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oapen-20.500.12657-887552024-03-30T02:12:56Z Chapter 11 The Queen Consort in Castile and Portugal Rodrigues, Ana Maria S.A. material culture; Visual culture; political identity; diverse political identities; sponsorship; Spanish Empire; religion; myth; protestant; festivals; Portuguese Empire; queen; ideology; space; Gender; Piety; saints; princess; ladies-in-waiting; funerary sculpture; devotion; Spectatorship; Iconography; dress; catholic; visual culture; religious paintings; Iberian women thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHG Middle Eastern history This chapter argues that to fulfil the interests of both the spouses and their original family, Maria projected herself as a Castilian infanta while Leonor built up the image of an Aragonese princess. The construction of the political identity of queens consort was a long and complex process, paramount to the subsequent performance and relevance in the configuration of monarchical power. In May 1428 Leonor of Aragon, while en route to Portugal to meet her husband, travelled to Valladolid to visit the king of Castile. In his last will and testament, he had entrusted her with the guardianship of their children and the regency of the realm. While the circumstances of their marriages were quite different and led them to assume distinctive identities from the very outset of their reigns, during their life as consorts Maria and Leonor adhered to a similar model of queenship, one they had learned from their mother. 2024-03-28T10:01:42Z 2024-03-28T10:01:42Z 2021 chapter 9781138541856 9781138541863 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/88755 eng application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf Taylor & Francis Representing Women's Political Identity in the Early Modern Iberian World Routledge 10.4324/9781351010122-15 10.4324/9781351010122-15 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 4777fa69-82f7-4eeb-b737-1d04527107ec 9781138541856 9781138541863 Routledge 15 open access
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This chapter argues that to fulfil the interests of both the spouses and their original family, Maria projected herself as a Castilian infanta while Leonor built up the image of an Aragonese princess. The construction of the political identity of queens consort was a long and complex process, paramount to the subsequent performance and relevance in the configuration of monarchical power. In May 1428 Leonor of Aragon, while en route to Portugal to meet her husband, travelled to Valladolid to visit the king of Castile. In his last will and testament, he had entrusted her with the guardianship of their children and the regency of the realm. While the circumstances of their marriages were quite different and led them to assume distinctive identities from the very outset of their reigns, during their life as consorts Maria and Leonor adhered to a similar model of queenship, one they had learned from their mother.
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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9781351010122_10.4324_9781351010122-15.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2024
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1799945216559415296
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