Eleanor of Aragon | |
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Queen consort of Portugal | |
Tenure | 14 August 1433 – 9 September 1438 |
Coronation | 15 August 1433 |
Born |
Medina del Campo |
2 May 1402
Died | 19 February 1445 Toledo |
(aged 42)
Burial | Batalha Monastery |
Spouse | Edward of Portugal |
Issue | Infante John Infanta Philippa Afonso V of Portugal Infanta Maria Infante Ferdinand, Duke of Viseu Eleanor, Holy Roman Empress Infante Edward Infanta Catherine Joan, Queen of Castile |
House | House of Trastamara |
Father | Ferdinand I of Aragon |
Mother | Eleanor of Alburquerque |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Eleanor of Aragon (2 May 1402 – 19 February 1445) was queen consort of Portugal as the spouse of Edward I of Portugal and the regent of Portugal as the guardian of her son. She was the daughter of Ferdinand I of Aragon and Eleanor of Alburquerque.
Eleanor's father died when she was 14 years old. Her mother eventually arranged her marriage to the future King Edward of Portugal, which happened on 22 September 1428. They had nine children, of whom five survived to adulthood. None of them lived past age 50. In 1433, she became Queen of Portugal on the same day her eldest child died. As queen she was not active politically and quickly became unpopular.
When her husband died on 9 September 1438, she was appointed regent of Portugal in his will, which was confirmed by the Portuguese Cortes. However, she was inexperienced, in poor health and, as an Aragonese, unpopular with the people, who preferred the late king's brother Infante Peter, Duke of Coimbra. The confirmation of her regency therefore caused a riot in Lisbon. The riot was suppressed by her brother Count John of Barcelona, later King John II of Aragon. Eleanor was supported by the nobility and the will, while Peter was supported by a fraction of the nobility and by the people. Negotiations for a compromise arrangement were drawn out over several months, but were complicated by the interference of the Count of Barcelos, who supported her, and the Archbishop of Lisbon, who supported Peter. This period also witnessed the birth to her of a posthumous daughter, Joan in March 1439 and the death of her eldest daughter, Philippa from tuberculosis.
Eventually, the Cortes appointed Peter the sole regent. Eleanor continued conspiring, but fell seriously ill and was forced to go into exile in Castile in December 1440. She died at Toledo after a prolonged respiratory illness in February 1445 and is buried in Batalha, Portugal.