Crown of Aragon explained

Crown of Aragon should not be confused with Kingdom of Aragon.

Native Name:


Conventional Long Name:Crown of Aragon
Common Name:Crown of Aragon
Status:Monarchy
Status Text:Composite monarchy[1]
Government Type:Feudal monarchy subject to pacts
Leader1:Alfonso II
Year Leader1:1164-1196 (first)
Leader2:Ferdinand II
Year Leader2:1479–1516
Leader3:Philip V / Charles III[2]
Year Leader3:1700–1715 (last)
Title Leader:Monarch
Year Start:1164
Year End:1707/1715
Event Start:Aragon-Barcelona Union
Event End:Nueva Planta decrees
Event1:Conquest of the Kingdom of Majorca
Date Event1:1231
Event2:Conquest of the Kingdom of Valencia
Date Event2:1238–1245
Event3:Conquest of the Kingdom of Sardinia
Date Event3:1324–1420
Event4:Union of Ferdinand II and Isabella I
Date Event4:19 October 1469
Event5:Conquest of the Kingdom of Naples
Date Event5:1501–1504
P1:Kingdom of Aragon
P2:County of Barcelona
S1:History of Spain (1700–1808)Bourbon Spain
Flag S1:Flag of Cross of Burgundy.svg
Border S4:no
Flag Border:no
Flag Type:Royal flag
Flag:Senyera
Symbol:Coat of arms of the Crown of Aragon
Image Map Caption:Diachronic map of the territories subject to the Crown of Aragon
Official Languages:
Languages Type:Co-official languages
Languages:
Languages2 Type:Minority languages
Languages2:
Capital:See Capital below
Religion:Majority religion:
Roman Catholic (official)[4]
Minority religions:
Sephardic Judaism, Greek Orthodoxy
Legislature:Aragonese: [[Aragonese Corts|Cortz d'Aragón]]
Catalan; Valencian: [[Catalan Courts|Corts Catalanes]]
Catalan; Valencian: [[Corts Valencianes]]
Stat Area1:120000
Stat Year1:1300
Stat Pop1:1 000 000
Today:Spain
Ref Area1:[5]

The Crown of Aragon [6] was a composite monarchy[1] ruled by one king, originated by the dynastic union of the Kingdom of Aragon and the County of Barcelona and ended as a consequence of the War of the Spanish Succession. At the height of its power in the 14th and 15th centuries, the Crown of Aragon was a thalassocracy controlling a large portion of present-day eastern Spain, parts of what is now southern France, and a Mediterranean empire which included the Balearic Islands, Sicily, Corsica, Sardinia, Malta, Southern Italy (from 1442), and parts of Greece (until 1388).

The component realms of the Crown were not united politically except at the level of the king,[7] who ruled over each autonomous polity according to its own laws, raising funds under each tax structure, dealing separately with each Corts or Cortes, particularly the Kingdom of Aragon, the Principality of Catalonia, the Kingdom of Majorca, and the Kingdom of Valencia. The larger Crown of Aragon must not be confused with one of its constituent parts, the Kingdom of Aragon, from which it takes its name.

In 1479, a new dynastic union of the Crown of Aragon with the Crown of Castile by the Catholic Monarchs, joining what contemporaries referred to as "the Spains",[8] led to what would become the Spanish composite monarchy under Habsburg monarchs. The Aragonese Crown continued to exist until it was abolished by the Nueva Planta decrees issued by King Philip V in 1707–1716 as a consequence of the defeat of Archduke Charles (as Charles III of Aragon) in the War of the Spanish Succession.

Context

Formally, the political centre of the Crown of Aragon was Zaragoza, where kings were crowned at La Seo Cathedral. The 'de facto' capital and leading cultural, administrative and economic centre of the Crown of Aragon was Barcelona,[9] [10] followed by Valencia. Finally, Palma (Majorca) was an additional important city and seaport.

The Crown of Aragon eventually included the Kingdom of Aragon, the Principality of Catalonia (until the late 12th century the County of Barcelona and others), the Kingdom of Valencia, the Kingdom of Majorca, the Kingdom of Sicily, Malta, the Kingdom of Naples and Kingdom of Sardinia. For brief periods the Crown of Aragon also controlled Montpellier, Provence, Corsica, and the twin Duchy of Athens and Neopatras in Latin Greece.

