Marie Of AUSTRIA

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Marie Of AUSTRIA was born on 19 Feb 1564 (daughter of Maximilian II Holy Roman EMPEROR and Maria Of SPAIN); died on 26 Mar 1564.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Maximilian II Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 31 Jul 1527 in Vienna (son of Ferdinand I Holy Roman EMPEROR and Anna Of Bohemia And HUNGARY); died on 12 Oct 1576.

    Notes:

    From 1562 King of Bohemia
    From 1563 King of Hungary
    From 1564 Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire

    Member of the House of Habsburg

    Maximilian married Maria Of SPAIN. Maria (daughter of Charles V Holy Roman EMPEROR and Isabella Of PORTUGAL) was born on 21 Jun 1528; died on 26 Feb 1603. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Maria Of SPAIN was born on 21 Jun 1528 (daughter of Charles V Holy Roman EMPEROR and Isabella Of PORTUGAL); died on 26 Feb 1603.
    Children:
    1. Albert VII Archduke Of AUSTRIA was born on 15 Nov 1559; died on 13 Jul 1621.
    2. Son Of AUSTRIA was born on 20 Oct 1557; died on 20 Oct 1557.
    3. Marie Of AUSTRIA was born on 27 Jul 1555; died on 25 Jun 1556.
    4. 1. Marie Of AUSTRIA was born on 19 Feb 1564; died on 26 Mar 1564.
    5. Karl Of AUSTRIA was born on 26 Sep 1565; died on 23 May 1566.
    6. Maximilian III Archduke Of AUSTRIA was born on 12 Oct 1558; died on 02 Nov 1618.
    7. Eleonore Of AUSTRIA was born on 04 Nov 1568; died on 12 Mar 1580.
    8. Archduke Ernest Of AUSTRIA was born on 15 Jul 1553; died on 12 Feb 1595.
    9. Ferdinand Of AUSTRIA was born on 28 Mar 1551; died on 25 Jun 1552.
    10. Matthias Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 24 Feb 1557; died on 20 Mar 1619.
    11. Anna Of AUSTRIA was born on 01 Nov 1549; died on 26 Oct 1580.
    12. Margaret Of AUSTRIA was born on 25 Jan 1567; died on 05 Jul 1633.
    13. Rudolf II Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 18 Jul 1552; died on 20 Jan 1612.
    14. Wenzel Of AUSTRIA was born on 09 Mar 1561; died on 22 Sep 1578.
    15. Friedrich Of AUSTRIA was born on 21 Jun 1562; died on 16 Jan 1563.
    16. Elizabeth Of AUSTRIA was born on 05 Jun 1554; died on 22 Jan 1592.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Ferdinand I Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 10 Mar 1503 in Madrid (son of Philip I The Handsome King Of CASTILE and Juana Queen Of CASTILE); died on 25 Jul 1564.

    Notes:

    Ferdinand I (10 March 1503 ? 25 July 1564), Holy Roman Emperor (1556?1564), was born in Madrid, the son of Juana the Mad, Queen of Castile (1479?1555), and Philip I the Handsome, King of Castile (1478?1506), who was heir to Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I of Habsburg.

    Ferdinand was the younger brother of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, who entrusted him with the government of the Habsburg hereditary lands (roughly modern-day Austria and Slovenia). In 1531 Ferdinand was elected King of the Romans, making him Charles's designated heir as emperor. He deputised as ruler during his brother's many absences from imperial lands.

    After Charles's abdication as emperor in 1556, Ferdinand assumed the title of Holy Roman Emperor, Charles having agreed to exclude his own son Philip from the German succession, which instead passed to Ferdinand's eldest son Maximilian (1527?1576
    Hungary and the Ottomans
    After Suleiman the Magnificent defeated Ferdinand's brother-in-law Louis II, King of Bohemia and of Hungary, at the battle of Moh·cs on 29 August 1526, Ferdinand was elected King of Bohemia in his place. The throne of Hungary became the subject of a dynastic dispute between Ferdinand and John Z·polya, voivode of Transylvania. Each was supported by different factions of the nobility in the Hungarian kingdom; Ferdinand also had the support of Charles V, and Z·polya, after defeat by Ferdinand at the Battle of Tokaj in 1527, the support of Suleiman. Ferdinand was able to win control only of western Hungary because Z·polya clung to the east and the Ottomans to the conquered south. In 1554 Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq was sent to Istanbul by Ferdinand to discuss a border treaty over disputed land with the Sultan, Suleiman.

