Leonor of England

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13th century
A01=Jose Manuel Cerda Costabal
Alfonso VIII
Author_Jose Manuel Cerda Costabal
biography
Capetian
Castile
Castilian kingdom
Category=DNBR
Category=N
Category=NHD
Category=NHDJ
Category=NHTB
Category=QRAX
court culture
courtly culture history
diplomacy
dynastic
dynastic alliances
Eleanor of Aquitaine
Eleanor Plantagenet
England
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Henry II of England
Iberia
Iberian kingdom
Iberian monarchy studies
legacy
Leonor
marriage
medieval diplomacy research
medieval queenship
memory
Plantagenet
Plantagenet Castile queenship analysis
power
queen consort
Queenship
royal women authority
Thomas Becket
women's history

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041063483
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book provides readers with the first biography in English on Leonor of England, bringing to life an understudied but fascinating figure who has been overshadowed by her famed parents and brothers. Leonor, also known as Eleanor, was queen consort of Castile (1170–1214), the wife of King Alfonso VIII and, as a Plantagenet, part of one of Europe’s most powerful dynastic networks.

The chapters move chronologically through the queen’s life but centre around key themes such as her enigmatic dowry, her participation in European diplomacy and the development of courtly culture, the arts and literature in Castile. Drawing together a wide range of sources, from visual and literary accounts, royal itineraries and chronicles to her dower charter and legal texts, this study unveils Leonor as a powerful woman, well endowed with the means to exercise her authority with autonomy and decisiveness. She inaugurated the very first marriage alliance between England and an Iberian kingdom, promoted the family cult of martyr Thomas Becket in his adopted kingdom and contributed decisively to the consolidation of Burgos as the royal city and Castilian capital. Her arrival on the peninsula was key to the dynastic and identity projects that developed throughout the reign of Alfonso VIII. She was the very first queen consort in Castile to have a personal household fully funded by her dower resources and entirely at her service, which provided for a fabulous court attended by some of the best sculptors, musicians, troubadours, scholars, painters and minstrels.

Leonor of England offers medieval students and scholars interested in queenship, women’s history, court culture and dynastic power more broadly a rare exploration of a figure who has remained in the shadows until now.

José Manuel Cerda Costabal is an Associate Professor of Medieval History and the Director of the Humanities Lab at San Sebastián University in Chile. He is the founder and was director of the Centre for Medieval Studies at Gabriela Mistral University. A historian of medieval monarchy, royal institutions and queenship, he has published on assemblies and parliamentary origins in England and the Spanish kingdoms, the reign of Henry II and his daughter Leonor of England, queen consort of Castile. He is a royal history specialist commentator for NBCU Universal Telemundo Channel.

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