CASTILE

kăstēlˈ, Span. Castillakästēˈlyä, historic region and former kingdom, central and N Spain, traditionally divided into Old Castile and New Castile, and now divided into Castile–La Mancha and Castile-Leon. Castile is generally a vast, sparsely populated region surrounding the highly industrialized Madrid area. It includes most of the high plateau of central Spain, across which rise the rugged Sierra de Guadarrama and the Sierra de Gredos, forming a natural boundary between Old and New Castile. The upper Duero, the Tagus, and Guadiana rivers form the chief valleys etched into the plateau. The soil of Castile, ravaged by centuries of erosion, is poor, and rainfall is sparse.

History

The name Castile derives from the many castles built there by the Christian nobles early in the reconquest from the Moors (8th–9th cent.). Old Castile at first was a county of the kingdom of León, with Burgos its capital. Its nobles (notably Fernán González) secured virtual autonomy by the 10th cent. Sancho III of Navarre, who briefly annexed the county, made it into a kingdom for his son, Ferdinand I, in 1035.

León was first united with Castile in 1037, but complex dynastic rivalries delayed the permanent union of the two realms, which was achieved under Ferdinand III in 1230. The Castilian kings played a leading role in the fight against the Moors, from whom they wrested New Castile. They also had to struggle against the turbulent nobles and were involved in dynastic disputes that plunged the country into civil war (see Alfonso X). Peter the Cruel limited the vast privileges of the nobles, but they were permanently curbed only late in the 15th cent.

In 1479, after Isabella I had defeated the dynastic claims of Juana la Beltraneja, a personal union of Castile and Aragón was established under Isabella and her husband, Ferdinand II of Aragón. The union was confirmed with the accession (1516) of their grandson, Charles I (later Emperor Charles V), to the Spanish kingdoms. Charles suppressed the uprisings of the comuneros in 1520–21.

With the decline of Catalan and Valencia during that period, Castile became the dominant power in Spain. It was the core of the Spanish monarchy, centralized in Madrid (the capital after the 16th cent.). Its dialect became the standard literary language of Spain, and the character of its people—proud and austere—typifies the Spanish state. Latin America was largely influenced by Castilian culture.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Castile
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books on: Castile  - 3417 results

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...and Leonese Extremadura. The Crown of Castile, the largest of Alfonso Xs dominions...the peninsular kingdoms, included Old Castile, Castilian Extremadura, the kingdom...Jaen, Murcia, and the Algarve. Old Castile, centered about the town of Burgos...
...of Israel?: the crypto-Jewish women of Castile / Renee Levine Melammed. p. cm. Includes...0-19-509580-4 1. Jews-- Spain--Castile--History. 2. Marranos--Spain--Castile--History. 3. Jewish Christians--Spain...
15. KING PEDRO II OF ARAGbN ALLIES WITH CASTILE But the glorious king, like a man not disheartened...evil he could for the ruination of the king of Castile; but the queen loved the king of Castile more than all men, even during her husbands...
...the evolution of its relationship with Castile when the PMC was most likely com- posed...Upon the death of King Alfonso VII of Castile and Le6n (r. 1105- 57), his territories...Sancho, who briefly reigned as Sancho III Castile (r. 1157-58), and Fernando, who...
...Joseph R., 55-57, 194 Juan II of Castile, 100-1, 178-79, 181 Juegos de Corpus...260- 61 ; at court of Juan II of Castile, 179; modern reincarnations, 240...longevity of, 28, 34; sparse record in Castile, 257-58 Lleida. See Bookkeeping and...
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journal articles on: Castile  - 374 results

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The Church of Castile-leon and the Cortes of 1295 by Paulette...century the prelates of the Church of Castile-Leon had not found it necessary to...the relationship between the Church of Castile-Leon and the state, no comprehensive...
...maritime law in medieval Spain: the case of Castile and the Siete Partidas. by Jennifer L...of Fernando III (r. 1217-1252) of Castile-Leon. The Castilians had found the...complete his blockade of the city. But Castile had no navy. Although it possessed a...
...Myth, and Gender in the Reign of Isabel of Castile. by Anne J. Cruz Isabel la Catolica, Queen of Castile: Critical Essays. Edited by David Boruchoff...The Committee Against Making Isabella of Castile a Saint (www.petitiononline.com 121904...
...Weissberger, Ed. Queen Isabel I of Castile: Power, Patronage, Persona. by Benito...Weissberger, ed. Queen Isabel I of Castile: Power, Patronage, Persona. Woodbridge...iconic persona of Isabel I, Queen of Castile (1474-1504). Weissbergers overarching...
...Intellectuals and Ideologies in Thirteenth-Century Castile. by Andrew M. Beresford Julian Weiss, The Mester de clerecia: Intellectuals and Ideologies in Thirteenth-Century Castile, Coleccion Tamesis, Serie A: Monografias 231 (Woodbridge...
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magazine articles on: Castile  - 143 results