    The most dangerous moment of Ferdinand's career came in 1529 when he took refuge in Bohemia from a massive but ultimately unsuccessful assault on his capital by Suleiman and the Ottoman armies at the Siege of Vienna. A further Ottoman attack on Vienna was repelled in 1533. In that year Ferdinand signed a peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire, splitting the Kingdom of Hungary into a Habsburg sector in the west and John Z·polya's domain in the east, the latter effectively now a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire.

    In 1538, by the Treaty of Nagyv·rad, Ferdinand became Z·polya's successor, but he was unable to enforce this agreement during his lifetime because in 1540 John II Sigismund Z·polya, infant son of John Z·polya and Isabella Jagiello, was elected the new king of Hungary. He was initially supported by King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland and Lithuania, his mother's brother, but in 1549 a treaty was signed between the Habsburgs and the Polish ruler as a result of which Poland became neutral in the conflict, Sigismund Augustus marrying Elisabeth von Habsburg, Ferdinand's daughter.

    [edit] Government
    The western rump of Hungary over which Ferdinand retained dominion became known as Royal Hungary. As the ruler of Austria, Bohemia and Royal Hungary, Ferdinand adopted a policy of centralization and, in common with other monarchs of the time, the construction of an absolute monarchy. In 1527 he published a constitution for his hereditary domains (Hofstaatsordnung) and established Austrian-style institutions in Pressburg for Hungary, in Prague for Bohemia, and in Wroclaw (Breslau) for Silesia. Opposition from the nobles in those realms forced him in 1559 to concede the independence of these institutions from supervision by the Austrian government in Vienna.

    In 1547 the Bohemian Estates rebelled against Ferdinand when he ordered the Bohemian army against the German Protestants. After suppressing Prague with the help of his brother's Spanish forces, he retaliated by limiting the privileges of Bohemian cities and inserting a new bureaucracy of royal officials to control urban authorities. Ferdinand was a supporter of the Counter-Reformation and helped lead the Catholic fight-back against what he saw as the heretical tide of Protestantism. For example, in 1551 he invited the Jesuits to Vienna and in 1556 to Prague; and in 1561 he revived the archbishopric of Prague.

    Ferdinand died in Vienna and is buried in St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague.

    Names in other languages: German, Czech, Slovak, Croatian: Ferdinand I.; Hungarian: I. Ferdin·nd

    Ferdinand married Anna Of Bohemia And HUNGARY in 1521. Anna (daughter of Vladislaus II Of Bohemia And HUNGARY and Anne DE FOIX) was born on 23 Jul 1503; died on 27 Jan 1547. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Anna Of Bohemia And HUNGARY was born on 23 Jul 1503 (daughter of Vladislaus II Of Bohemia And HUNGARY and Anne DE FOIX); died on 27 Jan 1547.

    Notes:

    Excerpt from Wikipedia:
    Anna, Queen of Bohemia and Hungary, also sometimes known as Anna Jagellonica (July 23, 1503 - January 27, 1547) was Queen-consort of the Romans and heiress of the kingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia.

    She was the elder child and only daughter of king Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary (1456-1516) and his fourth wife Anna of Foix-Candale. She was an older sister of Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia, and his eventual heiress.

    Her paternal grandparents were King Casimir IV of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania, of the Jagiellon dynasty, and Elisabeth of Austria, one of the heiresses of Bohemia, duchy of Luxembourg and duchy of Kujavia. Her maternal grandparents were Gaston de Foix, Count of Candale and Catherine de Foix, Infanta of the Kingdom of Navarre.