In the Late Middle Ages, the southward territorial expansion of the Aragonese Crown in the Iberian Peninsula stopped in Murcia, which eventually consolidated as a realm of the Crown of Castile, the Kingdom of Murcia. Subsequently, the Aragonese Crown focused on the Mediterranean, governing as far afield as Greece and the Barbary Coast, whereas Portugal, which completed its southward expansion in 1249, would focus on the Atlantic Ocean. Mercenaries from the territories in the Crown, known as Almogavars participated in the creation of this Mediterranean empire, and later found employment in countries all across southern Europe.

The Crown of Aragon has been considered an empire which ruled in the Mediterranean for hundreds of years, with thalassocratic power to setting rules over the entire sea, (as documented, for instance, in the Llibre del Consolat del Mar or Book of the Consulate of the Sea, written in Catalan, is one of the oldest compilations of maritime laws in the world).

However, the different territories were only connected through the person of the monarch. A modern historian, Juan de Contreras y Lopez de Ayala, marquis of Lozoya, described the Crown of Aragon as being more like a confederacy than a centralised kingdom.[11]

History

Origin

The Crown of Aragon originated in 1137, when the Kingdom of Aragon and the County of Barcelona (along with the County of Provence, Girona, Cerdanya, Osona and other territories) merged by dynastic union[12] [13] upon the marriage of Petronilla of Aragon and Raymond Berenguer IV of Barcelona; their individual titles combined in the person of their son Alfonso II of Aragon, who ascended to the throne in 1162. This union respected the existing institutions and parliaments of both territories. The combined state was initially known as Regno, Dominio et Corona Aragonum et Catalonie (only between 1286-1291), and later as Corona Regum Aragoniae, Corona Aragonum or simply Aragon.

Petronilla's father King Ramiro, "The Monk" (reigned 1134–1137) who was raised in the Monastery of Saint Pons de Thomières, Viscounty of Béziers as a Benedictine monk was the youngest of three brothers. His brothers Peter I (reigned 1094–1104) and Alfonso I El Batallador (The Battler, reigned 1104–1134) had fought against Castile for hegemony in the Iberian peninsula. Upon the death of Alfonso I, the Aragonese nobility that campaigned close to him feared being overwhelmed by the influence of Castile. And so, Ramiro was forced to leave his monastic life and proclaim himself King of Aragon. He married Agnes, sister of the Duke of Aquitaine and betrothed his only daughter Petronilla of Aragon to Raymond Berenguer IV, Count of Barcelona. The wedding agreement provided Berenguer with the title of Princeps Aragonum and Dominator Aragonensis (Ruler of the Kingdom and Commander of the Aragonese Military) but the title of King of Aragon was reserved for Ramiro II and Berenguer's future sons.

Raymond Berenguer IV, the first ruler of the united dynasty, called himself Count of Barcelona and "Prince of Aragon".[14]

Expansion

See also: Catalan Company. Alfonso II inherited two realms and with them, two different expansion processes. The House of Jiménez looked south in a battle against Castile for the control of the middle valley of the Ebro in the Iberian peninsula. The House of Barcelona looked north to its origins, Occitania, where through family ties it had significant influence, especially in Toulouse, Provence and Foix, towards the south along the Mediterranean coast and towards the Mediterranean sea.

Soon, Alfonso II of Aragon and I of Barcelona committed to conquering Valencia as the Aragonese nobility demanded. Like his father, he gave priority to the expansion and consolidation of the House of Barcelona's influence in Occitania.

Alfonso II signed the treaties of Cazorla, a multilateral treaty between Navarre, Aragon, León, Portugal, and Castile to redefine the frontiers and zones of expansion of each kingdom. Alfonso II assured Valencia by renouncing the Aragonese rights of annexing Murcia in exchange for securing the Aragonese frontier with Castile. This action should be seen as result of the aforementioned priority given over the Occitan and Catalan dominions of the Crown of Aragon.[15]

From the ninth century, the dukes of Aquitaine, the kings of Navarre, the counts of Foix, the counts of Toulouse and the counts of Barcelona were rivals in their attempts at controlling the various counties of the Hispanic Marches and pays of Occitania. And the House of Barcelona succeeded in extending its influence to the area that is now south of France through strong family ties, in the areas of the County of Provence, County of Toulouse and County of Foix. The rebellion of the Cathars or Albigensians, who rejected the authority and teachings of the Catholic Church, led to the loss of these possessions in southern France. Pope Innocent III called upon Philip II of France to suppress the Albigensians—the Albigensian Crusade, which led to bringing Occitania firmly under the control of the King of France, and the Capetian dynasty from northern France.

