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List of Leonese monarchs

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Coat of arms of León with the Royal Crest.

In the reign of Ordoño I of Asturias (850–866), the kingdom began to be known as that of León. In 910, an independent Kingdom of León was founded when the king of Asturias divided his territory amongst his three sons.

Below follows a list of Leonese monarchs. It is, in part, a continuation of the list of Asturian monarchs.

Kings of León

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Name Birth Reign Death Notes
Alfonso III the Great c. 848 866 – 10 December 910 10 December 910 Son of Ordoño I, King of Asturias. Alfonso succeeded his father in that throne.

The circumstances are uncertain, but after his death, Alfonso’s death, his kingdom was divided among his three sons, with his eldest, García I receiving the new kingdom of León, his middle son Ordoño receiving the new kingdom of Galicia, and his youngest Fruela what remained of Asturias.

García I c. 871 910 – 914 914 Oldest son of Alfonso III. García became the first king of the new kingdom of León, which was created from his father’s Kingdom of Asturias. Garcia died without children.
Ordoño II c. 873 914 – 924 924 Middle son of Alfonso III and brother of García I. Ordoño was first king of the new Kingdom of Galica, created from his father’s Kingdom of Asturias. On the death of his older brother García I, Ordoño inherited León, making him king of León and Galicia.

At Ordoño's death, his sons (Sancho, Alfonso, and Ramiro) were passed over in favor of Ordoño’s younger brother, Freuela for the crown of León.

Fruela II c. 875 924 – 925 924 Youngest son of Alfonso III, and younger brother to García I and Ordoño II. Fruela was given the remnents of the kingdom of Asturias, from which León and Galicia had been created. On the death of Ordoño II in 924, who had inherited León from García I in 914, Alfonso became ruler of all of three kingdoms created from that of his father.

Fruela is usually considered the last King of Asturias, as under his rule Asturias was folded into León.

Alfonso Fróilaz 925 – 926 Son of Fruela II. He was deposed within a year due to the efforts of his cousins (Sancho, Alfonso, and Ramiro), the sons of Ordoño II, who had been passed over when Fruella II took power.
Alfonso IV the Monk c. 890 924 – 931 933 Son of Ordoño II. Together with his brothers, Sancho and Ramiro, they overthrew their cousin Alfonso Fróilaz, and they then redivided the kingdoms that had been their father’s among them. Sancho received Galicia, Fruela newly conquered lands to the south, and Alfonso received León, becomign Alfonso IV.

In 1929, after his brother Sancho’s death, Galicia passed to Alfonso.

In 931, Alfonso was forced to abdicate by his brother Ramiro.

After Alfonso’s abdication, he retired to a monestary where he died in 933.

Ramiro II c. 900 931 – 950 950 Son of Ordoño II and younger brother of Alfonso IV. Together with his brothers, Alfonso and Sancho, they overthrew their cousin Alfonso Fróilaz, and they then redivided the kingdoms that had been their father’s among them. Sancho received Galicia, Fruela newly conquered lands to the south, and Alfonso received León.

Ramiro subsequently took power in León and Galicia by deposing his older brother Alfonso, blinding Alfonso’s three sons, so they could never challenge his rule.

Ordoño III c. 926 951 – 956 956 Oldest son of Ramiro II. Also king of Galicia. He had no surviving children and the throne passed to his younger brother, Sancho I.
Sancho I the Fat 932 956 – 958 966 Younger son of Ramiro II. Half-brother of Ramiro II. Also king of Galicia. He assumed the throne on Ramiro’s death, only to be forced to abdicate two years later because of his extreme obesity.
Ordoño IV the Wicked c. 926 958 – 960 962 Son of Alfonso IV, and cousin of Ordoño III. Also king of Galicia. He assumed the throne after the abdication of Sancho I (the Fat).
Sancho I the Fat 932 960 – 966 966 Second reign of Sancho I. Also king of Galicia. After bringing his weight down, he was able to stage a successful war to depose Ordoño IV and have himself re-installed as king. His death before his 35th birthday may have been due to his being poisoned.
Ramiro III 961 966 – 984 985 Son of Sancho I. He ascended to the throne at the age of 5, and so was under a regency for most of his reign. Defeats by muslim armies led to Galician nobility to depose Ramiro as their king and replace him with Bermudo II in 982. Two years later, Ramiro was deposed by Bermudo as king of León as well.
Bermudo II the Gouty 956 982 – 999 999 Son of Ordoño III. Cousin of Ramiro III. As a consequence of defeats by muslim armies under Ramiro III, a rebellion resulted in Bermudo being made king of Galicia in 982, then León as well in 984. Partly disabled by gout, he died in 999.
Alfonso V 994 999 – 1028 1028 Oldest son of Bermudo II. Also king of Galicia. Also sometimes used the title Emperor of all Spains. He became king as a child, and so was under a co-regency of his mother Elvira García and Count Menendo González until 1008, when he began to rule on his own.

