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In 1360, King Pedro I of the Kingdom of Portugal solemnly announced his skeleton bride, his legal wife Inés, before the ministers. Pedro I lifted the curtain,

author:Little stubborn storytelling

In 1360, King Pedro I of the Kingdom of Portugal solemnly announced his skeleton bride, his legal wife Inés, before the ministers.

Pedro I lifted the curtain, and the queen on the throne, dressed in a dazzling white wedding dress, was shocked and retreated from the people present.

It is not that the queen's beauty is shocking, and the one wearing the queen's crown is clearly a skeleton, and the protruding from the wedding dress is clearly a rotten and dry hand bone!

It's not that Pedro I has any quirks, on the contrary, Pedro is a lover of the emperor, and this skeleton queen is indeed his beloved!

As early as when Pedro was crown prince, the old king Alfonso arranged two marriages for him, the second to a young lady from a Spanish Castilian noble family.

This kind of political marriage is naturally not a love affair, but a means of mutual cohesion and consolidation in the power struggle.

In the face of the old king's threat to the throne, Pedro could only accept the arrangement even if he was unwilling, after all, no matter which noble lady or foreign princess it was, it made no difference to him.

Perhaps it was the mercy of the Eros, who brought with her the coveted love of Pedro when the beautiful Miss Castile of Spain married.

Among the dowries, a young lady named Inés de Castro caught Pedro's attention. Just as she was destined, this young lady's voice and smile were so in line with Pedro's heart, perhaps, she was his lover in the previous life. And Ines also understood and immediately fell in love with Pedro.

After marrying Princess Constanza, Pedro secretly entered Ines's room.

The gentle Watery Inés traps Pedro in a gentle village, while snubbing Princess Constanza from Spain.

Pedro even placed Ines in Coimbra, where the two lived together for several years, living as a couple and having four children.

Where blessings and misfortunes lie, misfortunes and blessings depend.

When Pedro and his lover Ines lived as husband and wife, Constanza died depressed after giving birth to a son for Pedro.

The death of the princess caused the old king Alfonso to fall into rage, believing that Ines not only killed the concubine, but also provoked his son to oppose himself. In January 1355, while Pedro was out on business, the old king ordered his men to rush to Coimbra and kill his son's lover, Inés.

Pedro, who rushed back after hearing the news, looked at his long-dead lover Ines, and his grief instantly turned into anger. The pain of seizing a loved one is like cutting off a heart. So, an enraged Pedro led his army in revenge.

Pedro, like an angry lion, pointed his arrow at his father and vowed to take the city of Porto.

However, just as the city gate was about to be breached, Pedro scanned the scene of corpses strewn across the field and rivers of blood, and the remaining sanity in his heart suddenly ached.

He hated himself for being a cruel executioner who had killed so many innocent people, all of whom were his people!

Pedro slipped feebly off his horse, reconciled with his father, and even swore an oath not to blame. However, he was ultimately unable to get rid of Ines and could not forgive his father.

In 1357, the old king Alfonso died, and Pedro ascended the throne. After Pedro ascended to the throne, he began to send people to find the person who killed Ines, capture it and deal with it with the punishment of heartbreaking!

After personally avenging his beloved, Pedro I announced to the world that Ines was his wife and queen.

Even though the beauty of the Slovak people no longer exists, even if only a pair of white bones remains. Pedro I, whose sideburns had become white, was still in love with Inés almost madly.

The day the queen is proclaimed is also the day of the queen's burial. Pedro I reburied Ines with queen's ceremonies.

The two lavish mausoleums in the Monastery of Arcabasa, richly decorated and imposing, even more beautiful than the palace where the king lived, were the mausoleums built by Pedro I for himself and Ines.

Pedro I, who lost his beloved, also lost the ability to love. Even though he had absolute imperial power, he remained unmarried for life after Ines's death.

In 1367, Pedro I died, and finally went to another world to meet Ines!

#Headline History ##爱情 #

In 1360, King Pedro I of the Kingdom of Portugal solemnly announced his skeleton bride, his legal wife Inés, before the ministers. Pedro I lifted the curtain,

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