catholic Monarchs

Polisinodial
System

Councils:
- Castile
- Aragon
- Navarra
- Inquisition
- War
…

Viceroys

- Aragon
- Navarra
- Catalonia
- Valencia
- Naples

Cortes

- Castile
- Aragon
- Catalonia
- Valencia

Court of
Justice

- Audiencia of
Valladolid
- Audiencia of
Granada
ALLIANCES THROUGH MARRIAGE


Following the customs
among royal families the
Catholic Monarchs
arranged their
children’s marriages
with political aims:





To obtain support
To increase their
influence over Europe
To annex new territories
through dynastic
unions…






Portugal: Isabel (first daughter) married infant
Alfonso of Portugal and when he died, she married
again with his husband’s brother Manuel I the
Fortunate. Then, when Isabel died, her sister María
married Manuel I, the Fortunate.
England: Catalina of Aragon married Arthur, Prince of
Wales, and when he died, she married his husband’s
brother Henry VIII.
The Low Countries, Austria and the Holy Roman
Empire: Juan, the eldest son and heir of the Crowns
of Castile and Aragon, married Margarita of Austria;
Juana, the mad, married Prince Philip, the handsome.
QUEEN ISABEL I DIES


Queen Isabel I died in
1504. As her only male
heir, Juan, had died as
well as her eldest
daughter, Isabel, the
Crown of Castile was
going to be inherited by
Juana, the mad.




Juana was living in the Low
Countries with her husband
Philip the Handsome.
Isabel I’s testament
established that Juana would
inherit the Crown and, only if
she was absent from the
country or could not or did not
want to reign Fernando would
act as a regent until his
grandson Carlos (son of
Juana) would become of age.






It also established that Castilian
positions could only be occupied by
Castilian subjects.
Waiting for the Queen to come to
Castile, the Cortes named Fernando
regent.
Fernando, reluctant to hand power
over to his daughter, who was showing
signals of mental illness, or to his sonin-law Phillip tried to convince the
Cortes to declare Juana not capable of
governing. But the Cortes did not want
to accept that.


Without Castilian support and
army, Fernando was worried of
losing the Kingdom of Naples.
So he secretly agreed with
King Louis XII of France, that
in exchange of France
recognizing aragonese
sovereignity over Italy,
Fernando would marry with
Germana de Foix, King Louis
XII’s nephew.






So that if Fernando and Germana had a child, he
would inherit the Crown of Aragon and its
territories and would rule over them under the
influence of France.
This decision was against the pact established
between Isabel I and Fernando as it did not
respect the rights of their own children.
Nevertheless, although Germana bore Fernando
a son, he died several hours after his birth.




In the Crown of Castile, the Cortes soon realized that
Juana was not capable of ruling. And when Phillip
the handsome suddenly died, the Cortes established
that Carlos, Juana and Philip’s son, would be
proclaimed king with his mother.
As Fernando and Germana did not have a child,
when Fernando died the Crown of Aragon was also
inherited by Charles.
Developed by María Jesús Campos
Chusteacher
wikiteacher

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The Catholic Monarchs. Spain 15ht century

