Claudio asks his sister, Isabella, to intercede on his behalf, but Angelo demands a higher price than she is prepared to pay. |
|
Isabella listened to the drone of his monotonous voice, and did as he said. |
|
Isabella retched up the meager contents of her stomach onto the ground and returned to the camp. |
|
Isabella had forced Lucio to promise that all of the jobs he did for their grandfather were legit and legal before she allowed him to do them. |
|
He renews his association with Catherine, to the dismay of her effete husband Edgar, but then elopes with Isabella, whom he maltreats. |
|
Isabella got the distinct impression that everyone was studying her very closely now. |
|
At the age of two he was betrothed to the three-year-old Catherine of Aragon, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. |
|
I even smiled at the sight of David and Isabella dancing and beaming mushily at each other. |
|
But Isabella was intuitively convinced of a distinct lack of life within the ancient stone edifice. |
|
Isabella stood in the doorway for a brief second, returning the loose strands of her hair to the chignon at the nape of her neck. |
|
George turned and smiled politely as he made a sharp right turn out of the subdivision, ramming Isabella into her husband. |
|
Her face crimsoning with fury, Isabella suddenly turned away from her friend and quickened her pace down the road. |
|
Both Isabella Rosellini and Marilyn Monroe began as models, she reminds me. |
|
They had drawn a hot bath for her and Isabella with scented oils and a variety of soaps that Maria could never had imagined. |
|
Unfortunately, when Isabella got her paper back, the errant apostrophe had been allowed to go uncorrected. |
|
The company started out at Isabella Court in Pickering and Phylward House in Harrogate. |
|
Isabella tilted her head again, in the same pose she had assumed when he first saw her. |
|
As Isabella shows him, however, neither domain is as unambiguous and unproblematic as he would like to believe. |
|
Against her shoulder she could feel Erik's hand groping blindly in the darkness for a sign of her or Isabella. |
|
Angelo proceeds Socratically with Isabella, teetering between forensic and deliberative styles. |
|
|
Isabella studied his quiet demeanor and honest profile for a few moments in silence. |
|
At the Milanese court, Leonardo witnessed the use of visual puns in heraldry for Ludovico Sforza, Beatrice d' Este, and her sister, Isabella. |
|
Isabella walked towards the elegant instrument and lifted the heavy wooden cover encasing the keys. |
|
Here, Lizzie pretends to be Isabella at an outrageously grandiose dress designer's studio. |
|
Sighing wearily, Isabella shifted her gaze to her mother with a wan smile on her lips. |
|
Isabella watched him curiously as she stood across from him, her pulse and heart racing. |
|
Isabella took a seat across from the girls' bunk beds on their small futon. |
|
We become, like Isabella, distorted by the stories we made up, warped by our own fictions. |
|
Isabella laughed as she sprayed on her perfume then looped her arm through mine. |
|
Isabella roused from sleep what seemed like an eternity later, disturbed by something she could not identify. |
|
Isabella is 70 if she is a day, stands about 4 foot 5 and is almost as broad as she is tall. |
|
Fellow high society matron Brooke Astor and actress Isabella Rossellini are also dachshund lovers. |
|
Soon, we finished eating and Halley took Isabella upstairs to change into her pajamas and brush her teeth as I cleaned up the kitchen. |
|
Isabella was there for five weeks and the doctors and nurses were fantastic with her. |
|
Isabella felt so blessed by God that she offered two novenas, three rosaries and gave more donations to the order she was part of. |
|
Isabella had given her aunt, mother, and sisters a full narration of her ordeal whilst she bathed. |
|
Isabella glanced at Audrey out of the corner of her eye, masking her surprise with a thin smile. |
|
Her dress caught on the door and with a strong pull, Isabella ripped the garment. |
|
Even his final offer of marriage to Isabella becomes a demonstration of brutal authority. |
|
Olivia gestured vaguely in the direction of the candy and Isabella took off, striding purposefully. |
|
|
After 1247, however, Henry began showering favours upon his half-brothers, the sons of his mother, Isabella of Angouleme. |
|