Peter II of Aragon returned from the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in autumn 1212 to find that Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester, had conquered Toulouse, exiling Count Raymond VI of Toulouse, who was Peter's brother-in-law and vassal. Peter's army crossed the Pyrenees and arrived at Muret where they were joined by Raymond of Foix and Raymond of Toulouse's forces, in September 1213 to confront Montfort's army. The Battle of Muret began on 12 September 1213. The Catalan, Aragonese and Occitan forces were disorganised and disintegrated under the assault of Montfort's squadrons. Peter himself was caught in the thick of fighting, and died as a result of a foolhardy act of bravado. Thus, the nobility of Toulouse, Foix and other vassals of the Crown of Aragon were defeated. The conflict concluded with the Treaty of Meaux-Paris in 1229, in which the Crown of Aragon agreed to renounce its rights over the south of Occitania with the integration of these territories into the dominions of the King of France.

King James I (13th century) returned to an era of expansion to the South, by conquering and incorporating Majorca, Ibiza, and a good share of the Kingdom of Valencia into the Crown. With the Treaty of Corbeil (1258), which was based upon the principle of natural frontiers,[16] the Capetians were recognised as heirs of the Carolingian dynasty, and the Capetian king Louis IX renounced any historical claim of feudal overlordship over Catalonia. The general principle was clear, Catalan influence north of the Pyrenees, beyond the Roussillon, Vallespir, Conflent and Capcir, was to cease. James I had realized that wasting his forces and distracting his energies in attempts to keep a footing in France would only end in disaster. In January 1266, James I besieged and captured Murcia, then settled his own men, mostly Catalans, there; and handed Murcia over to Castile with the treaty of Cazorla.[17]

The Kingdom of Majorca, including the Balearic Islands, and the counties of Cerdanya and Roussillon-Vallespir and the city of Montpellier, was held independently from 1276 to 1279 by James II of Majorca and as a vassal of the Crown of Aragon after that date until 1349, becoming a full member of the Crown of Aragon from 1349.

Valencia was finally made a new kingdom with its own institutions and not an extension of the Kingdom of Aragon as the Aragonese noblemen had intended since even before the creation of the Crown of Aragon. The Kingdom of Valencia became the third member of the Crown together with Aragon and the Principality of Catalonia. The Kingdom of Majorca had an independent status with its own kings until 1349.

In 1282, the Sicilians rose up against the second dynasty of the Angevins on the Sicilian Vespers and massacred the garrison soldiers throughout the island. Peter III responded to their call, and landed in Trapani to an enthusiastic welcome five months later. This caused Pope Martin IV to excommunicate the king, place Sicily under interdiction, and offer the kingdom of Aragon to a son of Philip III of France.[18] [19]

When Peter III refused to impose the Charters of Aragon in Valencia, the nobles and towns united in Zaragoza to demand a confirmation of their privileges, which the king had to accept in 1283. Thus began the Union of Aragon, which developed the power of the Justícia to mediate between the king and the Aragonese bourgeois.

When James II of Aragon[20] completed the conquest of the Kingdom of Valencia, the Crown of Aragon established itself as one of the major powers in Europe.In 1297, to solve the dispute between the Anjevins and the Aragonese over Sicily, Pope Boniface VIII created ex novo a Kingdom of Sardinia and Corsica and entrusted it as a fief to the Aragonese King James II, ignoring already existing, indigenous states.[21] In 1324, James II finally started to seize the Pisan territories in the former states of Cagliari and Gallura. In 1347 Aragon made war on the Genoese Doria and Malaspina houses, which controlled most of the lands of the former Logudoro state in north-western Sardinia, and added them to its direct domains. The Giudicato of Arborea, the only remaining independent Sardinian state, proved far more difficult to subdue. The rulers of Arborea developed the ambition to unite all of Sardinia under their rule and create a single Sardinian state, and at a certain point (1368–1388, 1392–1409) almost managed to drive the Aragonese out. The war between Arborea and Aragon was fought on and off for more than 100 years; this situation lasted until 1409, when the army of Arborea suffered a heavy defeat by the Aragonese army in the Battle of Sanluri; the capital Oristano was lost in 1410. After some years during which Arborean rulers failed to organise a successful resurgence, they sold their remaining rights for 100,000 gold florins, and by 1420 the Aragonese Kingdom of Sardinia finally extended throughout the island. The subduing of Sardinia having taken a century, Corsica, which had never been wrested from the Genoese, was dropped from the formal title of the Kingdom.

