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Gaudiosa

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Gaudiosa
Queen of Asturias
Image from the Genealogia dos Reis de Portugal
Spouse(s)Pelagius of Asturias
Issue2, Favila of Asturias and Ermesinda

Gaudiosa (born c. 695) was, according to late sources, an 8th-century queen of Asturias.

Biography

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According to the 16th-century Spanish historian Ambrosio de Morales, Gaudiosa was born about 695 in Cosgaya, Cantabria. Her family origins are unknown and she is not thought to be born into a royal family,[1] but she may have had been of half Asturian and half Visigothic descent. She was a Christian.

She married Pelagius of Asturias[2] after they met at an annual fair for the buying and selling of cattle and horses. Pelagius founded the Kingdom of Asturias in 718, which was the first independent nucleus of Andalusian power.[3]

At the Battle of Covadonga, the opening battle of the Reconquista of Spain, the army of Al-Andalus was defeated by her husband Pelagius amidst a vision of the Virgin Mary and the Cross. Some of the Muslim soldiers fled the battlefield to Liébana, where Gaudiosa was residing, and legend claims that she rallied the townspeople to defend the town.[4]

After her husband died in 737, Gaudiosa became a nun at the Church of Santa Cruz, Cangas de Onis, which had been founded by her son.[4]

Issue

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Gaudiosa and her husband had two children:[4]

Death and burial

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Gaudiosa's remains were transferred by King Alfonso X of Castile to the Santa Cueva de Covadonga (Holy Cave of Covadonga), Asturias,[7][8] along with her husband's remains and those of her sister-in-law Adonsina.

References

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  1. ^ "Gaudiosa, esposa de don Pelayo". José Ignacio Gracia Noriega. 23 May 2005. Retrieved 2025-01-30.
  2. ^ "María Luisa Castellanos, Doña Gaudiosa / La Alhambra / 1918". www.filosofia.org. Retrieved 2025-01-30.
  3. ^ García, Dolores Carolina Molina; Palacios, Ana Morilla; Hierro, María Pilar Queralt del (2025-01-29). Guerreras: españolas que empuñaron las armas (in Arabic). Editorial Almuzara. ISBN 978-84-1052-728-7.
  4. ^ a b c "Gaudiosa of Asturias, the warrior Queen". Albion & Iberia: Catholic history of Britain and Spain. 2015-03-05. Retrieved 2025-01-30.
  5. ^ Aparicio, Zoltan Gergely (2020). "Christian States of Iberia/Hispania between 711-1212". Jura: A Pecsi Tudomanyegyetem Allam- es Jogtudomanyi Karanak Tudomanyos Lapja. 2020: 5.
  6. ^ Grieve, Patricia E. (2020-03-03). The Eve of Spain: Myths of Origins in the History of Christian, Muslim, and Jewish Conflict. JHU Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-2914-4.
  7. ^ "LEON". www.royaltombs.dk. Retrieved 2025-01-30.
  8. ^ Byfield, Ted; Project, Christian History; Stanway, Paul (2004). The Sword of Islam: A.D. 565 to 740 : the Muslim Onslaught All But Destroys Christendom. Christian History Project. p. 247. ISBN 978-0-9689873-4-6.