In an early big scene in that novel, Sir Arthur Wardour and his daughter Isabella are trapped between the onrushing tide and unscaleable cliffs. |
|
Isabella noticed that her own neckline was lower than Gillian's modest dress. |
|
The lady lived alone with her tiny Chihuahua, Claudette, and three statuesque Siamese cats, Araminta, Isabella, and Jasmine. |
|
The house was round the corner from Lady Isabella Finch's house, 44 Berkeley Square, which had recently been built by William Kent. |
|
Once the brook was in sight, Audrey and Isabella both found large boulders on the bank to sit themselves down on. |
|
Isabella Rossellini brings a wonderfully biting performance to the screen as the legless beer baron, her self-loathing and sensuality an intoxicating combination. |
|
In death as in life fashion editor and muse Isabella Blow continues to fascinate. |
|
Isabella stared up at him speechlessly, suddenly dumbstruck. |
|
He woos her with tales of his fraught relationship with Queen Isabella of Spain and his love of the open ocean. |
|
Cressida, 20 at the time, bagged the job through half-sister Isabella Calthorpe, who had a lead role, according to the paper. |
|
When he wiped a few invisible specks of dust from the cantle, Isabella knew he was simply stalling for words, turning the situation over in his mind. |
|
During the first years of her brother's reign, Isabella and her younger brother Alfonso, who was considered Henry's heir presumptive, lived with their mother away from Court. |
|
Shortly after his accession he solemnized his fateful marriage to Catherine, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain and widow of his brother Arthur. |
|
Ignoring the fretfulness in his voice, Isabella glared at him out of the corner of her eye and then turned away to dry the remainder of her tears. |
|
Isabella was fun-loving, cheerful, wilful, ill-educated and plump. |
|
Angelo, on the other hand, has fifty-six lines before he meets with Isabella which contain few rhetorical devices, in keeping with forensic speech. |
|
Stripping off her leather breeches and boots, and her tunic, Isabella slid into the sudsy, herbal scented water of the tub, submersing her body up to her chin. |
|
Isabella of Bavaria, remarkable for her gallantry, and the fairness of her complexion, introduced the fashion of leaving the shoulders and part of the neck uncovered. |
|
His sister, Isabella, a cloistered novitiate, petitions Angelo for mercy. |
|
|
King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella learned of the Genoese explorer's success not from his own pen, but from the mouth of Santangel. |
|
Her sisters are called Isabella Amaryllis Charlotte and Pandora Lorna Mary. |
|
The crowd included the family of Isabella Blow, Alexander McQueen's late muse, and Sarah Burton. |
|
The headstrong Queen Isabella and court camarilla were eager to revert to absolute government, impressed by the example set in France by Louis-Napoleon. |
|
In 1866 the country's first major winery was established at Canada's most southerly point by three gentlemen farmers from Kentucky who planted 20 acres of Isabella vines. |
|
It pleased Maria to see Isabella able to enjoy herself again. |
|
Meanwhile, John II of Aragon negotiated in secret with Isabella a wedding to his son Ferdinand. |
|
Hunt also painted many works based on poems, such as Isabella and The Lady of Shalott. |
|
The year 1492 also marked the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the New World, during a voyage funded by Isabella. |
|
Papal blessing was the hinge of Isabella and Ferdinand's consolidation of power at the close of the Reconquista. |
|
Also closely associated with the city is Victorian poet and novelist Isabella Banks, most famed for her 1876 novel The Manchester Man. |
|
Queen Isabella was already being called Santa Isabella by many of her subjects because she was liberal with her alms. |
|
As part of the truce, Richard agreed to marry Isabella, daughter of Charles VI of France, when she came of age. |
|
The epicenter was Boston in no small part due to Isabella Stewart Gardner, a pioneering collector of Asian art. |
|
Additionally, Prince Llywelyn arranged for his son Dafydd to marry Isabella de Braose, eldest daughter of William de Braose. |
|
Kate Salvidio, Allie Smiley and Isabella Van Atten also scored, while Brittany Boudreau and Delaney Nosel combined on the shutout. |
|
On 1 May 1486, permission having been granted, Columbus presented his plans to Queen Isabella, who, in turn, referred it to a committee. |