Through the marriage of Peter IV to Maria of Sicily (1381), the Kingdom of Sicily, as well as the duchies of Athens and Neopatria, were finally implemented more firmly into the Crown. The Greek possessions were permanently lost to Nerio I Acciaioli in 1388 and Sicily was dissociated in the hands of Martin I from 1395 to 1409, but the Kingdom of Naples was added finally in 1442 by the conquest led by Alfonso V.

The King's possessions outside of the Iberian Peninsula and Balearic Islands were ruled by proxy through local elites as petty kingdoms, rather than subjected directly to a centralised government. They were more an economic part of the Crown of Aragon than a political one.

The fact that the King was keen on settling new kingdoms instead of merely expanding the existing kingdoms was a part of a power struggle that pitted the interests of the king against those of the existing nobility. This process was also under way in most of the European states that successfully effected the transition to the Early Modern state. Thus, the new territories gained from the Moors—namely Valencia and Majorca—were given furs as an instrument of self-government in order to limit the power of nobility in these new acquisitions and, at the same time, increase their allegiance to the monarchy itself. The trend in the neighbouring kingdom of Castile was quite similar, both kingdoms giving impetus to the Reconquista by granting different grades of self-government either to cities or territories, instead of placing the new territories under the direct rule of nobility.

Personal union with Castile

In 1410, King Martin I died without living descendants or heirs. As a result, on the Compromise of Caspe, representatives from each Iberian state of the Crown, the kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia and the Principality of Catalonia, chose Ferdinand of Antequera from the Castilian dynasty of Trastámara as king of the Crown of Aragon as Ferdinand I of Aragon.

Later, his grandson King Ferdinand II of Aragon recovered the northern Catalan counties—Roussillon and Cerdagne—which had been lost to France as well as the Kingdom of Navarre, which had recently joined the Crown of Aragon but had been lost after internal dynastic disputes.

In 1469, Ferdinand married Infanta Isabella of Castile, half-sister of King Henry IV of Castile, who became Queen of Castile and León after Henry's death in 1474. Their marriage was a dynastic union[22] [23] [24] which became the constituent event for the dawn of the Monarchy of Spain. At that point both the Castile and the states of the Crown of Aragon remained distinct polities, each keeping its own traditional institutions, parliaments and laws. The process of territorial consolidation was completed when their grandson King Charles I, known as Emperor Charles V, in 1516 ruled over all of the kingdoms on the Iberian peninsula, save the Kingdoms of Portugal and the Algarve, under one monarch—his co-monarch and mother Queen Joanna I in confinement—thereby furthering the creation of the Spanish monarchy, albeit a composite and decentralized one.

Dissolution

The literary evocation of past splendour recalls correctly the great age of the 13th and 14th centuries, when Majorca, Valencia and Sicily were conquered, the population growth could be handled without social conflict, and the urban prosperity, which peaked in 1345, created the institutional and cultural achievements of the Crown.[25]

The Aragonese crown's wealth and power stagnated and its authority was steadily transferred to the new Spanish crown settled in Castile after that date—the demographic growth was partially offset by the expulsion of the Jews from Spain (1492), Muslims (1502) and the expulsion of the Moriscos (1609). It was unable to prevent the separation of Sicily and Naples due to the establishment of the Council of Italy, the loss of Roussillon in 1659 after the Reapers' War in the Principality of Catalonia, the loss of Minorca and its Italian domains in 1707–1716, and the imposition of French language on Roussillon (1700) and Castilian as the language of government in all the old Aragonese Crown lands in Spain (1707–1716).

The Crown of Aragon and its institutions and public law were abolished between 1707 and 1716 only after the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714) by the Nueva Planta decrees, issued by Philip V of Spain. The original political structure was swept away, the administration was subsumed into the Castilian laws, the states of the Crown of Aragon loss their status of separate entitites and were united formally with those of Castile to legally form a single state, the Kingdom of Spain, as it moved towards an absolutist centralized government under the new Bourbon dynasty.[26]

Nationalist revisionism

Some of the nationalist movements in Spain consider the former kingdoms of the Crown of Aragon to be the foundation of their nations, the Catalan nationalist movement being the most prominent. Spanish nationalism, on the other hand, tends to place more importance on the later dynastic union with the Crown of Castile, considering it the origin of one Spanish nation.

The reprisals inflicted on the territories that had fought against Philip V in the War of Succession is given by some Valencian nationalists and Catalan nationalists as an argument against the centralism of Spanish nationalism and in favor of federalism, confederation, or even independence. Some Catalans associated their ancient political status with their Generalitat and resistance to Castile.[27] Because restoration of fueros was one of its tenets, Carlism won support in the lands of the Crown of Aragon during the 19th century.

