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This was born in Ghent (Flanders)
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When Fernado el Católico died, according to his will, his grandson Carlos I under the regency of Cardinal Jiménez de Cisneros had to take charge of the government of said Crowns, until he came from Flanders.
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Once appointed, he associated his former teacher Adriano with the Cisneros regency and sent him to Spain.
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After being appointed a member of the Court of Brussels, he moved to Asturias, and later went to Tordesillas to visit his mother.
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Thanks to a series of dynastic alliances and premature deaths, he turned a twenty-year-old named Charles V into the most powerful monarch in Europe.
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After the uprising of the communities, the comuneros, led by Padilla, Bravo and Maldonado, were defeated in Villalar by the royalist forces in favor of King Carlos I of Spain, led by Íñigo Fernández de Velasco and Mendozar.
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Carlos married Isabel of Portugal. With whom he has 5 children: Felipe II of Spain, Juan of Austria, Margarita of Parma, Maria of Austria and Portugal and Juana of Austria. Of which only Felipe, María and Juana reached adulthood.
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It was an alliance between the Papacy, France, Milan, Venice and Florence that was in force until 1529. Against this alliance Charles V fought in the sack of Rome.
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This battle was an important victory for the imperial army of Charles I in the framework of the confrontations between his Holy Roman Empire and the so-called League of Cognac. Soon the imperial troops achieved victories over the French army and established their control over northern Italy.
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Precisely on his birthday, in the Italian city of Bologna. Carlos was crowned as Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire by the Pope of Rome Clement VII.
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Isabel dies from pneumonia in Toledo.
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The Battle of Girolata was a naval combat that pitted a Hispano-Genoese fleet against another Ottoman in the Gulf of Girolata, located on the west coast of the island of Corsica. The confrontation took place to dispute for the control of the Mediterranean Sea between the emperor Carlos V and the Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. In this battle the fleet of Carlos V. was victorious.
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Felipe was named Duke of Milan. The ceremony was secret and prince electors were not consulted to avoid international problems. This may not have anything to do with Carlos, but in reality it does, since at first he thought of appointing himself a duke, but this could be considered a casus belli in France, and furthermore, it would damage his image as a liberator. So he granted the title to Felipe.
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This was a battle that took place in Mühlberg between the troops of Carlos I of Spain and V of the Holy Roman Empire and those of the Schmalkalden League, with the triumph of those of Carlos I of Spain. It came about because the Lutheran Reformation was creating a split not only religious, but also political within the Holy Roman Empire and they challenged Charles V. He met with his brother and joined the League.
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It was signed between Francisco I of France and Carlos I of Spain (and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire), it marked the departure of Carlos from the Italian war of 1542-1546. Peace would be short-lived, since in 1551 hostilities would break out again between the two signatory powers.
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The Peace of Augsburg, also called "Peace of religions", was a deal signed by Ferdinand I of Habsburg, brother and representative of Emperor Charles V, and the forces of the Schmalkalden League in the city of Augsburg in Germany, by the which resolved the religious conflict of the Protestant reform.
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Emperor Charles retires to the monastery of Yuste, renouncing to all of his titles (except those associated with German territories) in favor of his son Felipe, who became, in particular, King Felipe II of Spain.
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Once Charles retires, he gives the Holy Empire to his brother Ferdinand I and on the date that it was set, he was crowned Holy Roman Emperor.
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Carlos dies in the Monastery of San Jerónimo de Yuste, which is near Cáceres. He died of malaria.