Urraca, the eldest surviving child of Alfonso …

Years: 1109 - 1109

Urraca, the eldest surviving child of Alfonso VI of León with his second wife Constance of Burgundy, as eldest legitimate child of her father had been heiress presumptive from her birth until 1107, when Alfonso recognized his illegitimate son Sancho as his heir.

Urraca had become heiress presumptive again after Sancho’s death the following year, when he was killed after the Battle of Uclés.

Urraca’s place in the line of succession makes her the focus of dynastic politics, and she had become a child bride at age eight to Raymond of Burgundy, a mercenary adventurer.

Author Bernard F. Reilly suggests that, rather than a betrothal, the eight-year-old Urraca had been fully wedded to Raymond of Burgundy, as he almost immediately appeared in protocol documents as Alfonso VI's son-in-law, a distinction that would not have been made without the marriage.

Reilly doubts that the marriage was consummated until Urraca was thirteen, as she was placed under the protective guardianship of a trusted magnate.

Her pregnancy and stillbirth at age fourteen suggest that the marriage had indeed been consummated when she was thirteen or fourteen years old.

Urraca's marriage to Raymond had been part of Alfonso VI's diplomatic strategy to attract cross-Pyrenees alliances, and in 1105 she had given birth to a son, who will become Alfonso VII.

However, after Raymond died in 1107, Urraca’s father had contracted with Alfonso I of Aragon, known as the Battler, for a dynastic marriage with Urraca, opening the opportunity for uniting León-Castile with Aragón.

Marriage negotiations are still underway when Alfonso VI dies at the end of June 1109 and Urraca becomes queen.

Many of Alfonso VI’s advisers and leading magnates in the kingdom had formed a “quiet opposition” to the marriage of the Queen to the King of Aragon.

According to Bernard F. Reilly, these magnates feared the influence the King of Aragon might attempt to wield over Urraca and over Leonese politics.

Urraca had protested against the marriage but honors her late father’s wishes (and the Royal Council's advice) and continues with the marriage negotiations, though she and her father’s closest advisers are growing weary of Alfonso I's demands.

Despite the advisers' initial opposition, the prospect of Count Henry of Portugal filling any power vacuum leads them to go ahead with the marriage.

As events unfold, these advisers will turn out to have underestimated Urraca's political prowess, and will later advise her to end the marriage.

The marriage of Urraca and Alfonso I almost immediately sparks rebellions in Galicia and scheming by her illegitimate half-sister Theresa and brother-in-law Henry, the Countess and Count of Portugal.

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