Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Queen Isabella I of Castile

Episode Date: May 3, 2021

She was never intended to be a queen. She wasn’t the firstborn and the rules of the time didn’t support her as a woman. Yet through cunning and guile, she managed to take power. As a queen, she wa...s at the center of many of the most significant and notorious events in European history, and she was largely responsible for the creation of the country which became Spain. Learn more about Isabella I of Castille and how she influenced the history of Europe on this episode of Everything Everywhere Dail Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 She was never intended to become a queen. She wasn't the firstborn, and the rules at the time didn't support her as a woman. Yet, through cunning and guile, she managed to take power. As a queen, she was at the center of many of the most significant and notorious events in European history, and she was largely responsible for the creation of the country which became Spain. Learn more about Isabella I of First of Castile, and how she influenced the history of Europe on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. This episode is sponsored by the Tourist Office of Spain.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Queen Isabella traveled extensively in Spain, so there are many places in the country that have a connection to her life. There is the castle of Arevalo, where she grew up as a child. The Al-Qasar of Segovia is the place where she was proclaimed the Queen of Castile and Leone. The Royal Monastery of Santa Maria of Guadalupe was a place where she was a frequent visitor. One of her favorite homes was the Al-Gazar of Cordoba. And Queen Isabella's grave is at the Royal Chapel of Granada. You can start researching your dream trip to Spain today by visiting Spain.info, where you'll you can get everything you need to know to plan your Spanish adventure.
Starting point is 00:01:15 Once again, that's Spain.Info. Isabella was born to King John II of Castile and Isabella of Portugal in 1451. At the time of her birth, the country we know as Spain today didn't really exist. It was simply a collection of kingdoms and a Muslim emirate out of the city of Granada. At her birth, she was a highly unlikely candidate to assume the throne of Castile. For starters, she was female at a time when European kingdoms were passed. along male bloodlines. Secondly, she was born in the wrong order. At the time she was born, she had an elder half-brother Henry, who was already 26 years old and was the heir to the throne.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Then, a year after she was born, a younger brother Alfonso was born, putting her third in line to the throne. When her father, King John died in 1454, three-year-old Isabella and her mother were sent to Aravello to live in a dilapidated castle by the new king and her half-brother Henry the 4th. Despite being royalty and living in a castle, she and her mother and brother were basically living in poverty. Henry didn't have any children with his first wife, and he got the marriage annulled, but not before an extremely embarrassing ecclesiastical inquiry where he developed the nickname Henry the Impotent. He then married the daughter of the King of Portugal to establish an alliance with them, and eventually had a daughter named Joanna. Soon after the birth of Joanna,
Starting point is 00:02:38 Isabella was moved into the court of Henry in Segovia, where she was, was separated from her mother. Despite the privations Isabella had growing up, the one thing she did not lack was an education. She was trained in grammar, mathematics, art, music, and Latin. Moreover, she paid very close attention to what was happening politically with the neighboring kingdoms, despite the fact that her brother tried to keep her protected from such matters. A group of nobles began to pressure Henry to name his half-brother and Isabella's younger brother Alfonso as his heir. Henry agreed, but only if Alfonso was betrothed to his daughter, Joanna. Yeah, it's kind of creepy, but it was 500 years ago.
Starting point is 00:03:19 Henry tried to back out, which caused a rebellion amongst the nobles who then crowned the young Alfonso as king. Alfonso then died three years later, which then left Isabella next in line. Isabella was a teenager when this happened, and she had political smarts even at this age. The nobles pressured her to seize power now. However, she had the patience to wait. She agreed to continue to recognize Henry, if she was named Henry's heir. Her condition was that she wouldn't get married against her will. And here we have to talk about her marriage.
Starting point is 00:03:52 Like many aristocratic women of the time, Isabella was in line for an arranged alliance marriage. With her arrangement with Henry, however, she instead could choose her own husband, and would only have to notify Henry of the choice. Henry wanted Isabella to marry Alfonso V of Portugal, to unite Portugal and Castile. Isabella didn't trust Alfonso and didn't want anything to do with that. She decided to marry Ferdinand, the heir to the kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre, who, oddly enough, she was originally betrothed to when she was six years old. Ferdinand was technically the second cousin of Isabella,
