Ferdinand I of Portugal

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Ferdinand I
King of Portugal
and the Algarve
Ferdinand I of Portugal
17th century painting of Ferdinand I.
Reign January 18, 1367October 23, 1383
Full name Fernando of Portugal
Titles Infante of Portugal (1345–1367)
Born October 31, 1345
Birthplace Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal
Died October 23, 1383
Place of death Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal
Buried Carmo Convent, Lisbon, District of Lisbon, Portugal
Predecessor Peter I of Portugal
Heir
first son
second son
daughter

Infante Pedro (1370)
Infante Afonso (1371)
Infanta Beatriz (future disputed Beatrice I) (1372–1383)
Successor Beatrice of Portugal (disputed)
John I of Portugal
Consort Leonor Telles de Menezes
Issue Infante Pedro (1370)
Infante Afonso (1371)
Infanta Beatriz (future disputed Beatrice I) (1372–c. 1410)
Royal House Capetian House of Burgundy
Dynasty Affonsine Dynasty
Father Peter I of Portugal
Mother Constance of Peñafiel
Portuguese Royalty
House of Burgundy
Afonso Henriques (Afonso I)
Children include
Sancho I
Children include
Afonso II
Children include
Sancho II
Afonso III
Children include
Denis
Children include
Afonso IV
Children include
Peter I
Children include
Ferdinand I
Children include
Beatrice (disputed queen)
Children include
  • Infante Miguel of Castile and Portugal

Ferdinand I (Portuguese: Fernando, pronounced [fɨɾˈnɐ̃du]; Lisbon, 31 October 134522 October 1383 in Lisbon), sometimes referred to as the Handsome (Portuguese: o Formoso) or rarely as the Inconstant (Portuguese: o Inconstante), was the ninth King of Portugal and the Algarve, the second but eldest surviving son of Peter I and his wife, Constance of Castile. He succeeded his father in 1367.

On the death of Pedro of Castile in 1369, Ferdinand, as great grandson of Sancho IV by the female line, laid claim to the vacant throne, for which the kings of Aragon and Navarre, and afterwards John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster (married in 1370 to Constance, the eldest daughter of Pedro), also became competitors.

Meanwhile Henry of Trastamara, the brother (illegitimate) and conqueror of Pedro, had assumed the crown and taken the field. After one or two indecisive campaigns, all parties were ready to accept the mediation of Pope Gregory XI. The conditions of the treaty, ratified in 1371, included a marriage between Ferdinand and Leonora of Castile. But before the union could take place the former had become passionately attached to Leonor Telles de Menezes, the wife of one of his own courtiers, and having procured a dissolution of her previous marriage, he lost no time in making her his queen.

This strange conduct, although it raised a serious insurrection in Portugal, did not at once result in a war with Henry; but the outward concord was soon disturbed by the intrigues of the duke of Lancaster, who prevailed on Ferdinand to enter into a secret treaty for the expulsion of Henry from his throne. The war which followed was unsuccessful; and peace was again made in 1373. On the death of Henry in 1379, the duke of Lancaster once more put forward his claims, and again found an ally in Portugal; but, according to the Continental annalists, the English proved as offensive to their companions in arms as to their enemies in the field; and Ferdinand made a peace for himself at Badajoz in 1382, its being stipulated that Beatrice, the heiress of Ferdinand, should marry King John I of Castile, and thus secure the ultimate union of the crowns.

Ferdinand left no male heir when he died on October 22, 1383, and the direct Burgundian line, which had been in possession of the throne since the days of Count Henry (about 1112), became extinct. The stipulations of the treaty of Badajoz were set aside, and João, Grand Master of the order of Aviz, Ferdinand's illegitimate brother, claimed the throne. This led to a period of war and political indefinition known as the 1383-1385 Crisis. João became the first king of the House of Aviz in 1385.

[edit] Ancestors

Ferdinand's ancestors in three generations
Ferdinand I of Portugal Father:
Peter I of Portugal
Father's father:
Afonso IV of Portugal
Father's father's father:
Denis of Portugal
Father's father's mother:
Elizabeth of Aragon
Father's mother:
Beatrice of Castile
Father's mother's father:
Sancho IV of Castile
Father's mother's mother:
Maria de Molina
Mother:
Constance of Peñafiel
Mother's father:
Juan Manuel, Duke of Peñafiel
Mother's father's father:
Juan Manuel, Lord of Villena
Mother's father's mother:
Beatrice of Savoy
Mother's mother:
Constance of Aragon
Mother's mother's father:
James II of Aragon
Mother's mother's mother:
Blanche of Anjou

[edit] Marriages and descendants

Fernando married Leonor Telles (or Teles) de Menezes, formerly the wife of the late nobleman João Lourenço da Cunha, Lord of Pombeiro, and daughter of Martin Alfonso Telles de Menezes (Martim Afonso Teles de Menezes). She gave him two sons who both died young, and one daughter.

Name Birth Death Notes
By Leonor Telles de Menezes (c. 1340-April 27, 1386; married in 1371)
Infanta Beatriz 1372 c. 1410 Heiress of her father. Married King John (Juan) I of Castile and succeeded Ferdinand as the disputed tenth Portuguese monarch.
Infante Pedro (Peter) 1370 or 1380 1370 or 1380  
Infante Afonso 1371 or 1382 1371 or 1382  
Illegitimate offspring
Isabel 1364 1395 Countess of Gijón and Noroña through marriage to Alfonso, Count of Gijón and Noroña, illegitimate son of Henry II of Castile.
Ferdinand I of Portugal
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 8 April 1320 Died: January 18 1367
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Peter I
King of Portugal and the Algarves
1367 – 1383
Succeeded by
1383-1385 crisis
Beatrice (disputed)
After 1385: John I of Portugal

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.