Aragoneseliterature of Spain includes Aragonese-language poetry, prose and novels. The Glosas Emilianenses (11th century) are the first written testimony...
Aragonese (/ˌærəɡəˈniːz/ ARR-ə-gə-NEEZ; aragonés [aɾaɣoˈnes] in Aragonese) is a Romance language spoken in several dialects by about 12,000 people as...
Nagore, who classified Aragonese varieties into 4 groups: Western Aragonese Central Aragonese Eastern Aragonese Southern Aragonese For some, these groups...
literature Russian literature Sammarinese literature Serbian literature Slovak literature Slovene literature Spanish literatureAragoneseliterature Asturian...
would become the Spanish composite monarchy under Habsburg monarchs. The Aragonese Crown continued existing until it was abolished by the Nueva Planta decrees...
treated in two parts: The first, in two large volumes, catalogues Aragoneseliterature and letters ranging from the years 1 to 1500. The second part, separate...
V supporting Sforza, Alfonso switched his religious allegiance to the Aragonese antipope Benedict XIII. When Sforza abandoned Louis' cause, Alfonso seemed...
support the rebels and claim the throne. After Aragonese successes, the war grew into the concurrent Aragonese Crusade as the Kingdom of France intervened...
have disastrous consequences. Like similar legends in Castilian and Aragoneseliterature, the deaths of the illicit lovers result in a positive military outcome...
as the language of Jewish liturgy, rabbinic literature, intra-Jewish commerce, and Jewish poetic literature. The first dated book printed in Hebrew was...
Catalan literature came about because of a general decline in the use of the vernacular language and a lack of patronage among the nobility as Aragonese institutions...
his Aragonese dominions in 1442. As part of the Italian Wars, France went to war with Aragon over the kingdom in 1502; the war ended in an Aragonese victory...
Rabbinic literature, in its broadest sense, is the entire spectrum of rabbinic writings throughout Jewish history. However, the term often refers specifically...
(/ˈærəɡən/ ARR-ə-gən, US also /-ɡɒn, -ɡoʊn/ -gon, -gohn; Spanish and Aragonese: Aragón [aɾaˈɣon] ; Catalan: Aragó [əɾəˈɣo]) is an autonomous community...
Aragon by the provisions of his will, until its subsequent conquest by the Aragonese Pedro IV during the reign of James II of Majorca. The first repopulation...
composed a cycle of four sirventes in the summer of 1285 concerning the Aragonese Crusade. The Matter of Britain (or the "Arthurian cycle"), which centers...
Literature of Bosnia and Herzegovina, is a complex literary production within Bosnia and Herzegovina, which is seen as a unique, singular literature of...
Hecho Aragonese, or Cheso, is a Western Aragonese variety spoken in the Hecho Valley of Northern Aragon. Hecho Aragonese is one of Western Aragonese's most...
European languages, especially Romance languages such as Old Spanish or Aragonese, Mozarabic, Ladino and Old Galician-Portuguese. This alphabet is also...
and dialects belonging to the Romance continuum exist in Spain, such as Aragonese, Asturian, Fala and Occitan (sometimes called Provençal). The languages...
language groups: Galician-Portuguese, Spanish, Asturleonese, "Wider"-Aragonese, "Wider"-Catalan, Provençal+Lengadocian, and "Wider"-Gascon. In addition...
La Franja (Catalan pronunciation: [la ˈfɾandʒɛ]; "The Strip"; Aragonese: Francha) is the area of Catalan-speaking territories of eastern Aragon bordering...
called Jaume I el Conqueridor (the Conqueror), took Morella, mostly with Aragonese troops. Shortly after, in 1233, Borriana and Peniscola were also taken...
and Alghero, which for years remained as the only Aragonese dominions in Sardinia (Sardinian–Aragonese war). In 1409, Martin I of Sicily, king of Sicily...