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Maria de Luna

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period, the accounts of Maria de Luna in "Food in the Accounts of a Travelling lady: Maria de Luna, queen of Aragon, in 1403" contain more detail, describing specific dishes cooked for the queen's table, the food consumption per person, the weight of the animals used for meat, and the amounts of wheat used to make a certain quantity of bread. As with the king, every meal Maria de Luna ate was a public display; what she ate, drank, and how she behaved distinguished her from others and made her a model for those around her. Customs were distinct in every royal household, and Maria de Luna's was defined by "her close relationship with the mendicant orders and with charity, but also through the attention she paid to medical advice, given her fragile health." Even during Lent, for instance, she ate poultry at her doctors's advice due to the "vitality brought to sick bodies". Maria de Luna's accounts from 1403 also reflect the lavishness of the court in Valencia and the consistency and variety of foodstuffs also indicates the queen's prestige. An analysis of the accounts of 1403 describes how at stake "was the image that the queen projected to her guests, and in general to her subjects; food and the general levels of display that went with it on a daily basis were among the principal elements of prestige available to her." Valencian agriculture was able to provide a wide variety of food to the city's market. But even as Maria de Luna travelled to smaller locations during the year of 1403, the court was still able to provide a plethora of food to the household. This suggests that suppliers could have been following Maria de Luna as she travelled.
504:, a Jew who had provided much monetary assistance to the throne, was being investigated for unfaithfulness to the Catholic religion, she intervened to protect him. In an attempt to mitigate the effects of inquisitions, she originally tried to use a bargaining tactic, recognizing that some Jews might indeed deserve punishment, but rather trying to regulate the forms of investigation to which they were subject. MarĂ­a's stance towards inquisitors did not stop them all from trying to prosecute Jews, however, and when a case arose against Jewish women who supposedly had renounced their prior conversion to Catholicism, she forced the bishop who had imprisoned the women to let them go. Her analysis of the matter led her to realize that the case had been allowed to go on for too long and that it violated her previous statement of values: that "our rights and our vassals...will remain whole". 377:, and his powerful family. Amidst this unrest, Maria unsuccessfully tried to convince Martin to return to Aragon and assist her in stabilizing the realm. Reluctant to abandon his military campaign, however, Martin resisted his wife's entreaties for many months. Claiming to be concerned about Violant's health during the latter's supposed pregnancy, Maria had her rival removed to one of her own castles, isolating her from her supporters. Soon enough, Violant's pregnancy was exposed as a sham. Maria then assembled an army, imprisoned Violant and Matthew's suspected supporters, and stripped them of their Aragonese holdings. After a series of advances and retreats by Joanna and Matthew, Maria finally and decisively subdued them. Martin returned home soon thereafter. 451: 1080: 549:
Augustine—to redirect the troublesome influences of passions on the body and the mind to more salubrious and pious ends." Eiximenis' views on gender influenced his portrayal of Maria de Luna in the Scala Dei. For Eiximenis, "feminine space was constructed around and limited to the home, the family, and the body", which meant that instead of characterizing her as queen-lieutenant and governor, he placed her in a secondary, dependent role. Queens, Eiximenis believed, have a distinct and secondary status because they are female:
533:, for Maria de Luna, and composed for her the Scala Dei ("Ladder of God"), a devotional text accompanied by a set of prayers written in Catalan (with some notes in Latin) and presented to her shortly after she became queen. Eiximenis did not just have a literary influence of Maria de Luna. Around thirty years older than her, he knew her from the time she was a child and acted as a paternal figure for Maria and Marti. He never served as an official counselor, but he was an executor o Maria's will and testament. 481:, making policies that helped this community recover from turmoil. Morvedre had been the target of a number of violent attacks and massacres. In November 1348, troops from the Union of Valencia invaded it, and it was attacked once more by rebels who were fighting against King Peter III. From the winter of 1363 to March 1365, Castilian troops occupied the town, and the Jewish population of the entire kingdom of Aragon was vulnerable in 1391, when the Dominican preacher 434: 343:, and many of the realm's most distinguished noblemen. In the ensuing years, Maria was largely preoccupied with child-bearing, household administration, and the management of her personal estates. She and her husband enjoyed considerable royal favor; in the fifteen years following Maria and Martin's marriage, King Peter continued to bestow offices and lands upon his younger son. Upon Peter's death on 5 January 1368, his firstborn son succeeded him as 400: 22: 541:, which was then in its beginnings. Maria de Luna's reputation during her ascent to the throne sharply contrasted with that of Violant de Bar, whom the Franciscans saw as "overly frivolous, too French, and scandalously neglectful of the affairs of the state". Maria de Luna likely requested two copies of the Scala Dei for herself, one in 1397 and one in 1404. As Eiximenis explained in the dedicatory preface to his work: 290:
thereafter had the distinction of being the only one in Aragon with a member to reach the rank of "count". As Lope's first marriage to Violant of Aragon produced no children, Maria was formally named her father's sole heir shortly after her birth. Although Lope had an older, illegitimate son and went on to have a second, posthumous daughter by Brianda, Maria's status as heir was never compromised or revoked.
