• Chronicle of Alfonso III (Latin: Chronica Adefonsi tertii regis) is a chronicle composed in the early tenth century on the order of King Alfonso III of...
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  • Thumbnail for Alfonso III of Asturias
    Alfonso III (c. 848 – 20 December 910), called the Great (Spanish: el Magno), was the king of León, Galicia and Asturias from 866 until his death. He...
    13 KB (1,599 words) - 16:42, 27 June 2024
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    ratify the decision of the Quinisext Council that clerical marriage was permissible: according to the Chronicle of Alfonso III, Fruela I of Asturias (757–68)...
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    prevent the succession of Alfonso II, the son and heir of Fruela I. Though the Chronicle of Alfonso III in both its extant versions makes Bermudo out to be...
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    dynasty of Pamplona, who thereafter assumed the throne. The historiography produced by and for the dynasty, such as the Chronicle of Alfonso III (late 9th...
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    accounts of the battle that have sometimes been trusted by historians, most notably the Chronicle of Alfonso III, written by Alfonso III of Asturias in...
    38 KB (4,722 words) - 23:15, 19 July 2024
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    Bardulia (category Historical geography of Spain)
    Similar passages recur in the texts of later chroniclers. There are two variants of the Chronicle of Alfonso III. Among the passages there are "Bardulies...
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    Huesca, and Toledo. According to the Chronicle of Alfonso III, Musa had placed his army at Monte Laturce, outside of Albelda, which he had recently fortified...
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    the son of Fafila. The Chronica Albeldense says that this Fafila was a dux of Gallaecia, who was killed by Wittiza. The Chronicle of Alfonso III identifies...
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  • Oppas (category Roman Catholic archbishops of Seville)
    has grown in legend. According to the Chronicle of Alfonso III written in the late ninth century, he was a son of Wittiza, though based on Wittiza's approximate...
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    Sepúlveda, Segovia (category Municipalities in the Province of Segovia)
    The town of Sepúlveda is first mentioned in the Chronicle of Alfonso III. They referred to their depopulation as a result of the raids of Alfonso I. In the...
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    was born there. The first recorded appearance of the toponym of Carranza is on the Chronicle of Alfonso III, dated in the 10th Century, where it appears...
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  • Thumbnail for Ramiro I of Asturias
    the Chronicle of Alfonso III, credited to Ramiro's grandson, the childless Alfonso II chose as his successor Ramiro, his distant kinsman and son of Alfonso's...
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  • the Chronicle of Alfonso III, forced the "Chaldaeans" (an artful expression for the Muslims[citation needed] ) to flee. After this, the Chronicle adds...
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    Kingdom of Asturias, predecessor of the Kingdom of León, as an empire (imperium) is in the Chronicle of Alfonso III (881), which says that King Silo (774–83)...
    91 KB (12,638 words) - 05:37, 22 July 2024
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    Wamba (king) (category Year of birth uncertain)
    The Chronicle of Alfonso III blames Wamba's successor Erwig for this; some modern commentators have blamed Julian of Toledo, who was made primate of the...
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    Alfonso III (4 November 1265 – 18 June 1291), called the Liberal (el Liberal) and the Free (also "the Frank", from el Franc), was king of Aragon and Valencia...
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  • Thumbnail for History of Toledo, Spain
    932 Abd-ar-Rahman III captured the city following an extensive siege. According to the Chronicle of Alfonso III, Musa ibn Musa of the Banu Qasi had,...
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  • Thumbnail for Fruela of Cantabria
    Rotensis and Sebastianense versions of the Chronicle of Alfonso III, Fruela accompanied his brother King Alfonso in the incursions against the Muslim...
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    was the son of Ferdinand of Trastámara and Eleanor of Alburquerque. Ferdinand was the brother of King Henry III of Castile, and Alfonso was betrothed...
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  • Munuza (category Kingdom of Asturias)
    Kazim, kidnapped and married her. The chronicle of Alfonso III speaks of a "compulsory marriage", the failure of which compelled Pelayo into rebellion...
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    March, initiating a decade-long eclipse of the Banu Qasi. The Chronicle of Alfonso III relates how, in an unspecified year, Ordoño marched against the...
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    works of Isidore of Seville, Julian of Toledo, and the Vitas sanctorum patrum Emeritensium for the Visigothic period, the Chronicle of Alfonso III for the...
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    Roderic (category Umayyad conquest of Hispania)
    Chronicle of Alfonso III, Roderic was a son of Theodefred, himself a son of king Chindaswinth, and of a woman named Riccilo. Roderic's exact date of birth...
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    Universal dictionary of knowledge ... Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Retrieved 2014-01-21 – via Google Břker. This is the chronicle of Alfonso III of Asturias in which...
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    Asturias. As the Chronicle of Alfonso III identifies Pelagius as a grandson of Chindasuinth, this would make Afonso I the descendant of Liuvigild. Liuvigild...
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    Oviedo (redirect from History of Oviedo)
    or Alfonso II's contributions. The Chronicle of Alfonso III does not mention any buildings created by Alfonso III, neither does the Chronicle of Albelda...
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    Sancho Garcés III (año 1035). Madrid. Alfonso VII, King of León and Castile. Britannica. Glenn Edward Lipskey (1972). The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor:...
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    late-9th-century Chronicle of Alfonso III shows a clear hostility towards Oppa, bishop of Seville (or Toledo) and probably a brother of Wittiza, who appears...
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  • Thumbnail for Pope Callixtus III
    Pope Callixtus III (Italian: Callisto III, Valencian: Calixt III, Spanish: Calixto III; 31 December 1378 – 6 August 1458), born Alfonso de Borgia (Valencian:...
    19 KB (2,138 words) - 16:30, 12 June 2024