Fernando I of Navarre: Difference between revisions

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Gartzia de Noboa, duke of Valencia and chancellor, the bastard son of Antso IV, died in 1111 and was succeeded by his son Antso Gartzez. At the end of the year Fernando forced Antso Gartzez to resign both his duchy and the chancellorship, pushing him into open rebellion. Fernando defeated the rebels at Teruel on 22 January 1112 and again at Solsona in April. Antso Gartsez was exiled from the realm at the end of 1112. Meanwhile the king's brother Prince Ramiro, duke of Murcia, had died. He was ultimately succeeded by his second son Duke Carlos Ramirez, who was taken into the royal court.
Gartzia de Noboa, duke of Valencia and chancellor, the bastard son of Antso IV, died in 1111 and was succeeded by his son Antso Gartzez. At the end of the year Fernando forced Antso Gartzez to resign both his duchy and the chancellorship, pushing him into open rebellion. Fernando defeated the rebels at Teruel on 22 January 1112 and again at Solsona in April. Antso Gartsez was exiled from the realm at the end of 1112. Meanwhile the king's brother Prince Ramiro, duke of Murcia, had died. He was ultimately succeeded by his second son Duke Carlos Ramirez, who was taken into the royal court.


The death of Prince Rodrigo Fernandez in 1110 triggered mourning throughout Fernando's kingdoms. Queen Patricia delivered another son, Prince Fernando Fernandez, in May 1113, securing the succession. In 1116-17 Fernando decreed agnatic succession to his crowns, excluding his daughters from the succession and placing Carlos Ramirez directly in the line of succession behind the young prince.
The death of Prince Rodrigo Fernandez in 1110 triggered mourning throughout Fernando's kingdoms. Queen Patricia delivered another son, Prince Fernando Fernandez, in May 1113, securing the succession. On 14 June 1114 Fernando staged a "second coronation", a crown-wearing ceremony at Leyre, to underline his authority. The king was invested with expensive new regalia while the assembled nobles and prelates swore allegiance to Fernando Fernandez as the true heir. In 1116-17 Fernando decreed agnatic succession to his crowns, excluding his daughters from the succession and placing Carlos Ramirez directly in the line of succession behind the young prince.
 
[[File:Acceso_a_la_fortaleza_de_Jaca.jpg|thumb|right|240px|The citadel of Jaca where Fernando I died in 1127]]
On 14 June 1114 Fernando staged a "second coronation", a crown-wearing ceremony at Leyre, to underline his authority. The king was invested with expensive new regalia while the assembled nobles and prelates swore allegiance to Fernando Fernandez as the true heir.
 
With the formal renewal of the alliance between Fernando and the young Alfonso VIII in 1114 the king was sucked into the constant struggle to preserve Castile from Muslim encroachment. An army of 6,000 men was sent to Castile and defeated the Muslims at Castrobarte in November 1114. In 1115 Fernando raised another army in Valencia and led it himself on a plundering campaign into the Dhunnunid emirate in support of Castile. At Almazàn in March 1116 he defeated another Muslim incursion into Castile. In 1117 a controversy over cross-kingdom piracy briefly threatened to destroy the alliance. When Alfonso VIII attained his majority in 1119 he again asked for Fernando's assistance; a Navarrese army was defeated at Alcalà and in September 1119 Alfonso VIII himself was defeated heavily at El Pedrigal, convincing Fernando not to commit any further resources.
With the formal renewal of the alliance between Fernando and the young Alfonso VIII in 1114 the king was sucked into the constant struggle to preserve Castile from Muslim encroachment. An army of 6,000 men was sent to Castile and defeated the Muslims at Castrobarte in November 1114. In 1115 Fernando raised another army in Valencia and led it himself on a plundering campaign into the Dhunnunid emirate in support of Castile. At Almazàn in March 1116 he defeated another Muslim incursion into Castile. In 1117 a controversy over cross-kingdom piracy briefly threatened to destroy the alliance. When Alfonso VIII attained his majority in 1119 he again asked for Fernando's assistance; a Navarrese army was defeated at Alcalà and in September 1119 Alfonso VIII himself was defeated heavily at El Pedrigal, convincing Fernando not to commit any further resources.


===''El Descuidado''===
===''El Descuidado''===
[[File:Acceso_a_la_fortaleza_de_Jaca.jpg|thumb|right|240px|The citadel of Jaca where Fernando I died in 1127]]The Castilian wars continued for the rest of Fernando's reign. In 1121 another Castilian-Navarrese army was defeated at El Burgo. In 1123 Fernando raised a new army in Valencia but did not move to support Alfonso VIII, instead plundering French Denia. On 16 September 1124 the two kings met for the first and only time when Alfonso VIII married Princess Estefania in a grand ceremony at Burgos. In 1126 Castile became embroiled in another war with the Aftasid emirate during which Fernando's new son-in-law sustained heavy casualties.  
The Castilian wars continued for the rest of Fernando's reign. In 1121 another Castilian-Navarrese army was defeated at El Burgo. In 1123 Fernando raised a new army in Valencia but did not move to support Alfonso VIII, instead plundering French Denia. On 16 September 1124 the two kings met for the first and only time when Alfonso VIII married Princess Estefania in a grand ceremony at Burgos. In 1126 Castile became embroiled in another war with the Aftasid emirate during which Fernando's new son-in-law sustained heavy casualties.  


