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  1. On 18 July 1909 Jaime succeeded his father as Carlist pretender to the throne of Spain and likewise inherited the Legitimist claim to the throne of France. As Carlist pretender to Spain he was known as Jaime III, but used the style Duke of Madrid.

  2. Carlos VII claimed that he had explicitly banned Don Jaime from visiting Spain, but to no avail. Don Jaime maintained fairly cordial relations with his paternal uncle and potential but unlikely successor as claimant, Don Alfonso Carlos; however, the latter thought him “jugador, especulador, vividor”, sort of a playboy who lost part of his ...

  3. Jun 23, 2012 · In 1933 Infante Don Jaime renounced all his claims on the Spanish throne. In 1949 he withdrew his renunciation. In 1969 he renounced again all his claims to the Spanish throne.

  4. Alfonso XIII (left/top) and Jaime III (right/bottom) Pact of Territet ( Spanish: El Pacto de Territet) was an attempt to mend the long-standing dynastic feud between two Spanish Borbón branches and their supporters, known as the Alfonsists and the Carlists. In September 1931 it was agreed between two competitive exiled claimants, posing as ...

  5. On December 6, 1949, Don Jaime took back his renunciation of the throne of Spain. On May 3, 1964, he took the title Duke of Madrid as head of the carlist branch of the Spanish succession (recognized as King Jaime IV of Spain by a sizable group of Carlists).

  6. A few simple manipulations with the index finger of the right hand cured of congenital deafness, Don Jaime, 15-year-old son of King Alfonso of Spain, in 20 minutes by the clock. Dr. Curtis H. Muncie, Brooklyn osteopath, was summoned by King Alfonso to treat the Prince (TIME, July 2).

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  8. Apr 29, 2024 · Item 1 of 8 Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez gives a statement to annonunce he will stay on as Prime Minister after weighing his exit from the Spanish government, at Moncloa palace in Madrid ...