Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q260831> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 triples per page.
- Q260831 subject Q6545249.
- Q260831 subject Q7035269.
- Q260831 subject Q7149095.
- Q260831 subject Q7820632.
- Q260831 subject Q7842395.
- Q260831 subject Q8088543.
- Q260831 subject Q8088608.
- Q260831 subject Q8515239.
- Q260831 subject Q8786641.
- Q260831 abstract "Mayor of Castile (died 1032 or after 1066) was queen of Navarre. She was originally called Muniadona (or Muñadona) and is variously called Munia (or Muña) Mayor (or just Munia or Muña). In Spanish, she is called Muniadona de Castilla. It is said that her husband Sancho III of Navarre (Sancho the Great) renamed her from her contemporary name Muniadona to Mayor, for she was the eldest in her family, yet since she had an aunt of the same name, the story is clearly apocryphal. She was the daughter of Count Sancho García of Castile. Her marriage to Sancho made her Queen consort of Navarre.In 1029, the Count García Sánchez of Castile, Mayor's brother, was assassinated by the Vela family, Castilian exiles in León. Mayor's husband, Sancho the Great, claimed his role as feudal overlord to pass the county to their second son, Ferdinand. Likewise this brought a nominal legitimate claim to the counties of Ribagorza and Sobrarbe to her husband, who had already taken control of them militarily.Mayor was the mother of four sons and perhaps two daughters:King García Sánchez III of NavarreFerdinand the Great, king of León and CastileRamiro, known from a 1020 charter that also names his brother García and half-brother Ramiro I of AragonGonzalo of Sobrarbe and RibagorzaBernardoJimena, wife of Bermudo III of LeónMayor, wife of Pons, Count of Toulouse".
- Q260831 parent Q509637.
- Q260831 spouse Q296652.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q1186093.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q1297894.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q1340288.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q175276.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q1847459.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q200262.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q2038896.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q2112429.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q2358683.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q296652.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q296863.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q345392.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q359043.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q379792.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q509637.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q510793.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q6545249.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q7035269.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q7149095.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q719039.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q7820632.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q7842395.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q8088543.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q8088608.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q8515239.
- Q260831 wikiPageWikiLink Q8786641.
- Q260831 father Q509637.
- Q260831 name "Mayor of Castile".
- Q260831 spouse Q296652.
- Q260831 type Person.
- Q260831 type Agent.
- Q260831 type Noble.
- Q260831 type Person.
- Q260831 type Agent.
- Q260831 type NaturalPerson.
- Q260831 type Thing.
- Q260831 type Q215627.
- Q260831 type Q5.
- Q260831 type Person.
- Q260831 comment "Mayor of Castile (died 1032 or after 1066) was queen of Navarre. She was originally called Muniadona (or Muñadona) and is variously called Munia (or Muña) Mayor (or just Munia or Muña). In Spanish, she is called Muniadona de Castilla. It is said that her husband Sancho III of Navarre (Sancho the Great) renamed her from her contemporary name Muniadona to Mayor, for she was the eldest in her family, yet since she had an aunt of the same name, the story is clearly apocryphal.".
- Q260831 label "Mayor of Castile".
- Q260831 name "Mayor of Castile".