    Life account
    She was born in Prague and for the first three years of her life was the heiress presumptive to the thrones of Bohemia and the Kingdom of Hungary. The birth of her younger brother Louis on July 1, 1506, demoted her to second-in-line. Her mother died on July 26 of the same year.

    The death of Vladislaus II on March 13, 1516 left both siblings in the care of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor. It was arranged that Anna marry his grandson Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, second son of Queen regnant Joanna of Castile and her late husband and co-ruler Philip I of Castile.

    Anna married Ferdinand on May 25, 1521 in Linz, Austria. At the time Ferdinand was governing the Habsburg hereditary lands on behalf of his older brother Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor.

    Her brother Louis was killed in the Battle of Moh·cs against Suleiman the Magnificent of the Ottoman Empire on August 29, 1526. This left the thrones of both Bohemia and Hungary vacant, and Anna being the closest living relative of Louis, Ferdinand claimed both kingdoms in her right and was elected King of Bohemia on October 24 of the same year.

    Hungary was a more difficult case. Suleiman had annexed much of its lands. Ferdinand was proclaimed King of Hungary by a group of nobles, but another faction of Hungarian nobles refused to allow a foreign ruler to hold that title and elected John Z·polya as an alternative king. The resulting conflict between the two rivals and their successors lasted until 1571.

    In 1531 Ferdinand's older brother Charles V recognised Ferdinand as his successor as Holy Roman Emperor, and Ferdinand was elevated to the title King of the Romans.

    Anna and Ferdinand had fifteen children, which was a boon to Bohemia and Hungary, both of which kingdoms had suffered for centuries from premature deaths among heirs and from a shortage of succession prospects.

    Meanwhile Anna served as queen consort of Bohemia and as one of two rival queen consorts of Hungary until her death. She died in her native Prague.

    In 1556 Charles V abdicated and Ferdinand succeeded as emperor, nine years after Anna's death.

    Children:
    1. Charles II Archduke Of AUSTRIA was born on 03 Jun 1540; died on 10 Jul 1590.
    2. Magdalena Of AUSTRIA was born on 14 Aug 1532; died on 10 Sep 1590.
    3. Margaret Of AUSTRIA was born on 16 Feb 1536; died on 12 Mar 1567.
    4. Archduchess of Austria Maria Of HABSBURG was born on 15 May 1531; died on 11 Dec 1581.
    5. Johanna Of AUSTRIA was born on 24 Jan 1547; died on 10 Apr 1578.
    6. Ursula Of AUSTRIA was born on 24 Jul 1541; died on 30 Apr 1543.
    7. Eleonora Of AUSTRIA was born on 02 Nov 1534; died on 05 Aug 1594.
    8. Ferdinand II Archduke Of AUSTRIA was born on 14 Jun 1529; died on 24 Jan 1595.
    9. Johann Of AUSTRIA was born on 10 Apr 1538; died on 20 Mar 1539.
    10. Catharine Of AUSTRIA was born on 15 Sep 1533; died on 28 Feb 1572.
    11. Helen Of AUSTRIA was born on 07 Jan 1543; died on 05 Mar 1574.
    12. Elisabeth Of AUSTRIA was born on 09 Jul 1526; died on 15 Jun 1543.
    13. Barbara Of AUSTRIA was born on 30 Apr 1539; died on 19 Sep 1572.
    14. 2. Maximilian II Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 31 Jul 1527 in Vienna; died on 12 Oct 1576.
    15. Anna Of AUSTRIA was born on 07 Jul 1528; died between 16 and 17 Oct 1590.

  3. 6.  Charles V Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 24 Feb 1500 (son of Philip I The Handsome King Of CASTILE and Juana Queen Of CASTILE); died on 21 Sep 1558.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Fact: Emperor of Austria
    • Name: Charles I King of Spain
    • Death: 1556

    Notes:

    Charles V (24 February 1500 ? 21 September 1558) was ruler of the Burgundian territories (1506-1555), King of Castile (1516-1556), King of Aragon (1516-1556), King of Naples and Sicily (1516-1554), Archduke of Austria (1519-1521), King of the Romans (or German King), (1519-1531) and Holy Roman Emperor (1530-1556). In Spain, though he is often referred to as Carlos V, he ruled officially as Carlos I, hence Charles I of Spain. He is also known in English by his French name, Charles Quint.