The Romanticism of the 19th century Catalan Renaixença movement evoked a "Pyrenean realm" that corresponded more to the vision of 13th century troubadours than to the historical reality of the Crown.[27] This vision survives today as "a nostalgic programme of politicised culture".[27] Thus, the history of the Crown of Aragon remains a politically loaded topic in modern Spain,[28] especially when it comes to asserting the level of independence enjoyed by constituents of the Crown, like the Principality of Catalonia, which is sometimes used to justify the level of autonomy (or independence) that should be enjoyed by contemporary Catalonia and other territories.

Pennon

See main article: article and Coat of arms of the Crown of Aragon.

The origin of Coat of arms of the Crown of Aragon is the familiar coat of the Counts of Barcelona and Kings of Aragon.[29] The Pennon was used exclusively by the monarchs of the Crown and was expressive of their sovereignty.[30] James III of Majorca, vassal of the Crown of Aragon, used a coat of arms with four bars, as seen on the Leges palatinae miniatures.

Institutions

As separate states united to the Crown under the aeque principaliter principle, Aragon, Catalonia and Valencia each had a legislative body, known as the Cortes in the Kingdom of Aragon (the Courts of Aragon) or Corts in the Principality of Catalonia (the Catalan Courts) and the Kingdom of Valencia (the Valencian Courts). A Diputación del General or Diputació del General was established in each, becoming known as a Generalidad in Aragon and Generalitat in Catalonia and Valencia.

From the 15th century onwards, every realm of the Crown was granted its own court of justice in the form of Royal Audience, resulting from the division of the Royal Court and the establishment of the Council of Aragon in its place. After the dynastic union with Castile and the establishment of the monarchs in that realm, the king began to be permanently represented in the realms of the Crown of Aragon by viceroys, one for each state, including Mallorca and Sardinia.

Capital

The house of the Crown was the Cathedral of the Savior of Zaragoza from Peter II (12th century).[31] [32] The General Courts of the Crown (the simultaneous meeting of the Courts of Catalonia, Aragon and Valencia) used to gather at Monzón (13th to 16th centuries), the remaining meetings took place at Fraga, Zaragoza, Calatayud and Tarazona. The councillor headquarters were located at Barcelona (13th to 16th centuries) and Naples during the kingdom of Alfonso V.[33]

On the other hand, the General Archive of the Crown of Aragon, which was the official repository of royal documentation of the Crown since the reign of Alfonso II (12th century), was located in the Monastery of Santa María de Sigena until the year 1301 and then moved to Barcelona.[34] [35]

In the early 15th century, the de facto capital was Valencia until Alfonso V came to the throne.During the 15th and the 16th centuries, the Crown's de facto capital was Naples. After Alfonso V of Aragon, Ferdinand II of Aragon settled the capital in Naples. Alfonso, in particular, wanted to transform Naples into a real Mediterranean capital and lavished huge sums to embellish it further.[36] Later the courts were itinerant[37] until Philip II of Spain. The Spanish historian Domingo Buesa Conde has argued that Zaragoza ought to be considered the permanent political capital, but not the economic or administrative capital, owing to the obligation for kings to be crowned at the Cathedral of the Savior of Zaragoza.[38]

Culture

During the Crown of Aragon, the Catalan culture and language underwent a vigorous expansion.[39] During the period of trade, Occitan-Catalan contributions to Maltese occurred.[40]

King Fernando II and Queen Isabella, as the Catholic Monarchs who began the Inquisition, were contrary to the more plural development that preceded in the Crown of Aragon. The previous religious background was described as "longstanding tradition of Mudejarism, the royal sanctioning and protection of subject Muslim populations within Christian realms."[41] Aesthetic Mudéjar architecture of Aragon has been observed as demonstrating the influence of Andalusian and Arab culture in Aragon proper. Gothic architecture was also developed.[42] The Mediterranean Lingua Franca was a mixed language used widely for commerce and diplomacy and was also current among slaves of the bagnio, Barbary pirates and European renegades in precolonial Algiers. Among the speakers who created the language, also called Sabir, were Muslims from Aragon called "Tagarins" (a term mentioned by Miguel Cervantes).[43] Historically, the first to use it were the Genoese and Venetian trading colonies in the eastern Mediterranean after the year 1000.The similarities contribute to discussions of the classification of the Mediterranean Lingua Franca as a language. Although its official classification is that of a pidgin, some scholars adamantly oppose that classification and believe it would be better viewed as an interlanguage of Italian.