|
Isabella believed that the dispensation was authentic and the marriage went ahead. |
|
Harriet Beecher Stowe's sister Isabella Beecher Hooker was a leading member of the women's rights movement. |
|
I'd rather buy a Dior dress for Isabella or a Prada snowsuit for Jacob than a designer dress for myself. |
|
|
The Rev Richard Coley, 70, whose wife Isabella, 71, died in July in a suicide pact, was found dead at home on Friday. |
|
Isabella Rossellini stars as Mrs Kalman, a strict Hasidic Jew who hires young and carefree Chaja as a nanny. |
|
Tyler Vallance left 12-week-old Isabella with catastrophic brain injuries from which she never recovered. |
|
But they were unable to reach a verdict on whether the Redditch mum had caused or allowed the death of 12-week-old Isabella Vallance. |
|
He is also the owner of Isabella and Penelope, two excitable Portuguese water dogs. |
|
Charles's sister, Queen Isabella, was sent to negotiate and agreed a treaty that required Edward to pay homage in France to Charles. |
|
Though removed from power, Isabella was treated well, and lived in luxury for the next 27 years. |
|
Eight days later Richard's own nephew Henry II of Champagne was married to the widowed Isabella, although she was carrying Conrad's child. |
|
Isabella MacDuff, Countess of Buchan, who had crowned Bruce, was hung in a cage outside of Berwick Castle for four years. |
|
Edward was crowned at age fourteen after his father was deposed by his mother, Isabella of France, and her lover Roger Mortimer. |
|
While in France, however, Isabella conspired with the exiled Roger Mortimer to have Edward deposed. |
|
Edward's claim on the French throne was based on his descent from King Philip IV of France, through his mother Isabella. |
|
The last of the direct Capetians were the daughters of Philip IV's three sons, and Philip IV's daughter, Isabella. |
|
When Charles IV died in 1328, Isabella, unable to claim the French throne for herself, claimed it for her son. |
|
The French rejected the claim, maintaining that Isabella could not transmit a right that she did not possess. |
|
Both Isabella and Henry VII were keen on the idea, which had arisen very shortly after Arthur's death. |
|
Castile was already engaged in a race of exploration with Portugal to reach the Far East by sea when Columbus made his bold proposal to Isabella. |
|
This included construction of a new fort protecting the approaches to Saint Helier, Fort Isabella Bellissima, or Elizabeth Castle. |
|
On 10 March 1526, Charles married his first cousin Isabella of Portugal, sister of John III of Portugal, in Seville. |
|
Isabella Beeton in 1861 gives a recipe calling for rump steak and lamb's kidney. |
|
|
By 1630 he was described as the court painter of the Habsburg Governor of Flanders, the Archduchess Isabella. |
|
Keats befriended Isabella Jones in May 1817, while on holiday in the village of Bo Peep, near Hastings. |
|
Oldman then settled into a relationship with Italian actress and model Isabella Rossellini. |
|
In 1293, Countess Isabella de Fortibus, the last Redvers resident, sold the castle to Edward. |
|
After the death of her husband, Isabella lived with her children and her mother, Amice, at Burstwick in Holderness. |
|
It was read to the dying Isabella, who ordered her Lady of the Bedchamber to seal it. |
|
Isabella is also said to have gifted in perpetuity a water supply to the inhabitants of Tiverton, Devon. |
|
Ferdinand and Isabella were related and had married without papal approval. |
|
Although Isabella wanted to marry Ferdinand, she refused to proceed with the marriage until she received a Papal dispensation. |
|
A revolution in Spain overthrew Queen Isabella II, and the throne remained empty while Isabella lived in sumptuous exile in Paris. |
|
The court of Ferdinand and Isabella was constantly on the move, in order to bolster local support for the crown from local feudal lords. |
|
Isabella was named heir to the throne of Castile by her half brother Henry IV of Castile in the Treaty of the Bulls of Guisando. |
|
More recently, some speculate that Joanna was the legitimate successor, though Isabella was able to portray herself as such. |
|
Ferdinand and Isabella were noted for being the monarchs of the newly united Spain at the dawn of the modern era. |
|
Ferdinand and Isabella maintained accounts there, as did Christopher Columbus. |
|