  • 1. THE CATHOLIC MONARCHS María Jesús Campos learningfromhistory.wikispaces.com
  • 2.  The 15th century is considered to be a period of transition between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age.  The Early Modern Age was a period full of changes but most of these changes were seeded during the 15th century.
  • 3. ISABEL OF CASTILE    Trastamara dynasty. The Crown of Castile suffered continuous revolts of the nobles. They tried to control the monarch. When King Henry IV died (1474) the Crown suffered a civil war between the king’s daughter, Juana “la Beltraneja” and the king’s sister, Isabel,
  • 4.
  • 5. Juana, “la Beltraneja” was supported by Portugal as she was married with the king of Portugal.  Isabel was supported by the Crown of Aragon as she had married prince Ferdinand of Aragon (1469) 
  • 6. Isabel was proclaimed Queen of Castile in 1479 in the Alcaçovas Treaty.  Juana secluded herself at a convent. 
  • 7. FERNANDO OF ARAGON    Trastamara dynasty. Son of King Juan II and his second wife Juana Enriquez. Married with princess Isabel of Castile in 1469. As they were cousins they had to obtain a Papal bull.
  • 8.
  • 9. THE CREATION OF SPAIN? WAS IT A REAL UNION? In 1477 Isabel was proclaimed Queen of Castile as Isabel I.  In 1479 Fernando was proclaimed King of Aragon as Fernando II.  They decided to govern together over the two Crowns, and to have similar power in both: “tanto monta, monta tanto”  They were going to be known as the Catholic Monarchs 
  • 10.
  • 11.  The “Concordia of Segovia” (1475) set up the terms of the Catholic Monarchs’ government over the two Crowns:  Ferdinand was named King of Castile as Ferdinand V as he would cogovern with his wife Queen Isabel I
  • 12.    Nevertheless it was not a real union. It was only a dynastic union. Although Isabel and Fernando both would rule over the two Crowns, each kingdom would keep its independence, its own laws, institutions and customs. And after the death of any of the monarchs, the survivor would go to its own Crown to rule while the other Crown would be inherited by their first descendant.
  • 13. THE CATHOLIC MONARCHS: COMMON AIMS  Although the Crowns were, in fact, independent, the Catholic Monarchs established some common aims for both Crowns:    Religious unity Territorial expansion Sthrengthening of the monarchs authority
  • 14. The Crown of Castile    The monarch was the highest authority. The monarch’s power came from God’s desire. He/she had been chosen by God to govern and protect the kingdom’s subjects. Divine right of kings/queens. God Monarch Laws Government Subjects Justice
  • 15.
  • 16. Domestic Policy Foreign Policy •To assert the monarch’s authority over the nobility and the clergy •To unify their subjects on common grounds •To build a strong system of alliances to increase its influence over Europe
  • 17. THE CROWN OF CASTILE: DOMESTIC POLICY  To assert the monarch’s authority over the nobility and the clergy:      Professional and centralized administration Holy Brotherhood and Corregidores Audiencias and Chancillerías Professional Army Royal Treasury Professional and centrilized Professional army administration The path to Authoritarian Monarchies Royal Treaury Diplomatic system
  • 18. Administration • Professional: officials and jurists of the Third Estate (bourgeoisie) or lesser nobles that had studied in the recently created universities. • Centralized: depends directly on the monarchs • Objective: not to need the noblity or clergy when ruling and controlling the territories. Audiencias and Chancillerías • Supreme judicial bodies to impart justice on the territories. • Objective: to get rid of the nobles’ and clergy’s influence on justice Professional Army • Professional soldiers trained for war. • Depend on the monarch’s authority and follow only his/her orders. • Objective: not to need the nobility’s armies anymore
  • 19. Royal Treasury • To collect and organize taxes. • The monarchs created new taxes and reorganized the existing ones to make taxation more effective. • Objective: to pay the rest of the institutions, not to need the nobility’s and the clergy’s support any more. Corregidores • Officials from the administration that represented the monarchs in the cities. • To supervise City Councils, collect taxes for the Royal Treasury, make sure that law was being followed, etc. Holy Brotherhood • Santa Hermandad. • Judicial police force that worked in the municipalities fighting against bandits and defending peasants and workers from the abuses of the nobility. • Objective: to defend the land and its inhabitants and to stop the nobles’ inferences.
  • 20.   To govern the different territories and attend the different issues, the Catholic Monarchs created a polisinodyal system. Different Councils in charge of different territories and matters. ROYAL COUNCIL   To give advice to the monarchs in all matters connected to the government of Castiled and legal and political disputes within the Crown. Formed by nobles, clergy and jurists. The nobles and clergy position in the council was only honorary. The jurists were the ones helping the monarchs in all governmental matters.
  • 21. THE CROWN OF CASTILE: DOMESTIC POLICY  To unify their subjects on common grounds:   Ordenanzas Reales: New legal code. Same laws for the whole Crown. Religious unity: Conquest of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada (1492)  The Tribunal of Inquisition (1478) to prosecute heretics. It didn’t have authority over Muslims or Jews.  Compulsory Conversion: 1492 Jews were forced to convert or to migrate (the Expulsion of the Jews). Around 80,000 Jews left the country, the ones that converted were known as conversos  Compulsory Conversion: 1512, Mudejars (Spanish Muslims) were forced to convert or migrate. Muslims who converted were known as moriscos. 
  • 22.
  • 23. THE CROWN OF CASTILE: FOREING POLICY  To build a strong system of alliances to increase their influence over Europe and obtain support:     Council of State: to deal with foreign negotiations, hear embassies, etc. Diplomatic System: to represent the monarchs in other kingdoms and negotiate the Crown’s interests, set up alliances, avoid war, establish alliances, etc. Alliances through marriages. To expand their territories Professional and centrilized administration Professional army The path to Authoritarian Monarchies Royal Treaury Diplomatic system