Linguist Steven Dworkin hypothesized that Catalan was the point of entry for Mediterranean Lingua Franca terms into Spain, arguably the source of several Italian and Arabic loanwords in Spanish, citing the DCECH.[44]

Composition

The crown was made up of the following territories (which are nowadays parts of the modern countries of Spain, France, Italy, Greece, Malta, and Andorra).

Sort by "Earliest annexion" to see the states in the chronological order they were joined to the crown.

NameType of entityNotesEarliest annexion
AndorraCo-principalityBriefly annexed by Aragon in 1396 and again in 1512 1396
AragonKingdomJoined with the County of Barcelona in 1162 to form the Crown 1162
AthensDuchyInherited through the Kingdom of Sicily in 1381; lost in 1388 1381
Catalonia, originally BarcelonaPrincipality, originally a county1162
GévaudanCountyInherited in 1166 by Alfonso II; lost in 1307 1166
MajorcaKingdomEstablished in 1231 by James I, including Roussillon and Montpellier, as part of the Crown 1231
NaplesKingdom1442
NeopatriaDuchyInherited through the Kingdom of Sicily in 1381; lost in 1390 1381
ProvenceCountyInherited with the county of Barcelona in 1162 1162
Sardinia and CorsicaKingdomIn 1297 Pope Boniface VIII created ex novo this kingdom[45] and entrusted it in fiefdom to the Aragonese King James II, ignoring the already existing, indigenous states. The Corsica was never conquered durably. The kingdom was lost in 1714. 1324
SicilyKingdomInherited through Constance II of Sicily, lost in 1713.[46] 1282
ValenciaKingdom1238