    He was the son of Philip the Handsome and Joanna the Mad of Castile. His maternal grandparents were Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile, whose marriage had first united Spain. His paternal grandparents were Emperor Maximilian I and Mary of Burgundy. His aunt was Catherine of Aragon, Queen of England and first wife of Henry VIII, his cousin was Mary I of England who married his son Philip.

    Charles V's reign introduced the first documented use of the styles of His Majesty or His Imperial Majesty. Because of his far-reaching territories he was described as ruling an Empire "in which the sun does not set".

    Combining in himself the heritage of the German Habsburgs, the House of Burgundy, and the Spanish heritage of his mother, Charles transcended ethnic and national boundaries.

    Charles was born in the Flemish city of Ghent and brought up in Mechelen by his aunt Margaret until 1517. The culture and courtly life of the Burgundian Low Countries was the prime influence in his early life. He was brought up to speak French and Flemish, but also added Spanish and some German [1]. Indeed, he was said to speak "Spanish to God, Italian to women, French to men, and German to his horse". He could not speak Spanish very well, as it was not his primary language.

    From his Burgundian ancestors, he inherited an ambiguous relationship with the Kings of France. Charles shared with France his mother tongue and many cultural forms. In his youth, he made frequent visits to Paris, then the largest city of Western Europe, which he thoroughly enjoyed. In his words: "Paris is not a city, but a universe" (Lutetia non urbs, sed orbis). But Charles was also born into the tradition of political and dynastical enmity between the Royal and the Burgundian lines of the Valois Dynasty.

    This conflict was amplified by his accession to both the Holy Roman Empire and the kingdom of Spain. Though Spain was the core of his kingdom, he was never totally assimilated and especially in his earlier years felt and was viewed as a foreign prince. Nonetheless, he spent most of his life in Spain, including his final years in a Spanish monastery.

    In his youth, Charles was tutored by Adrian of Utrecht, later Pope Adrian VI. His three most prominent subsequent advisors were Lord ChiĖvres, Jean Sauvage and Mercurino Gattinara.

    Charles married Isabella Of PORTUGAL on 10 Mar 1526. Isabella (daughter of Manuel I King Of PORTUGAL and Maria Of ARAGON) was born on 04 Oct 1503 in Portugal; died on 01 May 1539. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Isabella Of PORTUGAL was born on 04 Oct 1503 in Portugal (daughter of Manuel I King Of PORTUGAL and Maria Of ARAGON); died on 01 May 1539.
    Children:
    1. Philip II Of SPAIN was born on 21 May 1527 in Palacio de Pimentel, Valladolid, Spain; died on 13 Sep 1598 in El Escorial, Spain.
    2. Joan Of HABSBURG was born in 1537; died in 1573.
    3. 3. Maria Of SPAIN was born on 21 Jun 1528; died on 26 Feb 1603.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Philip I The Handsome King Of CASTILE was born on 22 Jul 1478 in Bruges (son of Maximilian I Holy Roman EMPEROR and Marie Of BURGUNDY); died on 25 Sep 1506.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Phillip I King Of Spain

    Notes:

    Wikipedia Encyclopedia:
    Philip the Handsome (July 22, 1478 ? September 25, 1506), (Felipe el Hermoso - Philipp der Schˆne - Philippe le Beau) was the son of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I. Through his mother Mary of Burgundy he inherited the greater part of the Burgundian state and through his wife Joanna the Mad he briefly succeeded to the kingdom of Castile. He was the first Habsburg ruler in Spain and his successors reckoned him as Philip I of Spain.
    Philip was born in Bruges, then in the County of Flanders (today in Belgium). And was named after his grandfather, Philip the Good. In 1482, upon the death of his mother Mary of Burgundy, daughter of Charles the Bold, he succeeded to her Burgundian possessions under the guardianship of his father. A period of turmoil ensued which witnessed sporadic hostilities between, principally, the large towns of Flanders (especially Ghent and Bruges) and the supporters of Maximilian. During this interregnum, the young Philip became caught up in events and was even briefly sequestered in Bruges as part of the larger Flemish campaign to support their claims of greater autonomy, which they had wrested from Mary of Burgundy in an agreement known as the Blijde Inkomst or Joyous Entry of 1477. By the early 1490s, the turmoil of the interregnum gave way to an uneasy stand-off, with neither French support for the cities of the Franc (Flanders), nor Imperial support from Maximilian's father Frederick III proving decisive. Both sides came to terms in the Peace of Senlis in 1493, which smoothed over the internal power struggle by agreeing to make the 15-year old Philip prince in the following year.

    [edit] The Burgundian Inheritance and the Spanish Alliance
    In 1494 Maximilian relinquished his regency under the terms of the Treaty of Senlis and Philip, at the age of 16, took over the rule of the Burgundian lands himself, although in practice authority was derived from a council of Burgundian notables. On October 20, 1496, he married Joanna, daughter of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile, in Lier, Belgium.

    The marriage was one of a set of family alliances between Habsburgs and Trast·mara, designed to strengthen both the against growing French power, which had increased significantly thanks to the policies of Louis XI and the successful assertion of regal power after war with the League of the Public Weal. The matter became more urgent after Charles VIII's invasion of Italy (known as the First Peninsular War).

    Philip's sister Margaret married Juan, Prince of Asturias, the only son of Ferdinand and Isabella and successor to the unified crowns of Castile and Aragon. [1] The double alliance was never intended to let the Spanish kingdoms fall under Habsburg control. At the time of her marriage to Philip, Juana was third in line to the throne, with both Juan and his elder sister Isabella married and hopeful of progeny.

    [edit] The Castilian Inheritance
    In 1500, shortly after the birth of Juana and Philip's second child (the future Charles V), the succession to the Castilian and Aragonese crowns was thrown into turmoil. The heir presumptive, Juan, had died in 1497 very shortly after his marriage to Margaret of Austria. The succession thereby passed to Isabella, who had married Manuel I of Portugal. She died in 1498, while giving birth to a son, Miguel, to whom succession to the united crowns of Castile, Aragon and Portugal now fell; however, the infant was sickly, and he died during the summer of 1500. The succession to the Castilian and Aragonese crowns now fell to Juana. Because Ferdinand could conceivably produce another heir, the Cortes of Aragon refused to recognise Juana and Philip as the heirs presumptive to the Kingdom of Aragon. In Castile, however, the succession was clear. Moreover, there was no salic tradition which the Castilian Cortes could use to thwart the succession passing to Juana. At this point, the issue of Juana's mental incompetence moved from courtly annoyance to the centre of the political stage, since it was clear that Philip and his Burgundian entourage would be the real power-holders in Castile.

    In 1502, Philip, Juana and a large part of the Burgundian court travelled to Spain to receive fealty from the Cortes of Castile as king-consort of Juana, a journey chronicled in intense detail by Antoon van Lalaing (Antoine de Lalaing in French), the future Stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland. Philip and the majority of the court returned to the Low Countries in the following year, leaving a pregnant Juana behind in Spain, where she gave birth to Ferdinand, later Holy Roman Emperor. Philip's life with Joanna was rendered extremely unhappy by his infidelity and by her jealousy, which, working on a neurotic temperament, furthered her insanity. The princess gave way to paroxysms of rage, in which she was guilty of acts of atrocious violence. Before her mother's death, in 1504, she was unquestionably quite insane, and husband and wife lived apart.