Queen Patricia died at Poitiers on 1 May 1125, leaving Prince Fernando as legitimate duke of Gascony and Poitou. In the summer he was sent to St. Savin with a Navarrese guard for his investiture as duke. The death of his wife seems to have been the decisive turning point in the king's health. Fernando toured Barcelona and Murcia in the winter of 1125-26 but no longer bestirred himself to any great effort. His nephew Duke Carlos Ramirez, who had married the king of Castile's sister, became his favorite in his last years. In March 1126 the duke of Murcia and Valencia pursuaded the king to arrest his chancellor, Bernat de Cervera, for abuse of office.
Queen Patricia died at Poitiers on 1 May 1125, leaving Prince Fernando as legitimate duke of Gascony and Poitou. In the summer he was sent to St. Savin with a Navarrese guard for his investiture as duke. The death of his wife seems to have been the decisive turning point in the king's health. Fernando toured Barcelona and Murcia in the winter of 1125-26 but no longer bestirred himself to any great effort. His nephew Duke Carlos Ramirez, who had married the king of Castile's sister, became his favorite in his last years. In March 1126 the duke of Murcia and Valencia pursuaded the king to arrest his chancellor, Bernat de Cervera, for abuse of office.


In 1127 Fernando founded a university at Huesca in Alto Aragón. In the summer he visited Huesca before moving on to the nearby castle of Jaca. It was there on 23 August 1127 that the king complained of a pain in his neck and was taken to bed, where he died suddenly with a massive nosebleed. He was buried alongside his parents in the monastery of Santa María la Real de Nájera.
In 1127 Fernando founded a university at Huesca in Alto Aragón. In the summer he visited Huesca before moving on to the nearby castle of Jaca. It was there on 23 August 1127 that the king complained of a pain in his neck and was taken to bed, where he died suddenly with a massive nosebleed. He was buried alongside his parents in the monastery of Santa María la Real de Nájera.
===Issue===
By his wife Patricia de Poitou he had the following issue:
* Rodrigo Fernandez, prince of Navarre, Aragon, and Valencia (1099 - 1110)

Revision as of 21:14, 19 October 2021

Fernando I
Fernando III de Castilla 02.jpg
Fernando I in a 13th-century miniature
King of Navarre and Aragon
Reign21 July 1104 - 23 August 1127
PredecessorAntso IV
SuccessorFernando II
King of Valencia
Reign20 December 1108 - 23 August 1127
SuccessorFernando II
Born18 August 1073
Pampalona
Died23 August 1127 (aged 54)
Jaca
Burial
Santa María la Real de Nájera
ConsortPatricia de Poitou (m. 1091; d. 1125)
IssueRodrigo Fernandez

Fernando II of Navarre
Estefania, Queen of Castile
Maria, Queen of England

Ermesinda, Queen of Croatia
HouseJimena
FatherAntso IV of Navarre
MotherAdelhaid of Hungary

Fernando I, known as Fernando the Careless (Fernando el Descuidado; 18 August 1073 - 23 August 1127), was king of Navarre and Aragon from 1104 and the first king of Valencia from 1108 until his death. In his wars against the Muslims of the Iberian Peninsula he conquered considerable portions of land in southeastern Spain. Despite his cognomen he is remembered as a capable administrator.

Before the throne

Fernando was born at Pampalona on 18 August 1073, three months after his father King Antso IV had crowned himself king of Aragon. His childhood is obscure except for references to the prince being provided with a riding-master. In 1080 his mother Queen Adelhaid was murdered. In 1089 Fernando attained his majority and was dubbed a knight by his father in the presence of the nobles and prelates of Navarre and Aragon.

On 1 August 1091 Fernando married Patricia de Poitou, duchess of Gascony. During most of the 1090s he lived as duke of Gascony at Roquefort in southern France, where he gained valuable administrative experience leading his wife's council. In 1097 Patricia inherited the duchy of Poitou on the death of her sister Aines and the duke and duchess moved to Poitiers. In the spring of 1099 Fernando acted as regent of Gascony and Poitou during his wife's pregnancy. After the duchess gave birth to a son, Rodrigo Fernandez, in July the prince was recalled to Navarre by his father.

