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  1. 2 days ago · Pamplona was made capital of the kingdom of Navarre by Sancho III of Navarre (1000–35), and his new foundation was known as the Ciudad de la Navarrería. In 1512 the armies of King Ferdinand of Aragon-Castile entered Pamplona, and the portion of Navarre south of the Pyrenees was incorporated into Spain.

    • Sancho VI

      Sancho VI was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1150 and...

  2. Jun 22, 2024 · Toda Aznárez (Basque: Tota Aznar; 876 – 15 October 958), known as Toda of Pamplona, was Queen-Consort of Pamplona by her marriage with Sancho I of Pamplona. She was daughter of the Count Aznar Sánchez of Larraun and Onneca Fortúnez, and sister of Sancha Aznárez who was married to Jimeno Garcés of Pamplona.

    • Larraona
    • January 02, 876
    • Sancho Garcés, 1er. Rey de Pamplona
    • Larraona, España (Spain)
  3. Jun 21, 2024 · It was not in vain that an influential contemporary of Sancho III of Pamplona, Abbot Oliba, around 1030 gave the heirs of the Pamplona monarch the unusual title of rex ibericus. This unitary vision of Hispania, heir to a harmonious and idealised Gothic past, would live on throughout the Middle Ages and even beyond.

  4. www.socialstudiesforkids.com › articles › worldSpain's Kingdom of Navarre

    Jun 11, 2024 · Sancho III, known as the Great, had greater success with that because by the time he came to the throne, in 1004, the Moors had splintered into warring tribes. Sancho III took advantage of the chaos to enlarge his holdings, through marriage and other arrangements.

  5. 1 day ago · By extending his rule over all the Christian states except Catalonia, Sancho III made an apparent advance toward the unification of Christian Spain. By choosing to treat his dominions as a private patrimony to be divided among his sons, however, he turned away from the Leonese tradition of a united, indivisible kingdom.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ReconquistaReconquista - Wikipedia

    1 day ago · Early in 1197, at the request of Sancho I, King of Portugal, Pope Celestine III declared a crusade against Alfonso IX and released his subjects from their responsibilities to the king, declaring that "the men of his realm shall be absolved from their fidelity and his dominion by authority of the apostolic see."

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  8. Jun 23, 2024 · Sancho VI was the king of Navarre (Pamplona) from 1150 and son of García IV (or V) the Restorer. Sancho was the first to be called king of Navarre; previous kings were known as kings of Pamplona. In 1151 Castile and Aragon signed at Tudillén a treaty for the partition of Navarre.