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Fernández Albaladejo, Pablo (2001). Los Borbones: dinastía y memoria de nación en la España del siglo XVIII.... Marcial Pons Historia.
  2. Disputed due to the War of the Spanish Succession.
  3. Book: Jimeno Aranguren, Roldan; Lopez-Mugartza Iriarte, J. C. . 2004 . Vascuence y Romance: Ebro-Garona, Un Espacio de Comunicación . Gobierno de Navarra / Nafarroako Gobernua . Pamplona . 84-235-2506-6 . 250–255.
  4. Book: Collins, Wallace B. . Orientation: A Journey: Trip Through Europe Asia And Africa. 2004. 9780595310630. 428. University of Pittsburgh Press.
  5. Book: Reilly . Bernard F. . The Medieval Spains . 1993 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521397414 . 139 . 11 October 2019 . The new kingdom of Castile had roughly tripled in size to some 335,000 square kilometres by 1300 but, at the same time, its population had increased by the same factor, from one to three millions [...] In the new Crown of Aragon of 120,000 square kilometres the population density would have been about the same for its numbers reached about 1,000,000 in the same period. . en . 29 March 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240329122749/https://books.google.com/books?id=NdJjn1HpSy4C&pg=PA139#v=onepage&q&f=false . live .
  6. Aragonese: Corona d'Aragón pronounced as /an/;
    Catalan; Valencian: Corona d'Aragó, pronounced as /ca/;
    Spanish; Castilian: Corona de Aragón pronounced as /es/;
    Latin: Corona Aragonum pronounced as /la/.
  7. Book: Ryder, Alan . The Wreck of Catalonia. Civil War in the Fifteenth Century. 2007. v. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-920736-7. This group of states comprised the kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia, and Majorca, the principality of Catalonia, and the counties of Roussillon and Cerdagne; further afield it embraced the kingdoms of Sicily and Sardinia. These states had no common institutions or bonds save allegiance to a common sovereign.
  8. Kamen, Henry (2002). Empire: how Spain became a world power, 1492–1762, 20.
  9. Book: Buffery, Helena . Elisenda Marcer. Historical Dictionary of the Catalans. 18 December 2010. Scarecrow Press. 978-0-8108-7514-2. 106.
  10. Book: Elliott, John. Imperial Spain. 25 July 2002. Penguin. 978-0141007038. 30 December 2017. 29 March 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240329122742/https://books.google.com/books?id=0DoY6VKNSC0C&pg=PT33#v=onepage&q&f=false. live.
  11. Lozoya, Marqués de (1952). Historia de España, Salvat, vol. II page 60: "El Reino de Aragon, el Principado de Cataluña, el Reino de Valencia y el Reino de Mallorca, constituyen una confederación de Estados".
  12. Bisson, Thomas N. (1986). The Medieval Crown of Aragon: a short history, chapter II. The age of the Early Count-Kings (1137–1213) (The Principate of Ramon Berenguer IV 1137–1162), p. 31.
  13. Web site: Els impostos indirectes en el regne de Mallorca. . Cateura Benàsser, Pau . 2008-04-24 . https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20081003182453/http://libro.uca.edu/aarhms/newsletters/aahrmsfall07text.pdf . 3 October 2008 . dead . El Tall dels Temps, 14. (Palma de) Mallorca: El Tall, 1996. . 127pp.
  14. Web site: Chapter Five. The Rise of Aragon-Catalonia. A History of Spain and Portugal. Payne, Stanley G.. 2008-07-02. Stanley G. Payne. 15 April 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120415194817/http://libro.uca.edu/payne1/payne5.htm. live.
  15. Bisson T. N. The age of the Early Count-Kings (1137–1213) (Dynastic Policy 1162–1213), chapter II, p. 36.
  16. Web site: Chapter 6, James the Conqueror. A History of Aragon and Catalonia. Chaytor, H. J.. 2008-04-25. 6 April 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120406065117/http://libro.uca.edu/chaytor/hac6.htm. live.
  17. Bisson 1986:67
  18. Bisson 1986:87–88
  19. Book: A History of Aragon and Catalonia. 7, Pedro III. http://libro.uca.edu/chaytor/hac7.htm. Chaytor, H. J.. 2008-05-03. 4 February 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120204144658/http://libro.uca.edu/chaytor/hac7.htm. live.
  20. Not to be confused with James II of Majorca
  21. The Giudicati, the city of Sassari, and the Genoese and Pisan local possessions.
  22. Web site: Chapter Nine, The United Spanish Monarchy. A History of Spain and Portugal. Payne, Stanley G.. 2008-04-17. Stanley G. Payne. 8 February 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120208075612/http://libro.uca.edu/payne1/payne9.htm. live.
  23. Web site: Juan II. Union of Aragon with Castile. A History of Aragon and Catalonia. Chaytor, H. J.. 2008-04-17. 6 April 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120406064746/http://libro.uca.edu/chaytor/hac16.htm. live.
  24. Web site: Chapter 3, The Making of Spain. An historical essay on modern Spain. Herr, Richard. 2008-04-17. 8 February 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120208075820/http://libro.uca.edu/herr/ms03.htm. live.
  25. Bisson, T. N. "Epilogue", pp. 188–189.
  26. Bisson, T. N. "Epilogue", p. 189.
  27. Bisson, T. N. "Epilogue", p. 188.
  28. Web site: La web de la Generalitat rebautiza la Corona de Aragón como "nación catalana independiente. 30 November 2012. es. 15 September 2013. 16 November 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131116204708/http://www.heraldo.es/noticias/aragon/2012/11/29/la_web_generalitat_rebautiza_corona_aragon_como_quot_nacion_catalana_independiente_quot_213297_300.html?. live.
  29. Jéquier, Léon (1981). Actes du II Colloque international d'héraldique. Breassone. Académie internationale d'héraldique. Les Origines des armoiries. Paris. .
  30. Web site: La bandera de Aragón . Autonomous Government of Aragon . 6 March 1997 . 2008-04-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080107013054/http://www.aragob.es/pre/cido/bandera.htm . 7 January 2008 . Page on the official flag of Aragon and the origin of the "palos de gules" or "barras de Aragón"
