The 'Crown of Aragon' is a term used to refer to the permanent union of multiple titles and states in the hands of the
King of Aragon. The component realms of the Crown were never united politically except at the level of the king. Therefore, the 'Crown of Aragon' shouldn't be confused with the
Kingdom of Aragon.
It originated in
1137, when
Aragon and the
County of Barcelona merged by
dynastic union in the person of
Alfonso II of Aragon, son of
Raymond Berengar IV of Barcelona and
Petronilla of Aragon. By conquest and royal decree of
James I, the
Kingdom of Valencia (
1237) and then the
Kingdom of Majorca (
1262) were added to the Crown. Majorca was held independently from
1276 to
1279 by
James II of Majorca, but it was a vassal of the Crown after that date and until its reconquest in
1344. By grant of
Pope Boniface VIII to
James II, the
Kingdoms of Sardinia and
Corsica were added to the Crown in
1297, though it would not be for more than a century that they were brought under control of the aragonese Crown. By marriage of
Peter IV to
Mary of Sicily, the
Kingdom of Sicily, as well as the
Duchies of Athens and
Neopatria, were added in
1381. The Greek possessions were permanently lost to
Nerio I Acciaioli in
1388 and Sicily was dissociated in the hands of
Martin I from
1395 to
1409, but the
Kingdom of Naples was added finally in
1442 by conquest of
Alfonso V.
In
1479, a new dynastic union merged the Crown of Aragon with the
Crown of Castile, creating what would be the
Kingdom of Spain. The component titles of the Aragonese Crown as subsidiary titles of the Spanish monarch lasted through
1716, when they were abolished by the
Nueva Planta decrees as a consequence of the Aragonese defeat in the
War of the Spanish Succession.
Context

The maximum extent of the Aragonese Crown Empire.
The leading economic centres of this empire were whe
cities of
Barcelona and
Valencia. Another political centre was
Zaragoza, where kings were crowned in the
La Seo Cathedral. Finally,
Palma de Mallorca was an additional important
city and
seaport.
The Crown of Aragon eventually included the
Kingdom of Valencia, the
Kingdom of Majorca,
Sicily,
Malta and
Sardinia, and for a brief period,
Provence, the
Kingdom of Naples, the
Duchy of Neopatria, and the
Duchy of Athens.
The countries that are today known as
Spain and
Portugal spent the
Middle Ages after 722 in an intermittent struggle called the ''
Reconquista''. This struggle pitted the northern Christian kingdoms against the Islamic
taifa petty kingdoms of the
South and against each other.
In the Late Middle Ages, the expansion of the Aragonese Crown southwards met with the
Castilian advance eastward in the region of
Murcia. Afterward, the Aragonese Crown empire focused on the
Mediterranean, acting as far as
Greece and
Barbary, whereas Portugal, which completed its ''Reconquista'' in 1272, focused on the
Atlantic Ocean. Mercenaries from the territories in the Crown, known as ''
almogàvers'' participated in the creation of this Mediterranean "empire", and later found employment in countries all across southern Europe.
The Crown of Aragon has been considered by some as an
empire which ruled in the
Mediterranean for hundreds of years, with the power to
set rules over the entire sea (for instance, the ''Llibre del Consolat del Mar'' or ''
Book of the Consulate of the Sea'', written in
Catalan, is one of the oldest compilation of
maritime laws in the
World). It was indeed, at its height, one of the
major powers in
Europe.
However its different territories were only loosely connected, in a manner that does not match well the traditional idea of
Empire. A contemporary, the Marqués de Lozoya
[1] described the Crown of Aragon as being more like a
confederacy than a centralized
kingdom, let alone an empire. Nor did official documents ever refer to it as an empire (''Imperium'' or any cognate word); instead, it was considered a dynastic union of separate kingdoms.
History

King of Aragon's Standard
The union of the territories of the
County of Barcelona and the
Kingdom of Aragon was brought by the 1137 marriage of
Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Barcelona and
Petronila of Aragon. The resulting new kingdom came to be known as the Crown of Aragon. The son of Ramon Berenguer IV and Petronila,
Alfonso II, inherited both the titles of King of Aragon and Count of Barcelona, in a style that would be maintained by all its successors to the crown. Thus, this union was made while respecting the existing institutions and parliaments of both territories.