Starting point is 00:04:27 so they had to get a papal dispensation to get married. The papal dispensation was facilitated by one Spanish cardinal, Rodrigo Borgia, who later became Pope Alexander the 6th, one of the most corrupt popes of all time. Henry still wanted to marry her off to someone else, so Isabelle and Ferdinand concocted stories to get away from the respective royal courts and eloped, something which pretty much never, ever happened with royal marriages. On December 12, 1474, Henry died, and Isabella was proclaimed the Queen of Castile and Leon. The marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella was very much a political one. However, it worked. Their agreement had set firm limits on who had power where. It wasn't a joint rule per se. They each had defined spheres of power. Collectively, they were known as the Catholic monarchs, and their marriage was the de facto beginning of the Kingdom of Spain. One of the first things they set to doing is consolidating power with the intent of unifying the entire Iberian Peninsula. She was absolutely ruthless in her pursuit of power. Isabella created the Santa Hermandad, or the Holy Brotherhood, which was a type of judicial police force which was designed to keep the nobility in Czech and Castile.
Starting point is 00:05:40 She didn't want a repeat of the uprising which happened to King Henry. With the approval of Pope Sixtus IV, she established the Holy Office of the Inquisition in Castile, aka the Spanish Inquisition. One of the goals of the Inquisition was to use Catholicism as a unifying force in Spain. The primary targets of the Inquisition were Jews and Muslims. Eventually, all of the Jews in the country were expelled, and those who had converted were still the subject of the Inquisition. The Reconquista, which had been slowly pushing the Muslims back for centuries, was finally completed in 1492. This was big news throughout Europe. It was the first time that Christians had actually gained ground against Muslims since Constantinople had fallen.
Starting point is 00:06:24 If you were to ask people in Europe back then what was the most important thing that happened in 1492, this is what they probably would have mentioned. And speaking of 1492, the thing which Isabella is probably best known for is funding the expedition of Columbus. This really was mostly Isabella's call. Columbus had pitched the idea to several other countries, but they passed on the idea because they thought he vastly underestimated the distance to Asia when traveling west, which, ironically enough, they were correct. Isabella convened a committee that came to the same conclusion, that Columbus's calculations were way off. However, they concluded that it was still probably worth the risk. If he was wrong and never returned, they would have lost little. But if he was right, it could make them a fantastic fortune.
Starting point is 00:07:12 It was really one of the first instances of venture financing. It resulted in the capitulations of Santa Fe, which gave Columbus financing, titles, and 10% of any money derived from the venture. The result of this decision eventually led to the creation of the Spanish Empire, which would eventually at one point become the largest empire in the world. In addition to these really big things which she oversaw, she also took the lead in reforming the laws and finances of the country as well. Isabella and Ferdinand had five children who survived to adulthood.
Starting point is 00:07:44 The eldest daughter, Isabella, became the Queen of Portugal. John became the Prince of Astorius, a title which is now the Spanish equivalent to the Prince of Wales, and is given to the era parent. Joanna became the Queen of Castile after her mother died, and married into the Hapsburg dynasty, which is how Spain became part of the Holy Roman Empire. Maria married another king of Portugal, also becoming queen. And finally, the youngest child, Catherine, went on to marry a guy named Henry the 8th of England, and their marriage and subsequent divorce sparked the creation of the Church of England.
Starting point is 00:08:17 Isabella passed away in 1504 at the age of 53. She unquestionably had an outsized impact on the world. The voyages of Columbus, the completion of the reconquessation, and the Spanish Inquisition were all major events in world history, albeit not always positive. Isabella's choice to merge the kingdoms of Castile and Leon with Aragon and Navarre was the singular decision that created the modern country of Spain. Her impact could best be described by a German traveler who visited her kingdom during her reign. They noted, quote, This Queen of Spain called Isabella has had no equal on this earth for 500 years.
Starting point is 00:09:00 The associate producer of Everything Everywhere daily is Thor Thompson. If you'd like to support the show, please donate over at patreon.com. There is content only available to supporters, merchandise, and even opportunities for a show producer credit. If you know someone you think would enjoy the show, please share it with them. Also remember, if you leave a five-star review, I'll read your review on the show.

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