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  1. Alfonso I (c. 1073/1074 – 7 September 1134), called the Battler or the Warrior (Spanish: el Batallador), was King of Aragon and Navarre from 1104 until his death in 1134. He was the second son of King Sancho Ramírez and successor of his brother Peter I .

  2. King Alfonso I, the battler of the Kingdom of Aragón. During the same year that the Knights Templar were founded, in 1118, Alfonso I conquered Zaragoza for the Christian community of the Iberian Peninsula. The struggle of the two was the same, separated by a continent but united by a deep religiosity.

  3. The city of Valencia has been a major target for the Aragonese king, Alfonso the Battler. The Aragonese sent raids to the vicinity of Valencia to establish an Aragonese influence there. In 1129, the Almoravids suffered a major defeat at Cullera by the Aragonese, who were besieging Valencia.

    • Early May 1130
    • Almoravid victory
    • Valencia
  4. Alfonso I was the king of Aragon and of Navarre from 1104 to 1134. Alfonso was the son of Sancho V Ramírez. He was persuaded by Alfonso VI of Leon and Castile to marry the latter’s heiress, Urraca, widow of Raymond of Burgundy. In consequence, when Alfonso VI died (1109) the four Christian kingdoms.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. King Alfonso appealed to France for assistance in his first proposed crusade. His target was Zaragoza, a formerly independent Moorish city, which had in 1110 fallen to the powerful Almoravid Empire based in North Africa.

  6. The unenforceable Alfonso I’s will, known as the Battler, took a long time to be resolved. Three years before his death, the monarch of the Kingdom of Aragón decided to leave his lands, and also his property, in the hands of three great religious orders: the Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem, the Order of the Hospitallers and the ...

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  8. Alfonso I, called the Battler or the Warrior, was King of Aragon and Navarre from 1104 until his death in 1134. He was the second son of King Sancho Ramírez and successor of his brother Peter I.

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