King of Valencia

On 21 July 1104 Antso IV died and Fernando became king of Navarre and Aragon. On 28 August he was crowned king of Navarre at Pampalona, and on 7 October he received the Aragonese crown at Barbastro. In 1105 the new king took the cross for the upcoming Egyptian crusade and renewed his alliance with Alfonso VII, king of Castile, León, and Galicia. After Alfonso VII died in 1107 the alliance was preserved by the betrothal of his infant son and heir, Alfonso VIII, to Fernando's daughter Estefania.

In 1106 Fernando opened a campaign to conquer Valencia from the Dhunnunid emirate. In the winter of 1106-07 he campaigned against the Muslims with an army of 8,000 men. The pitched battles of the war were fought at Castelló (June 1107) and Alacuás (September 1107), where the Dhunnunid emir Ismail II was wounded and captured. At the start of 1108 the king advanced into Almansa and defeated the army of the Jyadid emirate. In the spring he sailed briefly for Egypt, returning in November for the signing of the treaty of Albacete by which the Dhunnunids and Jyadids recognized him as lord of all Valencia. On 20 December 1108 Fernando was crowned king of Valencia at Xàtiva.

In 1110 Fernando made his bastard half-brother Gartzia de Noboa duke of Valencia, giving him wide powers to rule the king's southernmost realm. After the fall of the de Noboa family the new duchy was given to the king's nephew Carlos Ramirez in 1116.

Domestic conflict and relations with Castile

Gartzia de Noboa, duke of Valencia and chancellor, the bastard son of Antso IV, died in 1111 and was succeeded by his son Antso Gartzez. At the end of the year Fernando forced Antso Gartzez to resign both his duchy and the chancellorship, pushing him into open rebellion. Fernando defeated the rebels at Teruel on 22 January 1112 and again at Solsona in April. Antso Gartsez was exiled from the realm at the end of 1112. Meanwhile the king's brother Prince Ramiro, duke of Murcia, had died. He was ultimately succeeded by his second son Duke Carlos Ramirez, who was taken into the royal court.

The death of Prince Rodrigo Fernandez in 1110 triggered mourning throughout Fernando's kingdoms. Queen Patricia delivered another son, Prince Fernando Fernandez, in May 1113, securing the succession. On 14 June 1114 Fernando staged a "second coronation", a crown-wearing ceremony at Leyre, to underline his authority. The king was invested with expensive new regalia while the assembled nobles and prelates swore allegiance to Fernando Fernandez as the true heir. In 1116-17 Fernando decreed agnatic succession to his crowns, excluding his daughters from the succession and placing Carlos Ramirez directly in the line of succession behind the young prince.

The citadel of Jaca where Fernando I died in 1127

With the formal renewal of the alliance between Fernando and the young Alfonso VIII in 1114 the king was sucked into the constant struggle to preserve Castile from Muslim encroachment. An army of 6,000 men was sent to Castile and defeated the Muslims at Castrobarte in November 1114. In 1115 Fernando raised another army in Valencia and led it himself on a plundering campaign into the Dhunnunid emirate in support of Castile. At Almazàn in March 1116 he defeated another Muslim incursion into Castile. In 1117 a controversy over cross-kingdom piracy briefly threatened to destroy the alliance. When Alfonso VIII attained his majority in 1119 he again asked for Fernando's assistance; a Navarrese army was defeated at Alcalà and in September 1119 Alfonso VIII himself was defeated heavily at El Pedrigal, convincing Fernando not to commit any further resources.

El Descuidado

The Castilian wars continued for the rest of Fernando's reign. In 1121 another Castilian-Navarrese army was defeated at El Burgo. In 1123 Fernando raised a new army in Valencia but did not move to support Alfonso VIII, instead plundering French Denia. On 16 September 1124 the two kings met for the first and only time when Alfonso VIII married Princess Estefania in a grand ceremony at Burgos. In 1126 Castile became embroiled in another war with the Aftasid emirate during which Fernando's new son-in-law sustained heavy casualties.

Queen Patricia died at Poitiers on 1 May 1125, leaving Prince Fernando as legitimate duke of Gascony and Poitou. In the summer he was sent to St. Savin with a Navarrese guard for his investiture as duke. The death of his wife seems to have been the decisive turning point in the king's health. Fernando toured Barcelona and Murcia in the winter of 1125-26 but no longer bestirred himself to any great effort. His nephew Duke Carlos Ramirez, who had married the king of Castile's sister, became his favorite in his last years. In March 1126 the duke of Murcia and Valencia pursuaded the king to arrest his chancellor, Bernat de Cervera, for abuse of office.

In 1127 Fernando founded a university at Huesca in Alto Aragón. In the summer he visited Huesca before moving on to the nearby castle of Jaca. It was there on 23 August 1127 that the king complained of a pain in his neck and was taken to bed, where he died suddenly with a massive nosebleed. He was buried alongside his parents in the monastery of Santa María la Real de Nájera.

Issue

By his wife Patricia de Poitou he had the following issue:

  • Rodrigo Fernandez, prince of Navarre, Aragon, and Valencia (1099 - 1110)