  31. Web site: Coronación real.. Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa. 27 December 2017. 19 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160919085858/http://www.enciclopedia-aragonesa.com/voz.asp?voz_id=4287. dead.
  32. Book: Español . Francesca . Hagiografia peninsular en els segles medievals . ca . Universitat de Lleida . 2008 . 180 . Universitat de Lleida . 978-8484093572 . 10 November 2020 . 29 March 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240329122751/https://books.google.com/books?id=mA__E1IntW0C&q=saragossa&pg=PA1#v=snippet&q=saragossa&f=false . live .
  33. Book: Actes del cinquè Col·loqui Internacional de Llengua i Literatura Catalanes: Andorra, 1–6 d'octubre de 1979. 1980. Publicacions de l'Abadia de Montserrat. Bruguera, J. (Jordi); Massot i Muntaner, Josep. 8472024091. Montserrat. 189. ca. 8347469.
  34. Cancillería real aragonesa . Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa . Zaragoza . El Periódico de Aragón . 27 December 2017 . 4 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304195549/http://www.enciclopedia-aragonesa.com/voz.asp?voz_id=3019 . dead .
  35. Book: Qué es el Archivo de la Corona de Aragón? . Rodríguez, Carlos López . Mira Editores . 978-84-8465-220-5 . April 2007 . 32–33, 35–38, 41. Mira Editores .
  36. History books (Donzelli), Medieval Historic, Rome 1998,
  37. Web site: Felipe II, the King that defended Majorca but didn't want to recognize all its privileges. A team of investigators of the UIB directed by Doctor Josep Juan Vidal. Servei de Comunicacions de la UIB. 2008-04-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080529123503/http://www.uib.es/servei/comunicacio/sc/projectes/arxiu/nousprojectes/FelipII/FelipIIcast.pdf . 29 May 2008. es.
  38. Domingo J. Buesa Conde, in El rey de Aragón (Zaragoza, CAI, 2000:57–59.) postulates that the Crown of Aragon's political capital of Zaragoza though it was not the economic or the administrative one since the court was itinerative in the 14th century and took its start from the decrees of Peter IV of Aragon establishing his coronation there: "Pedro IV parte (...) de la aceptación de la capital del Ebro como 'cabeza del Reino'. [...] por eso hizo saber a sus súbditos que 'Mandamos que este sacrosanto sacramento de la unción sea recibido de manos del metropolitano en la ciudad de Zaragoza' al tiempo que recordaba: "... y como quiera que los reyes de Aragón están obligados a recibir la unción en la ciudad de Zaragoza, que es la cabeza del Reino de Aragón, el cual reino es nuestra principal designación—esto es, apellido—y título, consideramos conveniente y razonable que, del mismo modo, en ella reciban los reyes de Aragón el honor de la coronación y las demás insignias reales, igual que vimos a los emperadores recibir la corona en la ciudad de Roma, cabeza de su imperio. Zaragoza, antigua capital del reino de Aragón, se ha convertido en la capital política de la Corona (...)".
  39. Book: Ferrando, Antoni . Manual of Catalan Linguistics . https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110450408-018/html . 11. The Growth and Expansion of Catalan (1213–1516) . 2020-04-06 . 471–484 . De Gruyter . 978-3-11-045040-8 . en . 10.1515/9783110450408-018 . 216504074 . 2 April 2022 . 2 April 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220402080149/https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110450408-018/html . live .
  40. Book: Biosca . Carles . Aspects of the comparison between Maltese, Mediterranean Lingua Franca and the Occitan-Catalan linguistic group (13th–15th centuries) . Castellanos . Carles . 2017-09-25 . De Gruyter Mouton . 978-3-11-056574-4 . en . 10.1515/9783110565744-003 . 2 April 2022 . 2 April 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220402080243/https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110565744-003/html . live .
  41. Web site: The Muslims of Valencia . 2022-04-02 . publishing.cdlib.org . 2 September 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220902041510/https://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft2q2nb14x&chunk.id=d0e256&toc.id=d0e256&brand=ucpress . live .
  42. Web site: Gothic Architecture in Spain: Invention and Imitation . 2022-04-02 . The Courtauld . en-US . 2 April 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220402081743/https://courtauld.ac.uk/research/research-resources/publications/courtauld-books-online/gothic-architecture-in-spain-invention-and-imitation/1-gothic-architecture-in-spain-invention-and-imitation-tom-nickson/ . live .
  43. Book: Cifoletti, Guido . Migrating Words, Migrating Merchants, Migrating Law . https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004416642/BP000006.xml . Lingua Franca and Migrations . 2019-11-07 . 84–92 . Brill Nijhoff . 978-90-04-41664-2 . en . 10.1163/9789004416642_006 . 214457931 . 2 April 2022 . 2 April 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220402083746/https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004416642/BP000006.xml . live .
  44. Book: Dworkin, Steven N. . A History of the Spanish Lexicon: A Linguistic Perspective . 2012-06-07 . OUP Oxford . 978-0-19-954114-0 . en . 2 April 2022 . 29 March 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240329122744/https://books.google.com/books?id=V4f8ZpJAhgIC&pg=PA193#v=onepage&q&f=false . live .
  45. Formally including Corsica, which was never conquered or controlled by the Aragonese or the Spanish.
  46. Including Malta. In 1530 Emperor Charles V gave the islands to the Knights Hospitaller under the leadership of Philippe de Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, Grand Master of the Order, in perpetual lease for which they had to pay the Tribute of the Maltese Falcon. These knights, a military religious order now known as the Knights of Malta, had been driven out of Rhodes by the Ottoman Empire in 1522.