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Joan of Portugal

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House
  
House of Aviz

Children
  
Joanna la Beltraneja

Name
  
Joan Portugal


Father
  
Edward of Portugal

Siblings
  
Afonso V of Portugal

Joan of Portugal httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Tenure
  
21 May 1455–11 December 1474

Burial
  
Convent of San Francisco, Madrid

Issue
  
Joan, Queen of Portugal

Died
  
December 12, 1475, Madrid, Spain

Spouse
  
Parents
  
Edward, King of Portugal, Eleanor of Aragon, Queen of Portugal

Similar People
  
Joanna la Beltraneja, Henry IV of Castile, Afonso V of Portugal, Alfonso - Prince of Asturias, John II of Castile

Death of Joan of Portugal, Queen of Castile (Isabel s02e02)


Joana of Portugal ([ʒuˈɐnɐ]; English: Joan; 20 March 1439 – 12 December 1475) was Queen consort of Castile as the second wife of King Henry IV of Castile and a Portuguese infanta, the posthumous daughter of King Edward of Portugal and his wife Eleanor of Aragon. She was born in the Quinta do Monte Olivete, Almada six months after the death of her father.

Contents

Queen of Castile

On 21 May 1455 in Córdoba, she married as his second wife King Henry IV of Castile who had repudiated his first consort, Blanche II of Navarre, after thirteen years of marriage. It was rumoured that their marriage had never been consummated due to the king's impotence. Henry and Joan shared the same maternal grandparents; Ferdinand I of Aragon and Eleanor of Alburquerque (making them first cousins). They also shared the same paternal great-grandfather; John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster (making them second cousins). In February 1462, six years after Joan's marriage to Henry, she gave birth to a daughter, also named Joan, called La Beltraneja because of rumours that she was in fact the daughter of Don Beltrán de la Cueva, 1st Duke of Alburquerque, who was suspected of being Joan's lover.

Henry banished Joan from the royal court and she went to live in Coca at the castle of Henry's supporter, Bishop Fonseca. She soon fell in love with Bishop Fonseca's nephew; they embarked on a sexual affair, which resulted in Joan bearing her lover two illegitimate sons (see below). Henry subsequently declared their marriage had never been legal and thus divorced her in 1468.

At the death of her former husband in 1474, Joan championed her daughter's right to succeed to the throne, but she died shortly thereafter. This led to the outbreak of the War of the Castilian Succession (1475–1479).

Scandals and illegitimate children

Prior to her banishment, Joan had provoked much criticism in the Castilian court as she allegedly wore dresses that displayed too much décolletage, and her philandering with men was considered scandalous. She was considered haughty, unscrupulous, ambitious and ruthless, participating in intrigues and completely controlling her husband. Joan has been credited with many lovers, including the poet Juan Rodríguez de la Cámara. Joan had two illegitimate children by Pedro de Castilla y Fonseca "el mozo", nephew of Bishop Fonseca, and a great grandson of King Peter of Castille. Her two sons were Pedro de Castilla y Portugal and Andres Apostol de Castilla y Portugal. The birth of her two illegitimate children only added to Joan's considerable notoriety.

She later entered the convent of San Francisco in Segovia.

Joan died in Madrid on 12 December 1475 at the age of 36. She was buried in the Convent of San Francisco.

References

Joan of Portugal Wikipedia


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