220px royal arms of aragon (lozenge shaped and crowned).svg

The Great Peninsular Kingdoms (13th-15th centuries) Aragón

  • 1213

    Battle of Muret

    Battle of Muret
    Pedro II died because he was killed by the king of France
  • 1229

    James I conquers Mallorca

    James I conquers Mallorca
    James I the Conqueror gave up the territory of France and focus on the Mediterranean and the south
  • 1232

    James I begins the conquest of the Kingdom of Valencia

    James I begins the conquest of the Kingdom of Valencia
    In 1238, James I conquered Valencia and part of the provinces of Alicante, which was completely occupied by James II in the 14th century
  • 1235

    James I conquers Ibiza

     James I conquers Ibiza
    James I began the conquest of Mallorca and Ibiza
  • 1244

    Treaty of Almizra

    Treaty of Almizra
    The Castilian and Aragonese troops met in Murcia. Alfonso X of Castile and James I of Aragón signed the Treaty of Almizra, which meant that Murcia remained part of Castile.
  • 1282

    Peter the great occupies Sicily

    Peter the great occupies Sicily
    The Sicilians then sent an embassy to Pedro III offering him the Sicilian crown, to which he was entitled thanks to his marriage. The Aragonese king then put his fleet to Sicily, where he arrived on August 30, 1282 and was crowned king in the city of Palermo.
  • 1323

    James II conquers Corsica and Sardinia

    James II conquers Corsica and Sardinia
    His dominion over Sicily had been answered by the Papacy and the Anjou, so Jaime finally agreed to cede the island to the pope in exchange for the rights to Corsica and Sardinia and the cession of the island of Menorca to Jaime II of Mallorca, by the Treaty of Anagni (1295).
  • 1379

    Peter IV incorporates the Duchies of Athens and Neopatria in the Crown of Aragón

    Peter IV incorporates the Duchies of Athens and Neopatria in the Crown of Aragón
    His reign was occupied with attempts to strengthen the crown against the Union of Aragon and other such devices of the nobility, with their near constant revolts, and with foreign wars, in Sardinia, Sicily, the Mezzogiorno, Greece, and the Balearics. His wars in Greece made him Duke of Athens and Neopatria in 1381.
  • 1391

    Anti-jewish pogroms

    Anti-jewish pogroms
    The seeds of the Inquisition are shown on this day in 1391 when a fiery preacher in Seville, Spain incited months of violence against the city's Jews.
  • 1412

    Compromise of Caspe. Beggining of the Trastámara dynasty in the Crown of Aragón

    Compromise of Caspe. Beggining of the Trastámara dynasty in the Crown of Aragón
    The Commitment of Caspe was a pact established in 1412 by representatives of the kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia and the Principality of Catalonia to choose a new king before the death in 1410 of Martin I of Aragon (the Human) without descent and without naming a Successor accepted. It involved the enthronement of Fernando de Antequera, a member of the Trastámara dynasty, in the Crown of Aragon
  • 1442

    Alfonso V conquers the Kingdom of Naples

    Alfonso V conquers the Kingdom of Naples
    Alfonso V of Aragon (Medina del Campo, 1396 - Naples, June 27, 1458), also called the Magnanimous and the Wise, between 1416 and 1458 was king of Aragon, of Valencia, of Mallorca, of Sicily, of Sardinia and Count of Barcelona; and between 1442 - 1458 king of Naples.
  • 1462

    Civil wars in Catalonia

    Civil wars in Catalonia
    The Catalan Civil War (1462-1472) was the civil war that took place in the Principality of Catalonia between the supporters of King Juan II of Aragon, Count of Barcelona, and the supporters of the Catalan institutions rebellious to the king headed by the Diputación del General of Catalonia and the Consell del Principat.