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originally stipulated. Thus, she grew up in close proximity to her future husband. Although there is little information available about her upbringing at court, her education was in all likelihood a thorough one, given surviving evidence of her writing, the collection of books she possessed, and how quickly she took over the administration of her estates upon coming of age.
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domain. Silleras-Fernandez argues that "Eiximenis inspired Maria to cultivate became the kernel of her royal persona, or, as she preferred to call it in her letters, her 'queenly dignity' (dignitat reginal)." Furthermore, he "coached her on how to project an image that enabled her to exercise power without upsetting contemporary sensibilities regarding gender roles."
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pay only a quarter of the amount, as King John I had done beforehand. MarĂ­a also used her royal power in 1401 to prevent the jurats, the local authorities, from taxing the Jewish community. The local authorities attempted to levy a property tax on Jewish assets, even though Jews had historically been paying their taxes directly to the monarchs.
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MarĂ­a once more swam against the tide of the jurats' public opinion in 1403, when her husband Martin passed a law that would force Jews in the kingdom to wear large badges of both yellow and red. MarĂ­a rejected this measure, ensuring that it would not be enforced in Morvedre or in Onda, a place where
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Martin's return to Aragon in 1397 – many months into his reign – meant the end of Maria's time as lieutenant-general. Her importance over the next thirteen years before her death), however, remained substantial. She had a close relationship with her surviving son, Martin, and was a critical source of
347:. Within weeks of his accession to the throne, John made his brother Martin Duke of Montblanc. Previously the only other duchy in Aragon was that of Girona, a title reserved for the heir to the throne. Such a grant was therefore an enormous honor for Martin and the newly made duchess, Maria, as well. 492:
As the Jewish community of Morvedre was getting back on its feet after the crises of 1391, it faced financial difficulties due to the high number of refugees that flowed in. MarĂ­a de Luna chose not to impose the higher rate of taxation that King Peter III had originally established, allowing them to
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owes it to her husband at all times to conserve the peace in the kingdom and ensure swift, righteous, and clear justice to their peoples, and not under any circumstances act as a tyrant, but rather to show herself likable and dear to her people, and take counsel from a small group chosen from among
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Most High Lady, many times your great Ladyship has encouraged me, for the improvement of your spiritual life, to prepare as you request some little book from which you might derive some guidance or light to better guard you from any offence to God, and that you might most aptly enjoy in all virtue,
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Records of Maria de Luna's court's food consumption, purchases, food quality and quantity, and methods of preparation have implications for structures of daily life in the Iberian Peninsula during the early fifteenth century. Compared to those surviving for other households of similar rank in this
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died without a legitimate heir. The throne of Aragon consequently passed to John's younger brother, Maria's husband Martin. At this time, however, Martin was on a military campaign in Sicily and would not receive word of his brother's death for a number of weeks. Fortuitously at hand in Barcelona,
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In keeping with other late medieval devotional texts, Eiximenis' dictates that "the queen is to pray with humility, to kiss the ground before the image of Christ, to kneel, and to look at him with humility and reverence. Praying alone in a private room or chapel, at night or early in the morning,
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The structure and message of the Scala Dei reflect broader traditions of devotional literature meant for women in the later Middle Ages. "At this time women were considered susceptible to excesses of passion; hence, conduct and devotional literature were intended to calm them and—following Saint
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Nuria Silleras-Fernandez, in Chariots of Ladies, suggests that the Scala Dei, and Maria de Luna's personal relationship with Eiximenis more generally, substantially shaped her queenship and subsequent reputation. Ultimately, she did launch the Observant Franciscan movement in the region of her
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The schedule described in Maria and Martin's betrothal contract appears to have been expedited somewhat. Maria first shows up in Queen Eleanor's account books as early as 1362, suggesting that she moved to court around age four or five – several years earlier than the terms of her engagement
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and Antipope Benedict XIII amongst her relations. Her father promoted the interests of the family still further. His unwavering loyalty to and political service on behalf of the Aragonese Crown was handsomely rewarded – first he was knighted then, several years later, made a count. Her house
