Ferdynand from Cerda


Younger son of Ferdinand's coat - a combination of the crests of Castile, León and France Don Ferdinand de la Cerda (born October 23, 1255 in Valladolid, died July 25, 1275 in Ciudad Real) is an infant and heir to the throne of Castile. Eldest son of King Alfonso X of the Wise and Queen Jolanta Aragon, daughter of James I the Conqueror. His nickname: de la Cerda stands for Spanish: Szczeciniasty and refers to the birth of Ferdinand (born with a breast covered with hair). As a youth he fought alongside his father, for example with the Arabs of Andalusia and Murcia. His ambitious father, however, failed to divert the Arabs from the Iberian Peninsula, master the Navarra or Portugal, and despite the election of some of the princes of the Roman Empire to the Roman king, he never really succeeded in becoming an emperor. November 30, 1268 or 1269 Ferdinand married Blanka, the French princess, the daughter of King Louis IX and Margaret of Provence. The couple had two sons (infantes de la Cerda): Ferdinand did not take the throne of Castile because he died before his father in 1275, in Ciudad Real. His two sons also did not take the throne of his grandfather because their uncle, Alfons X's second son, Sancho the Brave, used a growing dislike for Alonso's policies and forced him to assume himself as the successor of the throne. Authoritative control (person):

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