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Joanna La Beltraneja 

Joan of Castile
Queen consort of Portugal
and the Algarves
of either side of the sea in Africa
Consort 30 May 1475 - 1479
Consort to Alfonso V
Royal house House of Trastámara
Mother Joan of Portugal
Born 1462
Died 1530
Castilian and Leonese royalty
House of Trastámara

Henry II and I of Leon
Children include
   John I
   Eleanor, Queen of Navarre
John I
Children include
   Henry III of Castile and II of Leon)
   Ferdinand I of Aragon, Valencia and Sicily
Henry III and II of Leon
Children include
   John II
   Maria, Queen of Aragon, Valencia, Sicily and Naples
John II
Children include
   Henry IV of Castile and III of Leon
   Isabella I
   Alfonso, Prince of Asturias
Henry IV and III of Leon
Children
   Joan, Queen of Portugal
Isabella I with Ferdinand V
Children
   Isabella, Queen of Portugal
   Juan, Prince of Asturias
   Joanna I
   Maria, Queen of Portugal
   Catherine, Queen of England
Joanna

Juana of Castile, known also as la Beltraneja (14621530) was a princess of Castile.

Birth

Her birth caused a scandal in the Castilian court. Her mother was Joana, princess of Portugal, the consort queen of king Henry IV of Castile. The king had no other children from this or the previous marriage and rumour said he was impotent. Because of this and the fact that Joana of Portugal was having a notorious affair with Beltrán de La Cueva, a Castilian noble, Juana was never considered legitimate. Moreover, she was nicknamed the Beltraneja (a mocking reference to her assumed real father) from the cradle. Her mother was banished to Bishop Fonseca's castle where she fell in love with Fonseca's nephew and became pregnant. Henry divorced her.

Marriage

Legitimate or not, Joanna remained the only child that could be remotely attributed to Henry IV of Castile. He even made the nobles of Castile swear alliance to her and promise that they would support her as queen. After a few unsettled arrangements, that included French and Burgundian princes, Joanna was promised in marriage to her uncle, King Afonso V of Portugal, who swore to defend her (and his own) rights to the crown of Castile. But when Henry died in 1474, nobody took Juana's cause seriously and the crown went to Isabella I of Castile, her aunt, initiating a four-year War of the Castilian Succession.

On 30 May 1475, Afonso V married Joan in Plasencia and prepared for the fighting. In 1476 he invaded Castile, but was defeated in the battle of Toro by Ferdinand II of Aragon, Isabella of Castile's husband. After this, Afonso V tried to procure, without success, an alliance with Louis XI of France. In 1479, the king of Portugal gave up on the pretension and signed a treaty with the Catholic kings. Meanwhile their marriage had been annulled by Pope Sixtus IV on account of their family relation.

Death and legacy

Juana signed her letters until the day she died, "La Reina" meaning the queen. She thought that she had been cheated out of her inheritance and her aunt sent her to a convent. She died in Lisbon, having survived her aunt Isabella I. Joan's claim to the throne passed to her cousin, Queen Isabella I's daughter Joanna, who was already monarch of Castile.

A drama entitled "Juana la Beltraneja" has been published in Liceus El Portal de las Humanidades by the author Santiago Sevilla. Here the role of Juan Pacheco and Beltrán de la Cueva shows the pernicious influence of certain members of the nobility towards princess Juana.

Joanna La Beltraneja
Born: 1462 Died: 1530
Preceded by
Isabel of Coimbra
Queen Consort of Portugal
30 May 1475 - 1479
Succeeded by
Leonor of Viseu
Spanish royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Prince Henry
Princess of Asturias
1462-1464
Succeeded by
Infante Alfonso
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
Henry IV
— TITULAR —
 Queen of Castile
1474–1530
Reason for succession failure:
Joanna's aunt and uncle, Isabella I and Ferdinand V, were proclaimed co-monarchs.
Succeeded by
Joanna
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