Sancho I of Portugal
Sancho I of Portugal, known as the Populator, second king of Portugal, was born in November 11 1154 in Coimbra and died in March 26 1212 in the same city. He was the son of Afonso I Henriques of Portugal by his wife, Mafalda of Savoy. Sancho succeeded his father in 1185.
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In 1170, Sancho was made a knight by his father, king Afonso I, and since then he became his second in command, both administratively and military. At this time, the independence of Portugal (declared in 1139) was not firmly established. The kings of León and Castile were trying to annex the country and the Catholic church was late in giving its blessing and approval. Due to this Afonso I had to search allies within the Iberian Peninsula. Portugal made an alliance with the kingdom of Aragon and together they fought Castile and León. To secure the agreement, the prince Sancho of Portugal married in 1174, princess Dulce Berenguer, younger sister of king Alfonso II of Aragon. Aragon was thus the first Iberian kingdom to recognize the independence of Portugal.
With the death of Afonso I, Sancho I becomes the second king of Portugal in 1185. Coimbra was the centre of his kingdom, and Sancho ceased exhausting and generally pointless wars against his neighbours for control of the Galician borderlands. Instead, he turned all his attentions to the South, against the Moor communities that still thrived. With Crusader help he took Silves in 1191. Silves was an important city of the South, an administrative and commercial town with population around 20,000 people. Sancho ordered the fortification of the city and built a castle that is, nowadays, an important monument of Portuguese heritage. Unfortunately, military attentions had to be turned again to the North, where León and Castile threatened again the Portuguese borders. Silves was again lost to the Moors.
Sancho I dedicated much of his reign to political and administrative organization of the new kingdom. He accumulated a national treasure, supported new industries and the middle class of merchants. Moreover, he created several new towns and villages and took great care in populating remote areas in the northern Christian regions of Portugal, notably with Flemings and Burgundians – hence the nickname the Populator. The king was also a man known by his love of knowledge and literature. Sancho I wrote several books of poems and used the royal treasure to send Portuguese boys to study in European Universities.
Sancho's descendants
See also: Kings of Portugal family tree
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Preceded by: Afonso I | List of Portuguese monarchs |
Succeeded by: D. Afonso II |