    [edit] Struggle for Power in Spain
    When Isabella died, Ferdinand endeavoured to lay hands on the regency of Castile, but the nobles, who disliked and feared him, forced him to withdraw. Philip was summoned to Spain, where he was recognized as king. He landed, with his wife, at La CoruŅa on April 28, 1506, accompanied by a body of German mercenaries. Father and son-in-law mediated under Cardinal Cisneros at Remesal, near Puebla de Sanabria, and at Renedo, the only result of which was an indecent family quarrel, in which Ferdinand professed to defend the interests of his daughter, who he said was imprisoned by her husband.

    A civil war would probably have broken out between them; but Philip, who had only been in Spain long enough to prove his incapacity, died suddenly at Burgos, apparently of typhoid fever, on September 25, 1506. His wife refused for long to allow his body to be buried or to part from it.

    Philip married Juana Queen Of CASTILE in 1496. Juana (daughter of Ferdinand V of Castile Ferdinand II King Of ARAGON and Isabella I Queen Of Castile And LEON) was born on 06 Nov 1479; died on 12 Apr 1555. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Juana Queen Of CASTILE was born on 06 Nov 1479 (daughter of Ferdinand V of Castile Ferdinand II King Of ARAGON and Isabella I Queen Of Castile And LEON); died on 12 Apr 1555.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Joanna Of Aragon

    Notes:

    Wikipedia Encyclopedia:

    Her youngest sister was Catherine of Aragon, the first wife of Henry VIII. In 1496 at Lille, Joanna was married to the archduke Philip the Handsome, son of the German King Maximilian I, and at Ghent in February 1500, she gave birth to future emperor Charles V.

    The death of her only brother John, Prince of Asturias, of her eldest sister Isabella of Asturias, queen of Portugal, and then of the latter's infant son Miguel, Prince of Asturias, made Joanna the heiress of the Spanish kingdoms, and in 1502 the cortes of Castile and of Aragon recognized her and her husband as their future sovereigns, already Princess and Prince of Asturias.

    Joanna was said to pine day and night for her husband while he was overseas, and when she eventually joined Philip in Flanders, her passionate jealousy and constant suspicion of him made her notorious, if not necessarily beloved, in the local court.

    Her mother's death left Joanna Queen of Castile in November of 1504. She and Philip set sail from Flanders to Spain, where he would assume the kingship as her husband. Their ships were wrecked on the English coast and the couple became guests of Henry VII at Windsor Castle. After they continued their trip to Spain, they landed at CoruŅa in 1506 and started their trip south for the coronation. Ferdinand, her father, claimed that Joanna was being kept prisoner by Philip and that he was speaking for her, and therefore he should be made co-regent with her. This conflict threatened to lead to civil war. However, Philip unexpectedly died due to typhus fever in Burgos in September 1506. Joanna became completely deranged ? it was almost impossible to get her away from the corpse of her husband.

    F.Pradilla Ortiz: Juana la Loca Depicts Queen Joanna in vigil over her husband's coffinFerdinand's way to the regency was clear. Ferdinand convinced Joanna to grant him co-regency, and, in turn, kept her isolated in the castle of Tordesillas. After his death in 1516, her son Charles assumed the regency and was proclaimed co-king. Joanna was kept prisoner at Tordesillas, however, with the revolt of the comuneros she had a chance to resume her sole sovereignty but failed to take it. When Charles succeeded in quelling the uprising, Joanna was locked up for good in a windowless room in the castle of Tordesillas for the rest of her life. She died on Good Friday, April 12, 1555.

    Joanna was the last of the original Spanish royals; after her, all royalty on the Spanish throne was from houses that had come from abroad - though most of the future monarchs also were born in Spain. Most historians believe she suffered from schizophrenia and she was kept locked away and imprisoned. Needed to legitimize the claims of her father and son to the throne, Joanna only nominally remained queen of Castile until her death. Many historians, not understanding the nature and severity of a disease like schizophrenia, have made her story into an archtypal victim parable, without adequately understanding the dangers which her condition posed to the governance of Castile.

    She is entombed in the Capilla Real of Granada, alongside her parents, her husband, and her nephew Miguel.