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Maria was politically active and exerted influence upon both policy and society, and was considered by some a more talented ruler than Martin himself. She supported the poor financially, handled taxes, welcomed Jewish and Muslim refugees, attempted to end conflict between noble houses, and
423:(1259–1330) into Catalan. This project led to Eiximenio's realization that more texts should be translated into Catalan, especially for use during the 40 days of Lent. During María and Martin's reign, he compiled "Quarentena de contemplacio", a collection of prayers and meditations for 915:
Silleras-Fernández, NĂşria. Fit for a Queen: The Scala Dei, Franciscan Queenship, and Maria de Luna (Barcelona, c. 1396—1410). (2015). In Chariots of Ladies: Francesc Eiximenis and the Court of Culture of Medieval and Early Modern Iberia (p. 98). Ithaca; London: Cornell University
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Born in 1358, Maria was the eldest child of Count Lope de Luna and his second wife, Brianda d’Agout. Her family was one of the most influential in Spain, its members occupying some of the loftiest political and religious offices in the realm. She could, for example, count
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The Scala Dei includes the Ten Commandments, essays on the virtues of femininity and queenship, the seven deadly sins, a treatise on penance, and a treatise on contemplation. Eiximenis hoped that the Scala Dei would attract the Crown of Aragon to the reform movement of
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many Jews conducted trade. Although the Jews had been obligated to wear red badges since John I mandated it in 1396, these had been smaller and much more inconspicuous than the proposed new badge, which was intended to clearly set the Jews apart from the Christians.
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Maria was therefore acclaimed queen and appointed to serve as the Crown's lieutenant-general in her husband's absence. Maria's transition from duchess to queen was fraught with insurrection and uncertainty. In a desperate bid to retain power, the dowager queen,
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When Martin joined MarĂ­a in May 1397, she stepped down from her position as lieutenant of Aragon, but she continued to play an active role in her position as queen consort. In 1402, she sought to end the exploitation of the
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advice for him during his brief reign over Sicily. Her husband also clearly continued to view her as a key counselor and source of support, a relationship reflected by their extensive epistolary exchanges.
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and better please God: for which, Most High Lady, I—wishing to satisfy your pious intentions, and for the sound increase of your devotion—have assembled the following book.
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MarĂ­a de Luna's Jewish policy appears to have been motivated both by material interests and by more general concerns for the Jewish population. When MarĂ­a realized that
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Garcia Marsilla, J. (2018). Food in the accounts of a travelling lady: Maria de Luna, queen of Aragon, in 1403. Journal of Medieval History, 44 (5), 569–594.
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MarĂ­a de Luna associated with the Franciscan friars and donated money for their monastic foundation of the Holy Spirit (the Monasterio del Santo EspĂ­ritu).
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on 13 June 1372, and Maria became queen upon her husband's accession in 1396. At the time of his accession to the throne, Martin was in
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served not only to underline the humility and authenticity of devotion, but quite simply to ensure that she would not be interrupted."
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Silleras-Fernández, Núria. Power, Piety, and Patronage in Late Medieval Queenship: Maria de Luna. Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
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Planas, Josefina. "La Paz de las Plegarias." e-Spania Revue interdisciplinaire d’études hispaniques médiévales et modernes.
244:. Maria was betrothed to Martin (future King of Aragon) as a child, and brought up at the court of Martin's mother, Queen 58: 411:, a type of Christian worship that rose to prominence in the later Middle Ages which emphasized oral prayer and intense 1278: 1141: 1131: 1096: 471:
In 1398, MarĂ­a de Luna gained control over seven Jewish and six Muslim communities, and assumed responsibility for the
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Although Joanna had at one point been named her father’s heir, later wills had expressly excluded her from succession
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them, and fearing God, and eschewing greed, and who are committed to the common good and not their own affairs.
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Meyerson, Mark. "Defending their Jewish Subjects: Elinor of Sicily, Maria de Luna, and the Jews of Morvedre".
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was her personal confessor, and he translated Arbor vitae crucifixus ("the book of life of the crucified") of
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Silleras-Fernández, Núria. "Spirit and Force: Politics, Public, and Private in the Reign of Maria de Luna".
