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Isabella I (14511504), queen of Castile, called la Catolica ("the
Catholic"), and a sponsor of the voyages of Christopher Columbus.
She was the daughter of John II of Castile and Leon by his second wife,
Isabella of Portugal. In 1469 Princess Isabella married Ferdinand of
Aragon, known also as Ferdinand V, the Catholic. On the death of her
brother, Henry IV, Isabella and Ferdinand jointly succeeded (1474) to
the throne of Castile and León. Isabella's succession was contested,
however, by Alfonso V of Portugal, who supported the claim of Henry's
daughter Juana la Beltraneja. Alfonso attacked Castile and León but was
defeated by the Castilian army in 1476. Three years later Ferdinand
succeeded to the throne of Aragón. This union of the two main Spanish
kingdoms laid the foundation of Spain's future greatness. They had five
children, including Catherine of Aragon, the first wife of Henry VIII of
England, and Joanna the Mad, who was the mother of Charles V, king of
Spain and Holy Roman Emperor. Isabella and her husband (known together
as "the Catholic kings") are remembered for initiating the
Inquisition in 1478, for completing the reconquest of Spain from the
Moors and for their ruthless expulsion of the Spanish Jews, both in
1492. That same year they sponsored Christopher Columbus's voyage, which
led to the creation of the overseas Spanish colonial empire, bringing
great wealth and power to Spain.
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