    Children:
    1. 4. Ferdinand I Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 10 Mar 1503 in Madrid; died on 25 Jul 1564.
    2. Maria Of AUSTRIA was born on 18 Sep 1505; died on 18 Oct 1558.
    3. Leonor Of CASTILE was born on 24 Nov 1498 in Brussels; died on 18 Feb 1558 in Talavera.
    4. Catharina Of SPAIN was born on 14 Jan 1507; died on 12 Feb 1578.
    5. Isabella Of BURGUNDY was born on 18 Jul 1501; died on 19 Jan 1526.
    6. 6. Charles V Holy Roman EMPEROR was born on 24 Feb 1500; died on 21 Sep 1558.

  3. 10.  Vladislaus II Of Bohemia And HUNGARY was born on 01 Mar 1456; died on 13 Mar 1516.

    Vladislaus married Anne DE FOIX. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Anne DE FOIX
    Children:
    1. 5. Anna Of Bohemia And HUNGARY was born on 23 Jul 1503; died on 27 Jan 1547.
    2. Louis II Of Hungary And BOHEMIA was born on 01 Jul 1506; died on 29 Aug 1526 in Battle Of Mohacs.

  5. 14.  Manuel I King Of PORTUGAL was born between 31 May and 01 Jun 1469 in Alconchette (son of Ferdinand Duke Of VIZEU and Beatrice Of PORTUGAL); died on 13 Dec 1521 in Belem.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: Between 1495 and 1521, King of Portugal

    Notes:

    Manuel I, King of Portugal KG KGF (pron. IPA [m?nu'??]); Archaic Portuguese: Manoel I, English: Emanuel I), the Fortunate (Port. o Venturoso), 14th king of Portugal and Algarves (Alcochete, May 31, 1469 ? December 13, 1521 in Lisbon) was the son of Infante Fernando, Duke of Viseu , by his wife, Beatrice of Aveiro, princess of Portugal. His mother was the granddaughter of King John I of Portugal; his father was the second surviving son of King Duarte of Portugal. Manuel succeeded his first cousin John II of Portugal who was also his brother-in-law in 1495.

    Manuel grew up among the conspiracies of the aristocratic high nobility against king John II. He watched many people being killed and exiled. His older brother Diego, the duke of Viseu, was murdered by the king himself. Thus, when receiving a royal order in 1493 to present himself to the king, Manuel had every reason to worry. Without reason: John II wanted to name him heir to the throne, after the death of his son, prince Afonso of Portugal, and the failed attempts to legitimise George, Duke of Coimbra, his illegitimate son. As a result of this stroke of luck he was nicknamed the Fortunate.

    Manuel would prove a worthy successor to John II, supporting the Portuguese exploration of the Atlantic Ocean and the development of Portuguese commerce. During his reign, the following was achieved:

    1498 ? Vasco da Gama discovers the maritime route to India
    1500 ? Pedro ”lvares Cabral discovers Brazil
    1505 ? Francisco de Almeida becomes the first viceroy of India
    1503-1515 ? Afonso de Albuquerque, an admiral, secures the monopoly of the Indian ocean and Persian Gulf maritime routes for Portugal
    All these events made Portugal rich on foreign trade whilst formally establishing its empire. Manuel used the wealth to build a number of royal buildings (in the Manueline style) and to attract scientists and artists to his court. Commercial treaties and diplomatic alliances were forged with China and the Persian Empire. The Pope received a monumental embassy from Portugal during his reign, designed to be a show of the newly acquired riches to all Europe.

    Coat of Arms of Manuel I, according to the Livro do Armeiro-Mor c. 1509In Manuel's reign, royal absolutism was the method of government. The cortes (parliament of the kingdom) only met three times during his reign, always in Lisbon, the king's seat. He reformed the courts of justice and the municipal charters with the crown, modernizing taxes and the concepts of tributes and rights.