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...the fifteen-year-old Alfonso XI of Castile dismissed his tutors and assumed control...Europe. Fifty years earlier the kingdom of Castile had stood poised to assume a commanding...been rebuffed there, he came back to Castile crestfallen, and at that point his control...
...penetration of Africa by Portugal and Castile. This took place initially in Berberia...and 1ogistical support to the Kings of Castile and Aragon for their conquests of Grenada...contradictions first surfaced. The new states of Castile and Portugal had neither the time nor...
...overtures to Jamess rival Christian kingdom of Castile. While Ibn Hud called upon the Baghdad...days for Islamic Spain. Fernando III of Castile had conquered Cordoba in 1236, and in...however, as `emir of the East in 1239. Castile was moving purposefully into Mediterranean...
...control over Aragon, Leon, Navarre, and Castile during the three decades of civil war...second son, Ferdinand, first king of Castile. Ferdinand assimilated Leon into his...sons. Sancho, the oldest, received Castile, and the youngest, Garcia, inherited...
...Beginning in 1598 the population of Castile began to decline visibly and its economy...educated. The problem is more serious in Castile where the nobility has forgotten all its...don Alonso de Enriquez, Admiral of Castile, contributed 200,000 ducats and led...
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newspaper articles on: Castile  - 127 results

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Grand Castile; Iain Mayhew Ventures into the Heart of Real Spain. Byline: EDITED BY IAIN MAYHEW ALL good things come to an end and soon youll...
Leons King; JIM MERCER Spends a Couple of Knights in Medieval Leon and Castile in Central Spain. Byline: JIM MERCER WHEN El Cid rode out of his castle gates, strapped - dead - to his horse he rode straight...
...Zamora, Salamanca and Bejar in the Castile and Leon region, and Plasencia, Caceres...gave the city to his daughter, Ulraca of Castile, and her husband, Count Raymond of Burgundy...province of Salamanca, which is part of Castile and Leon, the largest region of Spain...
...KATHERINE OF ARAGON AND JUANA QUEEN OF CASTILE BY JULIA FOX (Weidenfeld Nicolson pounds...elder sister, Juana, who became Queen of Castile on the death of their mother, the formidable Isabella of Castile. Ferdinand and Isabella never merged...
...THE WASHINGTON TIMES Spains region of Castile and Leon - whose provinces include Salamanca...of Atapuerca . The Symphony Orchestra of Castile and Leon, conducted by Salvador Mas, will kick off Castile and Leons $5 million cultural promotion...
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encyclopedia articles on: Castile  - 172 results

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CASTILE kastel , Span. Castilla kaste lya, historic region and former kingdom, central and N Spain, traditionally divided into Old Castile and New Castile, and now divided into Castile La Mancha and Castile-Leon. Castile...
PHILIP I , Spanish king of Castile (Philip the Handsome), 1478 1506, Spanish king of Castile (1506), archduke of Austria, titular duke...Isabella I. When Joanna became (1504) queen of Castile under her fathers regency, Philip contested...
FERDINAND III , Spanish king of Castile and Leon 1199 1252, Spanish king of Castile (1217 52) and Leon (1230 52), son of Alfonso IX of Leon and Berenguela of Castile. At the death (1217) of her brother, Henry I of Castile, Berenguela...
FERDINAND I , Spanish king of Castile and Leon or Ferdinand the Great, d. 1065, Spanish king of Castile (1035 65) and Leon (1037 65). He inherited Castile from his father, Sancho III of Navarre, conquered Leon, and took parts of Navarre...
JOANNA , Spanish queen of Castile (Joanna the Mad), 1479 1555, Spanish queen of Castile and Leon (1504 55), daughter of Ferdinand II and Isabella I. She succeeded to Castile and Leon at the death of her mother. Ferdinand...
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