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Peter I (Portuguese: Pedro I, IPA: [ˈpeðɾu]; 8 April 1320 – 18 January 1367), known as the Just (o Justiceiro) or the Cruel (o Cruel), was King of Portugal from 1357 until his death.[1]

Peter I
Recumbent effigy on the tomb of King Peter I (c. 1360), Alcobaça Monastery
King of Portugal
Reign28 May 1357 – 18 January 1367
PredecessorAfonso IV
SuccessorFerdinand I
Born(1320-04-08)8 April 1320
Coimbra, Portugal
Died18 January 1367(1367-01-18) (aged 46)
Estremoz, Portugal
Burial
Spouses
(m. 1340; died 1349)
(m. 1354; died 1355)
Issue
among others...
HouseBurgundy
FatherAfonso IV of Portugal
MotherBeatrice of Castile

Early life

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Born on 8 April 1320 in Coimbra, Peter was the fifth child of Afonso of Portugal and his wife, Beatrice of Castile. Of his six siblings, only two – his sisters Maria and Eleonor – survived infancy.[2]

At six years old, shortly after his father ascended the crown, Peter was granted a retinue of six people, including his butler and tutor Lopo Fernandes Pacheco.[3]

First betrothal

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In October 1327, the marriage contracts of Peter and Blanche of Castile, granddaughter of Sancho IV of Castile, and Peter's sister Maria and the future Alfonso XI of Castile were negotiated.[4][5] Since both Peter and Blanche were minors, the marriage had to wait. Blanche was taken to be raised in Portugal until she was of age for marriage,[6] where she remained for eight years.[3] According to the Chronicle of Pedro I of Portugal by Fernão Lopes, during her stay, she began to show signs of illness and "defects of judgement" which made her unsuitable for marriage and for procreation. She was examined by physicians, including those sent by Alfonso XI, who confirmed her weak mental health and incapacity,[7] and, because of "Infante Pedro's refusal and the evident mental disorder of doña Blanca" the proposed marriage never took place.[8][9][10][11]

Marriage

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In 1328, Peter's eldest sister, Maria, was married to Alfonso XI of Castile. However, soon after their marriage Alfonso began a long affair with the beautiful and newly widowed Leonor de Guzman. Maria bore Alfonso a son in 1334, who ultimately became Peter of Castile, but after the Castilian king refused to end his affair, Maria returned home to Portugal in 1335.

Alfonso had been married once before, to his cousin's daughter, Constanza Manuel (granddaughter of James II of Aragon). Alfonso had the marriage annulled in 1327, after only two years, to clear the way for marriage to Maria. This angered his cousin Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena, a powerful Castilian aristocrat, and for two years Juan Manuel waged war against the Castilians – who had kept his daughter Constanza hostage – until Bishop John del Campo of Oviedo mediated a peace in 1329.

Afonso, now enraged by the infidelity and mistreatment of his daughter Maria, forged an alliance with Juan Manual by marrying his son and heir, Peter, to Constanza.[12] When Constanza arrived in Portugal in 1340, Inês de Castro, the beautiful and aristocratic daughter of a prominent Galician family (with links albeit through illegitimacy, to the Portuguese and Castilian royal families), accompanied her as her lady-in-waiting.

