War of the Castilian Succession
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War of the Castilian Succession
Summary
War of the Castilian Succession is a war of succession[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of war_of_succession entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (461 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- War of the Castilian Succession is in the country of Crown of Castile[3].
- War of the Castilian Succession's instance of is recorded as war of succession[4].
- War of the Castilian Succession took place at Crown of Castile[5].
- The location of War of the Castilian Succession was Atlantic Ocean[6].
- War of the Castilian Succession is part of Conflict over the succession of Henry IV of Castile[7].
- War of the Castilian Succession began on 1475[8].
- War of the Castilian Succession ended on September 4, 1479[9].
- Among those involved in War of the Castilian Succession was Crown of Castile[10].
- A participant in War of the Castilian Succession was Crown of Castile[11].
- A participant in War of the Castilian Succession was Order of Santiago[12].
- A participant in War of the Castilian Succession was Order of Calatrava[13].
- A participant in War of the Castilian Succession was Crown of Aragon[14].
- Among those involved in War of the Castilian Succession was Kingdom of Portugal[15].
- Among those involved in War of the Castilian Succession was Kingdom of France[16].
Body
When and Where
War of the Castilian Succession began on 1475[8]. It ended on September 4, 1479[9]. Recorded location include Crown of Castile[5] and Atlantic Ocean[6]. It is in the country of Crown of Castile[3].
Context
War of the Castilian Succession is part of Conflict over the succession of Henry IV of Castile[7]. Its instance of is recorded as war of succession[4].
Participants
Recorded participant include Crown of Castile[10], Order of Santiago[12], Order of Calatrava[13], Crown of Aragon[14], Kingdom of Portugal[15], and Kingdom of France[16].
Why It Matters
War of the Castilian Succession ranks in the top 6% of war_of_succession entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (461 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]