  • 24. Territorial expansion of the Crown of Castile  Focused in finishing the Reconquest, expanding through the Atlantic Ocean and protecting trade with Flanders:    1492 Conquest of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada 1512 Conquest of Navarra who was annexed to Castile in 1515. Conquests in the North of Africa: Canary Islands, Melilla, Orán, Bugía, Tunis…
  • 25. The Crown of Aragon    The monarch was the highest authority. The monarch’s power came from a pact with the subjects who gave them authority to govern and organize the territories but respecting their natural rights and customs. Pactist monarchy Monarch Laws Government Subjects Justice
  • 26.
  • 27. THE CROWN OF ARAGON Domestic Policy Foreign Policy • It was difficult to strengthen the monarch’s authority because of the pactist system. • Unity on common grounds • To build a strong system of alliances to increase its influence over Europe
  • 28. THE CROWN OF ARAGON: DOMESTIC POLICY   The monarchs tried to assert their power over the nobility by reducing some feudal rights (Sentencia Arbitral de Guadalupe) Their government was a constant struggle with the nobility to try to establish an authoritarian monarchy. CORTES Aragon Cataluña Professional and centrilized administration Valencia Professional army The path to Authoritarian Monarchies Royal Treaury Diplomatic system
  • 29.    Because of that Fernando spent more time in Castile attending Castilian bussiness as he was able to implement decisions easily. Lugartenientes: represented the king in the different territories of the Crown of Aragon. Then a viceroy, Alonso de Aragon (ilegitimate son of Fernando) represented him. Polisinodyal system: Counsil of Aragon,
  • 30. COUNSIL OF ARAGON    Formed by nobles, clergy and jurists from the Crown of Aragon Located in Castile Advised the monarchs in governmental matters connected to the Crown of Aragon but needed their approval to implement measures Monarch
  • 31. THE CROWN OF ARAGON: DOMESTIC POLICY  To unify their subjects on common grounds:  Religious unity:  The Tribunal of Inquisition (1478) to prosecute heretics. It didn’t have authority over Muslims or Jews.
  • 32. THE CROWN OF ARAGON: FOREIGN POLICY  To build a strong system of alliances to increase their influence over Europe and obtain support:     Council of State: to deal with foreign negotiations, hear embassies, etc. Diplomatic System: to represent the monarchs in other kingdoms and negotiate the Crown’s interests, set up alliances, avoid war, establish alliances, etc. Alliances through marriages. To expand their territories
  • 33. Territorial expansion of the Crown of Aragon    Focused in its Mediterranean interests. Struggle with France for influence over Italy. Naples, Sicily and Sardinia were kept as an Aragonese possesion.
  • 34. Catholic Monarchs Polisinodial System Councils: - Castile - Aragon - Navarra - Inquisition - War … Viceroys - Aragon - Navarra - Catalonia - Valencia - Naples Cortes - Castile - Aragon - Catalonia - Valencia Court of Justice - Audiencia of Valladolid - Audiencia of Granada
  • 35. ALLIANCES THROUGH MARRIAGE  Following the customs among royal families the Catholic Monarchs arranged their children’s marriages with political aims:    To obtain support To increase their influence over Europe To annex new territories through dynastic unions…
  • 36.
  • 37.    Portugal: Isabel (first daughter) married infant Alfonso of Portugal and when he died, she married again with his husband’s brother Manuel I the Fortunate. Then, when Isabel died, her sister María married Manuel I, the Fortunate. England: Catalina of Aragon married Arthur, Prince of Wales, and when he died, she married his husband’s brother Henry VIII. The Low Countries, Austria and the Holy Roman Empire: Juan, the eldest son and heir of the Crowns of Castile and Aragon, married Margarita of Austria; Juana, the mad, married Prince Philip, the handsome.
  • 38.
  • 39. QUEEN ISABEL I DIES  Queen Isabel I died in 1504. As her only male heir, Juan, had died as well as her eldest daughter, Isabel, the Crown of Castile was going to be inherited by Juana, the mad.
  • 40.
  • 41.   Juana was living in the Low Countries with her husband Philip the Handsome. Isabel I’s testament established that Juana would inherit the Crown and, only if she was absent from the country or could not or did not want to reign Fernando would act as a regent until his grandson Carlos (son of Juana) would become of age.
  • 42.    It also established that Castilian positions could only be occupied by Castilian subjects. Waiting for the Queen to come to Castile, the Cortes named Fernando regent. Fernando, reluctant to hand power over to his daughter, who was showing signals of mental illness, or to his sonin-law Phillip tried to convince the Cortes to declare Juana not capable of governing. But the Cortes did not want to accept that.
  • 43.  Without Castilian support and army, Fernando was worried of losing the Kingdom of Naples. So he secretly agreed with King Louis XII of France, that in exchange of France recognizing aragonese sovereignity over Italy, Fernando would marry with Germana de Foix, King Louis XII’s nephew.
  • 44.    So that if Fernando and Germana had a child, he would inherit the Crown of Aragon and its territories and would rule over them under the influence of France. This decision was against the pact established between Isabel I and Fernando as it did not respect the rights of their own children. Nevertheless, although Germana bore Fernando a son, he died several hours after his birth.
  • 45.   In the Crown of Castile, the Cortes soon realized that Juana was not capable of ruling. And when Phillip the handsome suddenly died, the Cortes established that Carlos, Juana and Philip’s son, would be proclaimed king with his mother. As Fernando and Germana did not have a child, when Fernando died the Crown of Aragon was also inherited by Charles.
  • 46.
  • 47.
  • 48. Developed by María Jesús Campos Chusteacher wikiteacher