Affair

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Peter soon fell in love with Inês, and the two conducted a long love affair that lasted until Inês's murder in 1355. Constanza died in 1349, following childbirth complications. The scandal of Peter's affair with Inês, and its political ramifications, caused Afonso to banish Inês from court after Constanza died. Peter refused to marry any of the princesses his father suggested as a second wife; and the king refused to allow his son to marry Inês as Peter wanted. The two aristocratic lovers began living together in secret. According to the chronicle of Fernão Lopes, during this period, Peter began giving Inês's brothers, exiled from the Castilian court, important positions in Portugal and they became the heir-apparent's closest advisors. This alarmed Afonso. He worried that upon his death, civil war could tear the country apart, or the Portuguese throne would fall into Castilian hands, either as Juan Manuel fought to avenge his daughter's honor, or the de Castro brothers supported their sister. Peter claimed that he had married Inês against his father's orders. In any event, in 1355, Afonso sent three men to find Inês at the Monastery of Santa Clara-a-Velha in Coimbra, where she was detained, and they decapitated her in front of one of her young children. Enraged, Peter revolted against his father.[13] Afonso defeated his son within a year, but died shortly thereafter, and Peter succeeded to the throne in 1357. The love affair and father-son conflict inspired more than twenty operas and many writers, including: the Portuguese national epic Os Lusíadas by Luís de Camões, the Spanish Nise lastimosa and Nise laureada (1577) by Jerónimo Bermúdez and Reinar despues de morir by Luís Vélez de Guevara, as well as Inez de Castro by Mary Russell Mitford and Henry de Montherlant's French drama La Reine morte.[14]

About the temperament of this sovereign, the chronicler Fernão Lopes dedicated a chapter entitled "How the King ordered his squire to be capped because he slept with a married woman", allowing us to glimpse that the gesture would have been motivated by jealousy of the monarch for his squire, named Afonso Madeira [pt].[15] Madeira is described as a great rider, hunter, fighter and agile acrobat, and records: "For his qualities, the King loved him very much and did him generous favors." The squire, however, fell in love with Catarina Tosse, wife of the Corregidor, described as "brave, mad and very elegant, of graceful gifts and good society". To get closer to her, Madeira befriended the Corregidor, seducing her and consummating the betrayal. The sovereign, however, discovered everything and did not forgive Madeira, punishing him brutally. The chronicler insists on the affection of the sovereign, stating enigmatically: "As much as the King loved the squire very much, more than should be said here (...)", but records that Peter I ordered "to cut off those limbs that men in greater esteem have". The squire received assistance and survived, but "thickened in legs and body and lived for a few years with a wrinkled face and no beard".[16][17]

According to the chronicle of Fernão Lopes, Peter I stuttered and had epileptic seizures.[18] It is also documented in this chronicle that the king had another passion besides Inês de Castro, in this case, for a squire named Afonso Madeira, who according to Fernão Lopes himself, "loved more than should be said here".[19]

Reign

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Peter reigned for a decade, and is often confused with his Castilian nephew because of their identical nicknames. Fernão Lopes labels Peter "the Just" and said that the Portuguese king loved justice—especially the dispensing of it, which he enjoyed doing for himself. Inês' assassins received his harshest punishment: the three had escaped to Castile, but Peter arranged for them to be exchanged for Castilian fugitives residing in Portugal with his nephew, Peter of Castile.[citation needed] The Portuguese king conducted a public trial of Pêro Coelho and Álvaro Gonçalves in 1361. After finding them guilty of Inês' murder, the king ripped their hearts out with his own hands, according to Lopes, because of what they had done to his own heart. Diogo Lopes Pacheco escaped and died in 1393.

According to legend, Peter later had Inês' body exhumed and placed upon a throne, dressed in rich robes and jewels, and required all of his vassals to kiss the hand of the deceased "queen". However, contemporary evidence that the event occurred is minimal; Peter did have Inês' body removed from her resting place in Coimbra and taken to Alcobaça where it was reburied in the royal monastery. Peter had two tombs constructed, one for each of them, so they would see each other when rising at the Last Judgment. The tombs show Peter and Inês facing each other, with the words "Até o fim do mundo..." ("Until the end of the world...") inscribed on the marble.

Peter was also the father of Ferdinand I of Portugal and John I of Portugal. John was the Master of the military order of Avis, and he would become the founder of the Avis dynasty after the 1383–85 Crisis.

