That depends on who you are talking about. The answer could be either Queen Isabella I or Queen Elizabeth.
Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon, together known as the "Catholic Monarchs," ruled Spain in 1492.
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No queen Victoria never ruled Spain or Germany.
Queen Isabella.
Queen Isabella I was born in 1451 in Castile, Spain. She was a devoted Catholic, and her schooling was limited. However, she was a very bright intelligent, woman. When her father died, her half-brother Henry became king, and at the age of 13, Isabella was brought to his court. (She learned about court affairs there.) Against her brother's wishes, Isabella married Ferdinand of Aragon in 1469, and when her brother died 5 years later, she and her husband ruled over a unified Spain.
Queen Isabella I was the queen of Castile in Spain. She married Ferdinand of Aragon, so they ruled their kingdoms together.
There was not a king and queen of Spain in 1495. Ferdinand II ruled Aragon and co-ruled Leon and Castile with Queen Isabel I. Isabel I was Queen of Castile and Leon and co-ruled Aragon with Ferdinand. They ruled those three kingdoms together but were only the Monarchs of their own kingdom(s). Consequently they were not the monarchs of Spain. Nor were their children. Spain was only unified when all three kingdoms were inherited by their grandson Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor in 1516. At that point it became one kingdom
Bloody Mary =Mary I (ruled 1553-58).
Queen Elizabeth I of England harbored animosity towards Spain primarily due to religious and political tensions. As a Protestant monarch, she opposed the Catholic Habsburgs, who ruled Spain and sought to re-establish Catholicism in England. Additionally, Spain's support for Mary, Queen of Scots, and its ambitions to expand its influence in Europe threatened Elizabeth's reign. This rivalry culminated in conflicts like the Spanish Armada's failed invasion in 1588, further deepening her disdain for Spain.
Her mother was Spanish and the sister of one of the powerful kings that ruled there.
No, Queen Isabella of Spain was not a Moor. She was a Catholic monarch from the Kingdom of Castile and is best known for her role in the unification of Spain and the sponsorship of Christopher Columbus's voyage to the Americas. The Moors were Muslim inhabitants of North Africa who ruled parts of the Iberian Peninsula from the 8th to the 15th centuries. Isabella, along with her husband Ferdinand II of Aragon, is known for the Reconquista, which sought to reclaim Spain from Moorish control.