Order of Saint James of the Sword Ordem de Sant'Iago da Espada |
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Badge, collar and star of the order
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Awarded by Portuguese Republic |
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Type | Order |
Motto | CIENCIAS, LETRAS, E ARTES |
Eligibility | Portuguese and foreigners; military and civilian |
Awarded for | Awarded for exceptional and outstanding merits in literature, science, and the arts |
Sovereign | President of the Portuguese Republic |
Grades | Grand Collar Grand Cross Grand Officer Commander Officer Knight |
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Established | 1172 (founded) 1789 (secularized) |
Precedence | |
Next (higher) | Order of Aviz |
Next (lower) | Order of Prince Henry |
Ribbon bar of the Order of Saint James of the Sword |
The Military Order of Saint James of the Sword (Portuguese: Ordem Militar de Sant'Iago da Espada) is a Portuguese order of chivalry.
The Order of Saint James was founded in León-Castile circa 1170. It was probably originally founded as an order of Augustinian canons regular to escort pilgrims to the shrine of St. James the Greater in Santiago of Compostella in Galicia. But King Ferdinand II of León soon set it to garrison the southern frontiers of León against the Almohads of al-Andalus. In 1170, Ferdinand II granted the new order the castles of Cáceres and Monfragüe, which had been confiscated from Gerald the Fearless in 1169, and would make further donations thereafter. The new Leonese order was soon operating in neighboring kingdoms. His nephew, King Alfonso VIII of Castile granted them the castles of Mora and Oreja in 1171, and merged the arriving knights of Santiago with the older Castilian brotherhood of knights of Ávila in 1172. In January 1174, Alfonso VIII granted them the citadel of Uclés, which would later serve as the headquarters of the Order of Santiago as a whole after the reunification of the León and Castile in 1230.