Letters of complaint and pleas to intervene were exchanged between the Duke of Braganza and Queen Isabella I of Castile. |
|
The oldest daughter, Isabella of Aragon, had been married to Afonso, Prince of Portugal, since childhood. |
|
The marriage of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile in 1469 united the two royal lines. |
|
Santangel had been the person who made the case to, and persuaded, Queen Isabella to sponsor Columbus's voyage eight months earlier. |
|
The completion of the Reconquista was not the only significant act performed by Ferdinand and Isabella in that year. |
|
|
After Isabella I's death in 1504, her kingdom went to their daughter Joanna. |
|
Ferdinand and Isabella established a highly effective sovereignty under equal terms. |
|
During the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, Spain pursued alliances through marriage with Portugal, Habsburg Austria, and Burgundy. |
|
Alfonso was placed in the care of a tutor while Isabella became part of the Queen's household. |
|
As she had been named in her brother's will as his successor, the nobles asked Isabella to take his place as champion of the rebellion. |
|
However, support for the rebels had begun to wane, and Isabella preferred a negotiated settlement to continuing the war. |
|
A major part of the alliance was that a marriage was to be arranged between Charles and Isabella. |
|
Isabella had been intended for his favourite younger son, Ferdinand, and in his eyes this alliance was still valid. |
|
Isabella was aghast and prayed to God that the marriage would not come to pass. |
|
Isabella refused and made a secret promise to marry her cousin and very first betrothed, Ferdinand of Aragon. |
|
After this failed attempt, Henry once again went against his promises and tried to marry Isabella to Louis XI's brother Charles, Duke of Berry. |
|
In Henry's eyes, this alliance would cement the friendship of Castile and France as well as remove Isabella from Castilian affairs. |
|
He pricked a finger. Every rose has a thorn. Isabella is a rose. Her father is a thorn. |
|
Because her brother had named Isabella as his successor, when she ascended to the throne in 1474, there were already several plots against her. |
|
In August of the same year, Isabella proved her abilities as a powerful ruler on her own. |
|
A rebellion broke out in Segovia, and Isabella rode out to suppress it, as her husband Ferdinand was off fighting at the time. |
|
Going against the advice of her male advisors, Isabella rode by herself into the city to negotiate with the rebels. |
|
Isabella had proven herself to be a fighter and tough monarch from the start. |
|
When Isabella came to the throne in 1474, Castile was in a state of despair thanks to her brother Henry's reign. |
|
Because of this, Isabella needed desperately to find a way to reform her kingdom. |
|
|
In 1477, Isabella visited Extremadura and Andalusia to introduce this more efficient police force there as well. |
|
Keeping with her reformation of the regulation of laws, in 1481 Isabella charged two officials with restoring peace in Galicia. |
|
From the very beginning of her reign, Isabella fully grasped the importance of restoring the Crown's finances. |
|
This decision was warmly approved by many leading nobles of the court, but Isabella was reluctant to take such drastic measures. |
|
Both Isabella and Ferdinand established very few new governmental and administrative institutions in their respective kingdoms. |
|
In 1480, during the Cortes of Toledo, Isabella made many reforms to the Royal Council. |
|
As mentioned previously, Isabella had little care for personal bribes or favours. |
|
Isabella began to rely more on the professional administrators than ever before. |
|
Isabella also saw the need to provide a personal relationship between herself as the monarch and her subjects. |
|
At the end of the Reconquista, only Granada was left for Isabella and Ferdinand to conquer. |
|
On 2 January 1492 Isabella and Ferdinand entered Granada to receive the keys of the city and the principal mosque was reconsecrated as a church. |
|
In 1494, by the Treaty of Tordesillas, Isabella and Ferdinand agreed to divide the Earth, outside of Europe, with king John II of Portugal. |
|
Her daughter, Isabella of Aragon, died in childbirth whose son Miguel da Paz also died at the age of two. |
|
Isabella did, however, make successful dynastic matches for her three youngest daughters. |
|
