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John I of Portugal

John I
Anoniem - Koning Johan I van Portugal (1450-1500) - Lissabon Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga 19-10-2010 16-12-61.jpg
Portrait painted c. 1435
King of Portugal and the Algarve
Reign 6 April 1385 – 14 August 1433
Acclamation 6 April 1385
Predecessor Ferdinand I
Successor Edward
Born (1358-04-11)11 April 1358
Lisbon, Portugal
Died 14 August 1433(1433-08-14) (aged 75)
Lisbon, Portugal
Burial Batalha Monastery
Spouse Philippa of Lancaster
Issue
among others...
House Aviz
Father Peter I of Portugal
Mother Teresa Lourenço
Religion Roman Catholicism

John I (Portuguese: João,[ʒuˈɐ̃w̃]; 11 April 1358 – 14 August 1433) was King of Portugal and the Algarve in 1385–1433. He was referred to as "the Good" (sometimes "the Great") or "of Happy Memory" in Portugal. More rarely, and especially in Spain, he was sometimes referred to as "the Bastard." He is recognized chiefly for his role in preserving the independence of the kingdom of Portugal from the kingdom of Castile. As part of his efforts to acquire Portuguese territories in Africa, he became the first king of Portugal to use the title "Lord of Ceuta."

John was born in Lisbon as the natural son of King Peter I of Portugal by a woman named Teresa, who, according to the royal chronicler Fernão Lopes, was a noble Galician. In the 18th century, António Caetano de Sousa found a 16th-century document in the archives of the Torre do Tombo in which she was named as Teresa Lourenço. In 1364, by request of Nuno Freire de Andrade, a Galician Grand Master of the Order of Christ, he was created Grand Master of the Order of Aviz.

On the death without a male heir of his half-brother, King Ferdinand I of Portugal, in October 1383, strenuous efforts were made to secure the succession for Princess Beatrice of Portugal, Ferdinand's only daughter. As heiress presumptive, Beatrice had married king John I of Castile, but popular sentiment was against an arrangement in which Portugal would have been virtually annexed by Castile. The 1383–1385 Crisis followed, a period of political anarchy, when no monarch ruled the country.


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