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  1. Joanna of Castile, known as la Beltraneja (28 February 1462 – 12 April 1530), was a claimant to the throne of Castile, and Queen of Portugal as the wife of King Afonso V, her uncle.

  2. Apr 21, 2017 · Joanna of Castile, Queen of Portugal is a very interesting and important woman in Castilian and Portuguese history. She should have been Queen of Castile instead of Isabel of Castile. I believe she was the daughter of Henry the Fourth by his second Queen, Joanna of Portugal.

  3. Queen of Aragon and Naples. Born in 1488; died in 1538; niece of Louis XII, king of France; married her great-uncle Ferdinand II (1474–1516), king of Aragon (r. 1479–1516), in 1505 (one year after the death of his first wife, Isabella I of Castile); children: one son Juan, who died in infancy.

  4. Joanna la Beltraneja renounced all her Castilian titles, and was given the option of either marrying the heir of Isabella and Ferdinand, Prince John, or retiring to a convent. Joanna chose to do the latter, although she remained active in politics until her death.

  5. Nov 12, 2021 · Juana, born an Infanta of Castile and plagued through her life by the cruel nickname La Beltraneja, died in 1530. By then, she’d earned a new nickname and was affectionately called a Excelente Senhora (the excellent lady) by the Portuguese. Whether or not she was a true-born daughter of Enrique IV we will never know—especially as her ...

  6. Juana de Castilla, llamada por sus adversarios «la Beltraneja» (Madrid, 28 de febrero de 1462 – Lisboa, 12 de abril de 1530) [1] fue una infanta castellana, reina proclamada de Castilla y de León y reina consorte de Portugal. Destituida de su rango, hubo de renunciar por tratado a todos sus títulos y señoríos, incluso a su calidad de ...

  7. Juana la Beltraneja. (Juana de Castilla, llamada la Beltraneja; Madrid, 1462 - Lisboa, 1530) Princesa castellana. Aunque nacida del matrimonio de Enrique IV de Castilla con su esposa Juana de Portugal, los adversarios de su padre la acusaron de bastarda, en virtud de los rumores sobre la impotencia del rey y la frivolidad de la reina; de ahí ...

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