Isabella maintained an austere, temperate lifestyle, and her religious spirit influenced her the most in life. |
|
In spite of her hostility towards the Muslims in Andalusia, Isabella developed a taste for Moorish decor and style. |
|
Isabella was the first woman to be featured on US postage stamps, namely on three stamps of the Columbian Issue, also in celebration of Columbus. |
|
This section of the main front altar of the church of Miraflores Charterhouse in Burgos portrays Isabella at prayer. |
|
Isabella commissioned it herself in honour of her parents, who are buried within the church. |
|
As soon as Cabral returned in 1501, Manuel announced the discovery of Brazil to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. |
|
|
His first wife was Isabella of Aragon, princess of Spain and widow of the previous Prince of Portugal Afonso. |
|
De la Cosa was arrested and incarcerated, liberated only with the help of Queen Isabella. |
|
Following their wedding, Charles and Isabella spent a long and happy honeymoon at the Alhambra in Granada. |
|
On 28 July 1854, the New Bedford ship Isabella reported as many as 94 ships in sight from her deck in Shantar Bay alone. |
|
In 1526, Charles married Infanta Isabella, the sister of John III of Portugal. |
|
The Spanish Empire had grown substantially since the days of Ferdinand and Isabella. |
|
It immediately occurred to him to sift her on the subject of Isabella and Theodore. |
|
A remark which Isabella received with a superb curl of the lip, but at the same time, and to her brother's infinite relief, she walked away. |
|
John married, around 9 February 1281, Isabella de Warenne, daughter of John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey. |
|
Isabella MacDuff, Countess of Buchan, who had crowned Bruce, was suspended in a cage outside of Berwick Castle for four years. |
|
At some point in early 1296, Robert married his first wife, Isabella of Mar, the daughter of Domhnall I, Earl of Mar and his wife Helen. |
|
In July 1498 the Spanish envoy Pedro de Ayala reported to Ferdinand and Isabella that. |
|
Her maternal aunts included Joan of England, Queen of Scotland, Isabella of England, and Joan, Lady of Wales. |
|
Edward returned to England in September, where diplomatic negotiations to finalise a date for his wedding to Isabella continued. |
|
Edward gave Isabella a psalter as a wedding gift, and her father gave her gifts worth over 21,000 livres and a fragment of the True Cross. |
|
Edward, Isabella and Gaveston left for Newcastle, pursued by Lancaster and his followers. |
|
The negotiations proved difficult, and they arrived at a settlement only after Isabella personally intervened with her brother, Charles. |
|
By February 1326, it was clear that Isabella was involved in a relationship with the exiled Marcher Lord, Roger Mortimer. |
|
Isabella and Mortimer turned to William, the Count of Hainaut, and proposed a marriage between Prince Edward and William's daughter, Philippa. |
|
Prince Edward and Philippa were betrothed on 27 August, and Isabella and Mortimer prepared for their campaign. |
|
|
The rule of Isabella and Mortimer did not last long after the announcement of Edward's death. |
|
Isabella and Mortimer both amassed, and spent, great wealth, and criticism of them mounted. |
|
The King spared Isabella, giving her a generous allowance, and she soon returned to public life. |
|
Edward's heart was removed, placed in a silver container, and later buried with Isabella at Newgate Church in London. |
|
He agreed to set aside his wife, Isabella of Gloucester, and marry Philip's sister, Alys, in exchange for Philip's support. |
|
After the early death of Isabella of Hainaut in childbirth in 1190, Philip decided to marry again. |
|
Isabella of France, sister of Charles IV, claimed the throne for her son, Edward III of England. |
|
Edward sent his wife Isabella, who was sister to the French king, to negotiate a settlement. |
|
From this point there is no further documented mention of Isabella Jones. |
|
In 1340, following the death of King Charles IV of France, Edward III asserted a claim to the French throne through his mother Isabella of France. |
|
Isabella often administered Spain while Charles was in other lands. |
|
In 1501, Gibraltar passed back to the Spanish Crown, and Isabella I of Castile issued a Royal Warrant granting Gibraltar the coat of arms that it still uses today. |
|
He lodged during term times at the house of his aunt Isabella. |
|