King
James I (13th century) started the era of expansion, by conquering and incorporating
Majorca and a good part of the
Kingdom of Valencia to the Crown. Valencia was made a new kingdom with its own institutions, and so was the third member of the crown. Majorca, together with the counties of
Cerdanya and
Roussillon and the city of
Montpellier, were given to his son
James and were named
Kingdom of Majorca, but these territories were reincorporated later, in 1349.
The fact that the King was keen on settling new kingdoms instead of merely expanding the existing kingdoms was a part of a power struggle that pitted the interests of the king against those of the existing
nobility. This process was also in under way in most of the European states that successfully transitioned from the medieval era to what was to be called the modern state (see
modern era). Thus, the new territories gained from the
Moors (namely Valencia and Majorca) were usually given
fueros (in Catalan ''furs'') as an instrument of self-government in order to limit the power of nobility in these new acquisitions and, at the same time, increase their allegiance to the monarchy proper. The trend in the neighbouring
kingdom of Castile was similar, both kingdoms giving impetus to the
Reconquista by granting self-government either to cities or territories, instead of placing the new territories under the rule of nobility.
Expansion through the Mediterranean also continued (
Sicily,
Minorca,
Sardinia). In 1443, the
Kingdom of Naples was conquered. Outside of the Iberian Peninsula and Balearic Islands, the kingdoms were ruled by proxy through local elites as
petty kingdoms, rather than subjected directly to a centralized government. They were more an economic part of the Crown of Aragon than a political one.
In
1410, King
Martin I died without surviving descendants. As a result, by the
Pact of Caspe,
Ferdinand of Antequera from the Castilian dynasty of
Trastamara, received the Crown of Aragon as
Ferdinand I of Aragon.
Later, his grandson King
Ferdinand II of Aragon recovered the northern Catalan counties (Roussillon) which had been lost to France and also the kingdom of
Navarre, which had recently joined the Crown of Aragon but had been lost after internal dynastic disputes.
Ferdinand married Queen
Isabella of Castile in 1469; restrospecively, this is seen as the dawn of the
Kingdom of Spain. At that point both
Castile and the 'Crown of Aragon' remained distinct territories, each keeping its own traditional institutions, Parliaments and laws. The process of territorial consolidation was completed when
Charles I of Spain in 1516 united all the kingdoms on the Iberian peninsula minus Portugal under one monarch, thereby furthering the creation of the Spanish state, albeit a decentralized one.
The Crown of Aragon and its institutions were abolished only after the
War of the Spanish Succession (1702–1713) by the
Nueva Planta decrees, under which all its lands were incorporated, as provinces, into a united Spanish administration, as
Spain moved towards a
centralized government under the new
Bourbon dynasty. The punishments and cruelty on the territories that had fought against
Philip V in the War of Succession are used by some
Valencian and
Catalan nationalists as arguments against modern
Spain.
See also
''Historical lands of the Crown of Aragon:''
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County of Barcelona
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Kingdom of Aragon
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Kingdom of Valencia
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Kingdom of Mallorca
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Roussillon
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Andorra
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Kingdom of Naples
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Corsica
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Kingdom of Sardinia
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Kingdom of Sicily
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Duchy of Neopatria
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Malta
''Monarchs related to the Crown of Aragon:''
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List of Counts of Barcelona
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List of Aragonese monarchs
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Kings of Spain family tree
''Others:''
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Union of Aragon
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Catalan Company
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Black Legend
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Catalan Countries
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House of Barcelona
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Compromise of Caspe
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Sicilian Vespers
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Spanish Empire
External links
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Catalan literature in Crown of Aragon
References
1. Marqués de Lozoya, ''Tomo Segundo de Historia de España'', Salvat, ed. of 1952, page 60: "''El Reino de Aragon, el Principado de Cataluña, el Reino de Valencia y el Reino de Mallorca, constituyen una confederación de Estados''".