| Beatrice | |
|---|---|
| Queen of Portugal and the Algarve Queen consort of Castile and León |
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| Disputed reign Consort |
22 October 1383 – 6 April 1385 17 May 1383 – 9 October 1390 |
| Predecessor | Ferdinand I |
| Successor | John I |
| Spouse | John I of Castile |
| House | House of Trastamara House of Burgundy |
| Father | Ferdinand I of Portugal |
| Mother | Leonor Telles de Menezes |
| Born | 9 December 1372 Coimbra, Kingdom of Portugal |
| Died | 8 March 1408 (aged 35) Madrigal de las Altas Torres, Kingdom of Castile |
| Burial | Toro, Zamora, Castile and León, Spain |
| Afonso Henriques (Afonso I) |
|---|
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| Sancho I |
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| Afonso II |
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| Sancho II |
| Afonso III |
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| Denis |
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| Afonso IV |
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| Peter I |
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| Ferdinand I |
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| Beatrice (disputed queen) |
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Beatrice (Portuguese: Beatriz; Portuguese pronunciation: [biɐˈtɾiʃ]; Coimbra, 9 December 1372 – 8 March 1408 in Madrigal, Castile) was the only daughter of King Ferdinand I of Portugal and his wife, Leonor Telles de Menezes, a Portuguese noble woman. She married King John I of Castile and claimed to be Queen of Portugal in the 1383–1385 Crisis that ended with her uncle John, Ferdinand's illegitimate brother, being acclaimed King of Portugal, the first from the House of Aviz.
At the beginning of 1383, the political situation in Portugal was not peaceful. Beatrice was the King's only child, and heir to the throne, after her younger brothers' deaths in 1380 and 1382. Her marriage was the political issue of the day and inside the palace, factions lobbied constantly. Ferdinand arranged and cancelled his daughter's wedding several times before settling for his wife's first choice, King John I of Castile. John had lost his wife, Infanta Leonor of Aragon the year before, and was happy to wed the Portuguese heiress. The wedding took place on 17 May 1383, in the Portuguese city of Elvas. Beatrice was only ten years old.
King Ferdinand died shortly thereafter, on 22 October 1383. According to the treaty between Castile and Portugal, the Queen Mother, Leonor Telles de Menezes, became regent in the name of her daughter and son-in-law. But not everybody in Portugal was happy about this state of affairs. The loss of independence was unthinkable for the majority of Portuguese freemen. A rebellion led by the Master of the Order of Aviz, the future John I, began in that year, leading to the 1383–1385 Crisis.
King John of Castile invaded Portugal in 1384 to fight for his newborn son Miguel's (1384–1385) rights to the crown. That war ended in the next year, with the utter defeat of Castile in the Battle of Aljubarrota. In the aftermath of this battle, John of Aviz became the uncontested King of Portugal. Beatrice no longer had a tenable claim to the throne of Portugal; she was merely the Queen Consort of Castile and Leon.
Beatrice died in 1408 in Madrigal, Castile.
There is some dispute among historians about Beatrice. She is rarely referred as Queen of Portugal, but some claim that at least for a short period she was Queen and so must be included the list of the Monarchs of Portugal. Others say that during the 1383–1385 period Portugal had no monarch, so Beatrice should not be counted as a Portuguese queen regnant.
Sources
- Williamson, David (1988). Debrett's Kings and Queens of Europe. Exeter: Webb & Bower. ISBN 0-86350-194-X.
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Beatrice of Portugal
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 1372 Died: 1410 |
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| Regnal titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Ferdinand I |
Queen of Portugal and the Algarve 1383–1385 |
Succeeded by John I |
| Spanish royalty | ||
| Preceded by Eleanor of Aragon |
Queen Consort of Castile and León 1383–1390 |
Succeeded by Katherine of Lancaster |
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