The risk of this invasion happening was considered high and plans for it were in fact included in the German preparations for the planned operations Isabella and Felix. |
|
After a week in Portugal, he set sail for Spain and on 15 March 1493 arrived in Barcelona, where he reported to Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand. |
|
Before Columbus even reached Isabella I of Castile, John II had already sent a letter to them threatening to send a fleet to claim it for Portugal. |
|
A probable marriage with Lady Isabella de Strathbogie, daughter of John, Earl Atholl produced a son, Alexander de Brus, who would later inherit his father's earldom. |
|
He was the son of Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland and of Marjorie Bruce, daughter of Robert the Bruce by his first wife Isabella of Mar. |
|
It was resolved by Robert giving his daughter Isabella in marriage to Douglas's son, James and with Douglas replacing Erskine as Justiciar south of the Forth. |
|
The Isabella goals were scored by Gippy Singh and Adam Bramley, with Stuart Gibbs, Dave Nichol, Brett Kennedy and Kevin Wheatley scoring for the Lodge. |
|
|
As William de Braose had no male heir, Llywelyn strategized that the vast de Braose holdings in south Wales would pass to the heir of Dafydd with Isabella. |
|
Henry, Isabella, Louis, Guala and William came to agreement on the final Treaty of Lambeth, also known as the Treaty of Kingston, on the 12 and 13 September. |
|
During the first year of her reign, Isabella established a monopoly over the royal mints and fixed a legal standard to which the coinage must approximate. |
|
Opposition to the regime grew, and when Isabella was sent to France to negotiate a peace treaty in 1325, she turned against Edward and refused to return. |
|
He died in the early hours of the morning on 21st September 1558, at the age of 58, holding in his hand the cross that his wife Isabella had been holding when she died. |
|
Before Christopher Columbus received support for his voyage from Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain, he had first approached King John II of Portugal. |
|
A fresh parliament was held in April, where the barons once again criticised Gaveston, demanding his exile, this time supported by Isabella and the French monarchy. |
|
The nobles desired for Charles to marry a princess of Spanish blood and a marriage to Isabella would secure an alliance between Spain and Portugal. |
|
Abandoning many of their belongings, the royal party fled by ship and landed at Scarborough, where Gaveston stayed while Edward and Isabella returned to York. |
|
Edward started with Bartholomew of Badlesmere, and Isabella was sent to Bartholomew's stronghold, Leeds Castle, to deliberately create a casus belli. |
|
Edward's illegitimate son, Adam, died during the campaign, and the raiding parties almost captured Isabella, who was staying at Tynemouth and was forced to flee by sea. |
|
He abandoned the idea of an English alliance, cancelled his engagement to Mary Tudor and decided to marry Isabella and form an alliance with Portugal. |
|
Edward now expected Isabella and their son to return to England, but instead she remained in France and showed no intention of making her way back. |
|
Along with big sis Isabella, 20, and 10 mates, the gang quaffed Crack Baby cocktails, five bottles of Cristal champers and two bottles of Grey Goose vodka. |
|
It is unclear when Isabella first met Mortimer or when their relationship began, but they both wanted to see Edward and the Despensers removed from power. |
|
Edward's opponents began to gather around Isabella and Mortimer in Paris, and Edward became increasingly anxious about the possibility that Mortimer might invade England. |
|
Isabella hoped by forcing the nobility to choose whether to participate or not would weed out those who were not dedicated to the state and its cause. |
|
Isabella and her brother Alfonso were left in King Henry's care. |
|
Isabella and Mortimer rapidly took revenge on the former regime. |
|
Even though living conditions were lackluster, under the careful eye of her mother, Isabella was instructed in lessons of practical piety and in a deep reverence for religion. |
|
|
Maurice continued sending secret offers to Isabella after Albert had died in July 1621, through the intermediary of the Flemish painter and diplomat Peter Paul Rubens. |
|
Therefore, Isabella and Ferdinand set aside a time every Friday during which they themselves would sit and allow people to come to them with complaints. |