Alfonso was killed during a siege at age 33-34.

Bermudo III 1010 1028 – 4 September 1037 4 September 1037 Oldest son of Alfonso V. Also king of Galicia. Also sometimes used the title Emperor of all Spains. Killed in a war with his brother in law, Ferdinand, who would succeed him as king of León as Bermudo had no children of his own.
Picture Name Birth Reign Death Notes
Ferdinand I the Great 1017 1037–24 December 1065 24 December 1065 Husband of Sancha of León, sister of Bermudo III, then King of León. During a war between Ferdinand and Bermudo, Bermudo was killed without children, leading to Ferdinand being made king of León as husband to his sister.

Ferdinand had previously been made Count of Castile in 1029, having been nominated by his father Sancho III of Navarre.

During his life, Castile was elevated to the status of kingdom, and having reduced Navarre to vassalage, Ferdinand took the title of Emperor of All Spain.

On his death, Ferdinand attempted to divide his realms between his three sons, with oldest son Sancho receiving Castile, middle son Alfonso receiving León, and Galicia elevated as a separate kingdom for his youngest son Garcia.

Alfonso VI
(first time)
before June 1040 24 December 1065 – January 1072 29 June/1 July 1109 Son of Ferdinand I, who ruled Castile as well as León, and was self-declared Emperor of Spain.

Ferdinand did not pass both of his kingdoms on to Sancho but on his death gave instructions to divide the kingdoms among his sons, with Sancho receiving Castile, Alfonso receiving León, and Galicia elevated as a separate kingdom for Garcia. But it did not go well. In 1071, Garcia's kingdom of Galicia was attacked, conquered, and divided between his brothers, and in 1072, Alfonso's kingdom of León was attacked and conquered by Sancho.

Sancho II 1036/1038 January 1072 – 6 October 1072 6 October 1072 Oldest son of Ferdinand I, who ruled León and Castile, and brother to his predecessor, Alfonso VI.

Ferdinand on his death had divided his kingdoms among his three sons Sancho, Alfonso, and Garcia (elevating the KIngdom of Galicia for Garcia). This division did not endure, as they immediately went to war with each other, first Sancho and Alfonso against Garcia, then Sancho against Alfonso, with Sancho victorious and king of all of the realms left by his father. Sancho did not enjoy his conquests long, however, as in that same year, he was assassinated.

Alfonso VI
(second time)
before June 1040 6 October 1072 – 29 June/1 July 1109 29 June/1 July 1109 Son of Ferdinand I, brother of his predecessor Sancho II.

After Sancho was assassinated, His deposed brothers Alfonso and Garcia both attempted to return and reclaim their father’s kingdoms. As it happened, this only worked out for Alfonso, who captured and imprisoned Garcia, taking all three kingdoms under Alfonso’s control. Alfonso also seems to have adopted the title Emperor of All Spain, sometimes used by his father.

Urraca 1082 1109 – 8 March 1126 8 March 1126 Daughter of Alfonso VI, and sister to Sancho Alfónsez. Urraca came to the throne on the death of her father, his having been pre-deceased by Sancho in 1108.

As Alfonso was king of Castile as well as León, he passed both kingdoms to Urraca. An attempt to create a dynastic unity with neighboring Aragon by a marriage with its king, Alfonso VI of Aragon, spectacularly failed. Not only was the marriage childless, Alfonso actively waged war on his wife until his death in 1114. Urraca did seem to sometimes use the title Empress of All Spain.

The follow dynasts are descendants, in the male line, of Urraca's husband, Raymond of Burgundy.

