Alfonso XI of Castile

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Coin of Alfonso XI, a cornado made of billon, dated ca. 1345.  Some 600 years later, about 1949, while digging a conduit near the site of Fort Harrod in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, an electrician unearthed this coin, alongside eleven others, all buried in a leather bag.  Spanish coinage was legal tender in the United States until 1857.  While such finds are somewhat rare in Kentucky, they are not extremely uncommon.  Historians believe that merchants from New Orleans traveled up the Kentucky River, and perhaps a local person or tradesman either buried the coins or simply lost them.
Coin of Alfonso XI, a cornado made of billon, dated ca. 1345. Some 600 years later, about 1949, while digging a conduit near the site of Fort Harrod in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, an electrician unearthed this coin, alongside eleven others, all buried in a leather bag. Spanish coinage was legal tender in the United States until 1857. While such finds are somewhat rare in Kentucky, they are not extremely uncommon. Historians believe that merchants from New Orleans traveled up the Kentucky River, and perhaps a local person or tradesman either buried the coins or simply lost them.
Status of Alfonso XI in Algeciras
Status of Alfonso XI in Algeciras

Alfonso XI of Castile (Salamanca, August 13, 1311 – Gibraltar, March 26/27, 1350) was the king of Castile and León, the son of Ferdinand IV of Castile and his wife Constance of Portugal.

He is variously known among Castillian kings as the Avenger or the Implacable, and as "He of Salado River." The first two names he earned by the ferocity with which he repressed the disorder of the nobles after a long minority; the third by his victory in the Battle of Rio Salado over the last formidable African invasion of Spain in 1340.

Alfonso XI never went to the insane lengths of his son Pedro of Castile, but he could be bloody in his methods. He killed for reasons of state without form of trial. He openly neglected his wife, Maria of Portugal, and had an ostentatious passion for Eleanor of Guzman, who bore him ten children. This set Peter an example which he failed to better. It may be that his early death, during the Great Plague of 1350, at the Siege of Gibraltar, only averted a desperate struggle with Peter, though it was a misfortune in that it removed a ruler of eminent capacity, who understood his subjects well enough not to go too far. He was the only European monarch to die during the Black Death.

[edit] Marriage and children

Alfonso XI first married Costanza Manuel of Castile on 1325, but divorced her two years later. His second marriage, on 1328, was to Maria of Portugal, daughter of Alfonso IV of Portugal. She was the mother of his son Pedro of Castile.

By his mistress, Eleanor of Guzman, he had ten children:


[edit] Reference

Preceded by
Ferdinand IV
King of Castile and León
1311–1350
Succeeded by
Peter I