|
Although Isabella made many reforms that seem to have made the Cortes stronger, in actuality the Cortes lost political power during the reigns of Isabella and Ferdinand. |
|
Nevertheless, in 1327, Edward was deposed by his wife Isabella. |
|
While Mary's grandparents, Ferdinand and Isabella, had retained sovereignty of their own realms during their marriage, there was no precedent to follow in England. |
|
Henry joined the revolt of Edward's wife Isabella of France and her lover Mortimer in 1326, pursuing and capturing Edward at Neath in South Wales. |
|
Soon after, in the late 15th century, in the dynastic conflict between Isabella I of Castile and Joanna La Beltraneja, part of the Galician aristocracy supported Joanna. |
|
Even by the standards of the time, Isabella was married whilst very young. |
|
Isabella I of Castile, considered a usurper by many Galician nobles, eradicated all armed resistance and definitively established the royal power of the Castilian monarchy. |
|
Philip's son by Isabella of Hainaut, Louis VIII, was his successor. |
|
A Pea in the Pod's shop in shop also highlights the best of British maternity design with exclusive product from Seraphine, Isabella Oliver, and Madderson London. |
|
More than a century later, Philip II of Spain attempted to claim the French crown for his daughter Isabella Clara Eugenia, born of his Valois queen. |
|
In England, Isabella of France claimed the throne on behalf of her son. |
|
The young Edward was accompanied by his mother Isabella, who was the sister of King Charles, and was meant to negotiate a peace treaty with the French. |
|
Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand responded by removing Columbus from power and replacing him with Francisco de Bobadilla, a member of the Order of Calatrava. |
|
King Ferdinand II of Aragon married Queen Isabella I of Castile in 1469, uniting the two largest kingdoms into what would later be the Spanish Crown. |
|
Before he left Spain on his second voyage, Columbus had been directed by Ferdinand and Isabella to maintain friendly, even loving, relations with the natives. |
|
Queen Isabella made a claim to throne of France on behalf of her son Edward on the grounds that he was a matrilineal grandson of Philip IV of France. |
|
In the Netherlands, the rule of Philip II's daughter, Isabella Clara Eugenia, and her husband, Archduke Albert, restored stability to the southern Netherlands. |
|
The death of Isabella of Aragon, created a necessity for Manuel I of Portugal to remarry and Isabella's third daughter, Maria of Aragon, became his next bride. |
|
|
Isabella and Amice together purchased the two thirds of the honour of Holderness that Isabella did not already hold, and they administered the area jointly for some years. |
|
In 1293 the king reopened negotiations to acquire Isabella's southern lands, and while travelling from Canterbury, Isabella was taken ill and stopped near Lambeth. |
|
Isabella officially withdrew from governmental affairs on September 14, 1504 and she died that same year on 26 November at the Medina del Campo Royal Palace. |
|
It lasted until 1479 when Isabella and her supporters came out victorious. |
|
In October 1469 Isabella I and Ferdinand II, heir to the throne of Aragon, married in secret in the Palacio de los Vivero in Castilian Valladolid. |
|
The royal crown had been either lost or sold during the civil war, so instead the ceremony used a simple gold corolla belonging to Queen Isabella. |
|
The popular historian Alison Weir believes the events in the letter to be essentially true, using the letter to argue that Isabella was innocent of murdering Edward. |
|
Isabella was also the first named woman to appear on a United States coin, an 1893 commemorative quarter, celebrating the 400th anniversary of Columbus's first voyage. |
|
Engraving of Isabella donating her jewels for Columbus' voyage. |
|
A coup by Edward III ended four years of control by Isabella and Mortimer. |
|
With the English heir in her power, Isabella refused to return to England unless Edward II dismissed his favourites, and she became the mistress of Roger Mortimer. |
|
Isabella and Ferdinand's tomb in La Capilla Real, in Granada. |
|
He then negotiated directly with King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain to move the line west, and allowing him to claim newly discovered lands east of it. |
|