Picture Name Birth Reign Death Notes
Alfonso VII the Emperor 1 March 1105 1126 – 21 August 1157 21 August 1157 Oldest son of Urraca. His other inherited titles include King of Castile, and King of Galicia. He also claimed the title Emperor of all Spain.
Ferdinand II 1 March 1137 21 August 1157 – 22 January 1188 22 January 1188 Second surviving son of Alfonso VII. Inherited León and Galicia by his father’s will and the council of Valladolid of 1555. Castile went to Ferdinand’s older brother, who ascended as Sancho III of Castile. There was intermittent warfare between the two, but neither was able to displace the other.
Alfonso IX 15 August 1171 22 January 1188 – 23/24 September 1230 23/24 September 1230 Oldest son of Alfonso VII. Also king of Galicia. By his (second) marriage to Berengaria, heir to the kingdom of Castile, the ground was laid for the reunification of the kingdoms in their children. The marriage, however, was annulled and Berengaria left León with their son Ferdinand, making reunification in his person uncertain.
Sancha & Dulce 1191/1192 23/24 September 1230 – 11 December 1230 before 1243 Daughters of Alfonso IX by his first wife, Theresa of Portugal. Alfonso sought to have them (and later his son by his first marriage after them) rulers of León. The kingdom, however had already pledged to Berengaria’s son Ferdinand and refused to accept them in his stead.
All kings hereafter were also kings of Castile
Ferdinand III the Saint 30 July or 5 August 1199 11 December 1230 – 30 May 1252 30 May 1252 Oldest son of Queen Berengaria of Castile, ascending to King of Castile when his mother abdicated in his favor. Also from 1230, through his father, he was King of León and King of Galicia as well. The three kingdoms were thereafter dynastically bound together.
Alfonso X the Learned 23 November 1221 30 May 1252 – 4 April 1284 4 April 1284 Oldest son of Ferdinand III. He was elected King of Germany in 1257, a title which he held without ever gaining any authority by it until he renounced it in 1275.
Sancho IV the Brave 1257 or 1258 4 April 1284 – 25 April 1295 25 April 1295 Son of Alfonso X. He ascended over the claims on behalf of the minor son of his deceased older brother Fernando de la Cerda. (The traditions of Proximity of blood and Agnatic seniority, by which younger sons would be preferred over grandsons, were not dead in León-Castile.) To retain power, Sancho executed thousands of his nephew's supporters during his reign.
Ferdinand IV the Summoned 6 December 1285 25 April 1295 – 7 September 1312 7 September 1312 Oldest son of Sancho IV. He ascended as a minor, amid disputes regarding competing claims to his throne and his regency. His mother retained custody of him (though not the regency) until he was old enough to hold power for himself in 1301.
Alfonso XI the Just 13 August 1311 7 September 1312 – 26/27 March 1350 26/27 March 1350 Oldest son of Ferdinand IV. He ascended as an infant, and was under a divided regency of multiple relatives until he took power in 1325.

His passion for his mistress led to her having 10 illegitimate children by him, one of whom, the future Henry II, deposed and executed Alfonso’s son and successor, Peter.

Peter the Cruel 30 August 1334 26/27 March 1350 – 23 March 1369 23 March 1369 Oldest legitimate son of Alfonso XI. After a tumultuous reign, an uprising against him begn in 1366, led by his illegitimate half-brother, the future Henry II. Peter was deposed and executed by Henry in 1369.

Henry II was the illegitimate son of Alfonso XI. He was made duke of Trastámara.

Picture Name Birth Reign Death Notes
Henry II 13 January 1334 1369–1379 29 May 1379
John I 24 August 1358 1379–1390 9 October 1390
Henry III the Infirm 4 October 1379 1390–1406 1406
John II 6 March 1405 1406–1454 20 July 1454
Henry IV the Impotent 5 January 1425 1454–1474 11 December 1474
Isabella I the Catholic 22 April 1451 1474–1504 26 November 1504
Ferdinand V the Catholic (iure uxoris) 10 March 1452 1474–1504 23 January 1516 Iure uxoris
Joanna the Mad 6 November 1479 1504–1555 12 April 1555 She was regarded insane. Her reign was presided over by two co-monarchs (Philip I of Castile and Charles I of Spain) and a regent (Ferdinand the Catholic).
Ferdinand V the Catholic (regent) March 10, 1452 1506–1516 January 23, 1516 Regent
Picture Name Birth Reign Death Notes
Philip I the Handsome (iure uxoris) July 22, 1478 1504–1506 September 25, 1506 Iure uxoris
Charles I the Emperor 24 February 1500 1516–1556 21 September 1558

Family tree

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The colors denotes the monarchs from the:

000 - Astur-Leonese Dynasty; 000 - Jiménez dynasty; 000 -House of Burgundy

—— The solid lines denote the legitimate descents

– – – - The dashed lines denote a marriage

· · · · The dotted lines denote the liaisons and illegitimate descendants

See also

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Further reading

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  • Barton, Simon. The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century León and Castile. Cambridge University Press, 1997. Appendix I: "The Counts of Twelfth Century León and Castile", pp. 235–302.