When
João III died in 1557, the only surviving heir to the
throne was his three-year-old son, Sebastião, who
took over the government at the age of fourteen. Sickly and
poorly educated, Sebastião proved to be mentally
unstable, and as he grew to young manhood he developed a
fanatical obsession with launching a great crusade against
the Muslims in North Africa, thus reviving the Moroccan
policy of Afonso V. In 1578, when he was twenty-four years
old, Sebastião organized an army of 24,000 and
assembled a large fleet that left Portugal on August 4 for
Alcázarquivir. Sebastião's army, poorly
equipped and incompetently led, was defeated, and the king,
presumed killed in battle, was never seen again. A large
number of the nobility were captured and held for ransom.
This defeat, the most disastrous in Portuguese military
history, swept away the flower of the aristocratic
leadership and drained the coffers of the treasury in order
to pay ransoms. Worse, it resulted in the death of a king
who had no descendants, plunging Portugal into a period of
confusion and intrigue over the succession. With
Sebastião's death, the crown fell to his uncle,
Henrique, the last surviving son of Manuel I. This solved
the succession crisis only temporarily because Henrique was
an infirm and aged cardinal who was unable to obtain
dispensation from the pope to marry. There were several
pretenders to the throne, one of whom was Philip II of
Spain, nephew of João III. When
Henrique died in 1580, a powerful Spanish army commanded by
the duke of Alba invaded Portugal and marched on Lisbon.
This force routed the army of rival contender,
António, prior of Crato and the illegitimate son of
João III's son Luís. Portugal was annexed by
Spain, and Philip II was declared Filipe I of
Portugal. Imperial
Decline
<<< Contents
>>> Iberian
Union
Library of Congress Country StudyDynastic
Crisis
Library of Congress Country Study
This document is in the public domain. You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see fit.Every effort has been made to present this text accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors. Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any problems you experience with the text version or with any electronic form of the document.
More at the Medieval History Site
Site
Map
FAQs
Quizzes
Reviews
Daily
Features
More about the Knightly Newsletter

