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  1. Eleanor of Aragon. Ferdinand I (Spanish: Fernando I; 27 November 1380 – 2 April 1416 in Igualada, Òdena) named Ferdinand of Antequera and also the Just (or the Honest) was king of Aragon, Valencia, Majorca, Sardinia and (nominal) Corsica and king of Sicily, duke (nominal) of Athens and Neopatria, and count of Barcelona, Roussillon and ...

  2. Peter III van Aragón. Peter de Grote, Catalaans: Pere, Spaans: Pedro ( Valencia, 1239 — Vilafranca del Penedès, 2 november 1285) was koning van Aragón (als Peter III) en Valencia (als Peter I) en graaf van Barcelona (als Peter II) van 1276 tot zijn dood. Hij veroverde koninkrijk Sicilië en werd er (als Peter I) tot koning gekroond in 1282.

  3. Ramiro II of Aragon. Ramiro II (24 April 1086 – 16 August 1157), called the Monk, was a member of the House of Jiménez who became king of Aragon in 1134. Although a monk, he was elected by the Aragonese nobility to succeed his childless brother Alfonso the Battler. He then had a daughter, Petronilla, whom he had marry Count Ramon Berenguer ...

  4. Peter of Aragon ( Catalan: Pere d'Aragó, Spanish: Pedro de Aragón; 1305 – 4 November 1381) was an infante (royal prince) of the Crown of Aragon who served three successive kings as a soldier, diplomat and counsellor before joining the Franciscans in 1358. Psalm 44, from the illuminated manuscript BnF lat. 8846, the Anglo-Catalan Psalter.

  5. The Justicia de Aragón ( Spanish pronunciation: [xusˈtiθja ðe aɾaˈɣon]; Aragonese: Chusticia d'Aragón; Catalan: Justícia d'Aragó; lit.Justice of Aragon) is the name of an important public office that existed in the Kingdom of Aragon from the beginning of at least the 12th century until 1711, and again from 1982 onwards.

  6. Peter III of Aragon (c. 1239 – November 1285) was King of Aragon, King of Valencia (as Peter I), and Count of Barcelona (as Peter II) from 1276 to his death. At the invitation of some rebels, he conquered the Kingdom of Sicily and became King of Sicily in 1282, pressing the claim of his wife, Constance II of Sicily, uniting the kingdom to the crown.

  7. 1555. The House of Trastámara ( Spanish, Aragonese and Catalan: Casa de Trastámara) was a royal dynasty which first ruled in the Crown of Castile and then expanded to the Crown of Aragon from the Late Middle Ages to the early modern period . They were an illegitimate cadet line of the House of Burgundy who acceded to power in Castile in 1369 ...

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