Marriage and descendants

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Name Birth Death Notes
Constanza Manuel (c. 1318–1349; married on 24 August 1340)
Maria 6 April 1342[20] 1377[21] Marchioness of Tortosa by marriage to Infante Fernando of Aragon, Marquis of Tortosa.
Luís 1344 1344 Lived only eight days.[22]
Ferdinand 31 October 1345[22] 22 October 1383 Succeeded him as king of Portugal.
Daughter (possibly named Maria) 1349 1349 Died shortly after birth.[23]
Inês de Castro (c. 1325–1355; possibly married in 1354)
Afonso 1350 1350 Died shortly after his birth.[24]
John 1352[24] ca. 1396[25] Lord of Porto de Mós, Seia and Montelongo, also Duke of Valencia de Campos. Claimant to the throne during the 1383–85 Crisis.
Denis 1353[24] ca. 1403[26] Lord of Villar-Dompardo, Cifuentes, Escalona and Alvar de Tormes. Claimant to the throne during the 1383–85 Crisis.
Beatrice 1354[24] 1381 Countess of Alburquerque by marriage to Sancho of Castile, Count of Alburquerque.
Teresa Lourenço (c. 1330–?)
John 11 April 1357 14 August 1433 Natural son. Grand Master of the Order of Aviz. Succeeded his half-brother Ferdinand I after the 1383–85 Crisis as John I, 10th King of Portugal, the first of the House of Aviz.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ In order to have his issue with Inês legitimized, Peter claimed to have married her in 1354.

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Wheeler & Opello, Jr. 2010, p. 206.
  2. ^ Muxagata 2019, p. 10.
  3. ^ a b Muxagata 2019, p. 11.
  4. ^ Lopes 1735, pp. 408–409.
  5. ^ García Fernández 1998, pp. 172–173.
  6. ^ Mutgé i Vives 1997, p. 481.
  7. ^ Lopes 1735, p. 409.
  8. ^ García Fernández 1998, p. 173.
  9. ^ Rodrigues Oliveira 2010, p. 223.
  10. ^ Caetano de Souza 1735, pp. 379–380.
  11. ^ Mutgé i Vives 1997, p. 482.
  12. ^ McMurdo 1889, pp. 172–173.
  13. ^ McMurdo 1889, p. 193.
  14. ^ "La reine morte (TV Movie 2009)". IMDB.
  15. ^ Santos, Luciane dos (2011-10-25). SINGULARIDADES DIALÉTICAS DE EROS E TÂNATOS NO CONTO TEOREMA, DE HERBERTO HELDER. UNIVERSIDADE CESUMAR. ISBN 978-85-8084-055-1.
  16. ^ Matos, Luiz Paulo Labrego de (2017). "Justiça, moralidade e amor: aspectos do reinado de D. Pedro I de Portugal" (PDF). Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações - Rede Sirius. UERJ. Retrieved 2024-11-06.
  17. ^ Vieira, Joaquim (2019-11-07). História Libidinosa de Portugal (in Brazilian Portuguese). Leya. ISBN 978-989-660-712-8.
  18. ^ Gomes, Marleide da Mota; Chalub, Miguel (September 2007). "Epilepsia e comportamento peculiar de Dom Pedro I do Brasil e IV de Portugal". Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria (in Portuguese). 65: 710–715. doi:10.1590/S0004-282X2007000400033. ISSN 0004-282X. PMID 17876421.
  19. ^ "D. Pedro I: um Rei cruel, epilético, gago e bissexual | VortexMag". www.vortexmag.net (in European Portuguese). 2021-05-04. Retrieved 2024-11-06.
  20. ^ Rodrigues Oliveira 2010, p. 249.
  21. ^ La muerte en la Casa Real de Aragón (PDF) (in Spanish). Institución Fernando el Católico. 2018. p. 137. ISBN 978-84-991-1485-9.
  22. ^ a b Rodrigues Oliveira 2010, p. 250.
  23. ^ Rodrigues Oliveira 2010, p. 250 and 252.
  24. ^ a b c d Rodrigues Oliveira 2010, p. 262.
  25. ^ Romero Portilla 2002, p. 521.
  26. ^ Olivera Serrano 2005, p. 130.

Sources

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Peter I of Portugal
Cadet branch of the House of Capet
Born: 8 April 1320 Died: 18 January 1367
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Portugal
1357–1367
Succeeded by