    Manuel was a very religious man and invested a large amount of Portuguese income to sponsor missionaries in their journeys to the new colonies, such as Francisco Alvarez, and the construction of religious buildings, such as the Monastery of JerŪnimos. Manuel also endeavoured to promote another crusade, against the Turks. His relationship with the Jews started out well. At the outset of his reign, he released all the Jews who had been made captive during the reign of Jo„o II. Unfortunately for the Jews, he decided that he wanted to marry princess Isabella of Aragon, then heiress of the future united crown of Spain (widow of his nephew Afonso of Portugal). Ferdinand and Isabel had expelled the Jews in 1492, and would never marry their daughter to the king of a country that still tolerated their presence. In December 1496, it was decreed that any Jew who did not convert to Christianity would be expelled from the country. However, those expelled could only leave the country in ships specified by the king. When those who chose expulsion arrived at the port in Lisbon, they were met by clerics and soldiers who used force, coercion, and promises in order to baptize them and prevent them from leaving the country. This period of time technically ended the presence of Jews in Portugal. Afterwards, all converted Jews and their descendants would be referred to as "New Christians", and they were given a grace period of thirty years in which no inquiries into their faith would be allowed; this was later to extended to end in 1534. A popular riot in 1504 would end in the death of two thousand Jews; the leaders of this riot were executed by Manuel.

    Isabella died in childbirth in 1498, putting a damper on Portuguese ambitions to rule in Spain, which various rulers had had since the reign of Fernando I (1367-1383). Manuel and Isabella's young son Miguel was for a period the heir apparent of Castile and Aragon, but his death in 1500 ended these ambitions. Manuel's next wife, Maria of Aragon, was also a Spanish princess, but not the oldest. This was Joanna of Castile, known as Joanna the Mad.

    The Monastery of JerŪnimos in Lisbon houses Manuel's tomb. His son Jo„o succeeded him as king.

    Manuel married Maria Of ARAGON on 30 Oct 1500 in Alcazar De Sol. Maria (daughter of Ferdinand V of Castile Ferdinand II King Of ARAGON and Isabella I Queen Of Castile And LEON) was born on 29 Jun 1482; died on 07 Mar 1517. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Maria Of ARAGON was born on 29 Jun 1482 (daughter of Ferdinand V of Castile Ferdinand II King Of ARAGON and Isabella I Queen Of Castile And LEON); died on 07 Mar 1517.

    Notes:

    Wikipedia Encyclopedia:

    Maria was an Aragonese princess, second wife of Portuguese King Manuel I and because of that queen consort of Portugal from 1500 until her death. She was the third surviving daughter of Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon.
    Her eldest sister Isabella of Asturias was the first wife of Manuel I, but her death in 1498 created a necessity for Manuel to remarry; Maria became the next bride of the Portuguese King, reaffirming dynastical links with the future Spain, that in 1580 lead to a dynastical crisis in Portugal that made Philip II of Spain King of Portugal as Philip I.

    Children:
    1. Beatrice Of PORTUGAL was born on 31 Dec 1504 in Portugal; died on 08 Jan 1538.
    2. Anthony Prince Of PORTUGAL was born on 09 Sep 1516 in Portugal; died in 1516.
    3. Louis Duke Of BEJA was born on 03 Mar 1506 in Portugal; died on 27 Nov 1555.
    4. John III King Of PORTUGAL was born on 06 Jun 1502 in Lisbon, Portugal; died on 11 Jun 1557 in Lisbon, Portugal; was buried in Belem.
    5. Maria Of PORTUGAL was born in 1511 in Portugal; died in 1513.
    6. Ferdinand Duke Of GUARDA was born on 05 Jun 1507 in Portugal; died on 07 Nov 1534.
    7. Alfonso Of PORTUGAL was born on 23 Apr 1509 in Portugal; died on 21 Apr 1540.
    8. Edward Duke Of GUIMARAES was born on 07 Oct 1515 in Portugal; died on 20 Sep 1540.
    9. Henry Of PORTUGAL was born on 31 Jan 1512 in Portugal; died on 31 Jan 1580.
    10. 7. Isabella Of PORTUGAL was born on 04 Oct 1503 in Portugal; died on 01 May 1539.