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See also: Castile and Leon, and II. of See also: Aragon (1452-1516), was the son of See also: John I. of Aragon by his second
See also: marriage with See also: Joanna Henriquez, of the See also: family of the hereditary See also: grand admirals of Castile, and was See also: born at Sos in Aragon on the 16th of See also: March 1452
.
Under the name of "the Catholic" and as the
See also: husband of Isabella, See also: queen of Castile, he played a See also: great See also: part in See also: Europe
.
His share in establishing the royal authority in all parts of See also: Spain, in expelling the Moors from See also: Granada, in the See also: conquest of See also: Navarre, in forwarding the voyages of See also: Columbus, and in contending with See also: France for the supremacy in See also: Italy, is dealt with elsewhere (see SPAIN: See also: History)
.
In See also: personal character he had none of the attractive qualities of his wife
.
It may fairly be said of him that he was purely a politician
.
His marriage in 1469 to his See also: cousin Isabella of Castile was dictated by the See also: desire to unite his own claims to the See also: crown, as the See also: head of the younger branch of the same family, with hers, in See also: case See also: Henry IV. should die childless
.
When the
See also: king died in 1474 he made an ungenerous attempt to procure his own proclamation as king without recognition of the rights of his wife
.
Isabella asserted her claims firmly, and at all times insisted on a
See also: voice in the See also: government of Castile
.
But though See also: Ferdinand had sought a selfish
See also: political See also: advantage at his wife's expense, he was well aware of her ability and high character
.
Their married See also: life was dignified and harmonious; for Ferdinand had no See also: common vices, and their views in government were identical
.
The king cared for nothing but dominion and political power
.
His character explains the most ungracious acts of his life, such as his breach of his promises to Columbus, his distrust of Ximenez and of the Great Captain
.
He had given wide privileges to Columbus on the supposition that the discoverer would reach powerful kingdoms . When islands inhabited by feeble savages were discovered, Ferdinand appreciated the See also: risk that they might become the seat of a power too strong to be controlled, and took See also: measures to avert the danger
.
He feared that Ximinez and the
Great Captain would become too See also: independent, and watched them in the See also: interest of the royal authority
.
Whether he ever boasted, as he is said to have boasted, that he had deceived See also: Louis XII. of France twelve times, is very doubtful; but it is certain that when Ferdinand made a treaty, or came to an understanding with any one, the contract was generally found to contain implied meanings favourable to himself which the other contracting party had not expected
.
The worst of his character was prominently shown after the
See also: death of Isabella in 1504
.
He endeavoured to See also: lay hands on the regency of Castile in the name of his insane daughter Joanna, and without regard to the claims of her husband See also: Philip of
See also: Habsburg
.
The hostility of the Castilian nobles, by whom he was disliked, baffled him for a See also: time, but on Philip's early death he reasserted his authority
.
His second marriage with Germaine of See also: Foix in 1505 was apparently contracted in the hope that by securing an heir male he might punish his Habsburg son-in-See also: law
.
Aragon did not recognize the right of See also: women to reign, and would have been detached together with See also: Catalonia, See also: Valencia and the See also: Italian states if he had had a son
.
This was the only occasion on which Ferdinand allowed passion to obscure his political sense, and See also: lead him into acts which tended to undo his See also: work of See also: national unification
.
As king of Aragon he abstained from inroads on the liberties of his subjects which might have provoked See also: rebellion
.
A few acts of illegal violence are recorded of him—as whenheinvitedanotorious demagogue of Saragossa to visit him in the palace, and caused the See also: man to be executed without See also: form of trial
.
Once when presiding over the Aragonese See also: cortes he found himself sitting in a thorough draught and ordered the window to be shut, adding in a See also: lower voice, " If it is not against the fueros." But his See also: ill-will did not go beyond such sneers
.
He was too intent on See also: building up a great See also: state to complicate his difficulties by See also: internal troubles
.
His arrangement of the See also: convention of Guadalupe, which ended the fierce Agrarian conflicts of Catalonia, was wise and profitable to the country, though it was probably dictated mainly by a wish to weaken the landowners by taking away their feudal rights
.
Ferdinand died at Madrigalejo in See also: Estremadura on the 23rd of See also: February 1516
.
The lives of the See also: kings of this name before Ferdinand V. are contained in the See also: chronicles, and in the Anales de Aragon of Zurita, and the History of Spain by See also: Mariana
.
Both See also: deal at length with the life of Ferdinand V
.
Prescott's History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, in any of its numerous See also: editions, gives a full life of him with copious references to authorities
.
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