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Lope's death in 1360 left two-year-old Maria as one of the wealthiest landowners in
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From Arxiu de la Corona d' Arago, C 2335 89v-90r, qtd. In Meyerson, p. 74
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Maria and Martin had four children; three of them died in childhood:
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Queenship and Political Power in Medieval and Modern Europe
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Queenship and Political Power in Medieval and Modern Europe
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Statue of Maria de Luna outside the Church of St. Martin,
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She was the daughter and heiress of the Aragonese noble
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On 13 June 1372 Maria and Martin wed at the Church of
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Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 437:Inventory of items MarĂ­a de Luna's household used. 314:, before marrying Martin at the age of fourteen. 1245: 407:MarĂ­a de Luna was a proponent of the so-called 287:Lope Fernandez de Luna, Archbishop of Zaragoza 994: 1008: 489:supported existing efforts to convert Jews. 466: 441: 1001: 987: 233:, a kingdom to which he also had a claim. 131: 520: 394: 317: 106:Learn how and when to remove this message 525:In the 1390s, the Franciscan theologian 449: 432: 398: 304:Peter IV the Ceremonious, King of Aragon 403:Martin I's illuminated text of psalm 59 1246: 221:(c. 1358 – 1406) was queen consort of 982: 485:incited violence against Jews, while 44:adding citations to reliable sources 15: 461: 415:upon the words and deeds of Jesus. 380: 13: 507: 14: 1295: 335:in Barcelona, in the presence of 1078: 264:until Martin's return in 1397. 20: 1274:Burials at the Poblet Monastery 1070:Ramon Berengeur IV of Barcelona 896: 883: 874: 865: 856: 847: 838: 829: 820: 811: 802: 793: 784: 775: 766: 757: 748: 739: 730: 721: 712: 703: 694: 685: 676: 529:adapted his previous work, the 268:corresponded directly with the 31:needs additional citations for 667: 658: 649: 640: 631: 622: 613: 604: 595: 279: 1: 961:Countess consort of Barcelona 588: 1284:Mothers of Sicilian monarchs 718:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 62-63 709:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 60-61 700:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 60-61 691:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 43-47 664:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 42-43 655:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 24-25 637:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 19-20 619:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 13-14 601:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 14-15 350: 293: 7: 871:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 125. 853:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 104. 844:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 100. 826:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 100. 326: 10: 1300: 880:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 125 355: 1279:14th-century women rulers 1223: 1185: 1087: 1076: 1020: 967: 945: 937: 932: 673:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 41 646:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 27 628:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 17 610:Silleras-Fernandez, p. 13 467:Policy towards minorities 442:Day to day administration 208: 200: 188: 178: 166: 158: 154: 146: 139: 130: 125: 1264:Queens consort of Aragon 564: 389: 341:Bishop Jaume of Valencia 248:. 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732: 723: 714: 705: 696: 687: 678: 669: 660: 651: 642: 633: 624: 615: 606: 597: 568: 559: 555: 551: 547: 543: 535: 524: 511: 499: 495: 491: 472: 470: 445: 429: 406: 384: 359: 330: 321: 297: 283: 266: 235: 218: 217: 117: 102: 93: 83: 76: 69: 62: 50: 38:Please help 33:verification 30: 1259:1406 deaths 502:Jacob Façan 345:King John I 280:Early years 1248:Categories 965:1396–1406 889:barcelona2 589:References 337:King Peter 173:Villarreal 66:newspapers 362:King John 360:In 1396, 351:Queenship 294:Betrothal 250:Barcelona 150:1396–1406 96:July 2017 956:Valencia 745:Marsilla 736:Marsilla 479:Valencia 327:Marriage 242:Provence 952:Majorca 515:remença 456:Segorbe 356:Regency 272:-based 270:Avignon 80:scholar 1055:Bertha 1014:Aragon 916:Press. 474:aljama 371:Joanna 260:, and 254:Sicily 231:Sicily 223:Aragon 209:Mother 201:Father 179:Spouse 147:Tenure 82:  75:  68:  61:  53:  1035:Agnes 565:Issue 390:Death 300:Spain 190:Issue 87:JSTOR 73:books 958:and 425:Lent 238:Lope 167:Died 162:1358 159:Born 59:news 1012:of 42:by 1250:: 954:, 950:, 427:. 339:, 1002:e 995:t 988:v 109:) 103:( 98:) 94:( 84:· 77:· 70:· 63:· 36:.

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Queen consort of Aragon
Villarreal
Martin I of Aragon
Issue
Martin I of Sicily
Aragon
King Martin I of Aragon
Sicily
Lope
Provence
Eleanor of Sicily
Barcelona
Sicily
Violant of Bar
Matthew, Count of Foix
Avignon
Antipope Benedict XIII
Lope Fernandez de Luna, Archbishop of Zaragoza

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