#Jaime Olías gifs
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JAIME OLÍAS El Cid 1.01 "La conjura"
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@asongofstarkandtargaryen
El Cid (2020–), 2x02
#El Cid#Alfonso VI de León#Urraca de Zamora#Alfonso VI of Leon#Urraca of Zamora#Jaime Olías#Alicia Sanz#El Cid 2x02
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Jaime Olías as Alfonso (El Cid)
#jaime olías#jaime olias#jaíme olías gifs#jaime olias gifs#alfonso vi of leon#el cid 2020#el cid#elcidedit#period fc#periodedit#userperioddrama#perioddramasource#perioddrama#perioddramacentral#perioddramaedit#weloveperioddrama#fcressources#gifs#ressources gifs#ressources rpg#faceclaim ressources
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Enviado por India López:
Una vez vi que este actor os seguía en redes sociales y os mencionó en varios programas y vosotros a él y he visto un cotometraje que ha rodado en casa en confinamineto y el making of de como lo ha hecho con maquetas y juegos de perspectivas y demás que no tiene desperdicio.
Hombre, claro, Jaime Olías siempre en nuestro equipo.
Aquí el corto:
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Promoción fantasma
2012, España - 88 min.
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#Promoción Fantasma#Raúl Arévalo#Alexandra Jiménez#Aura Garrido#Jaime Olías#Àlex Maruny#Silvia Abril#Película#Movie
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@asongofstarkandtargaryen
…yo advertido del peligro que se cierne sobre mi reino en Galicia y para proteger así como mantener lo que en buena ley me pertenece como vuestro rey, convoco al servicio de las armas a mis vasallos, a todos los nobles, caballeros, hombres buenos e hijosdalgo para la defensa de estos reinos.
El Cid (2020–), 2x04
#El Cid#Alfonso VI de León#Urraca de Zamora#Alfonso VI of Leon#Urraca of Zamora#Jaime Olías#Alicia Sanz#El Cid 2x04
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Jaime Olías as Alfonso (El Cid)
#Jaime Olías#Jaime Olías gifs#jaime olias gifs#jaime olias#el cid#alfonso#Alfonso VI de León#el cid 2020#period fc#perioddramaedit#weloveperioddrama#perioddramacentral#userperioddrama#gifs#underused male fc#underused fc
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Alfonso VI (c. 1040/1041 – 1109)
Son of Fernando I of León and Queen Sancha, Alfonso VI became the ruler of a vast kingdom and far outstripped his predecessors in the extent of his sway. Yet few would have predicted this at his birth. A series of events between that moment and his triumph in 1072 shaped the king that was to rule a reunited León, Castile and Galicia, and from 1085 Toledo. This was a vital conquest, which recovered for Christian Spain one of the most important historical, strategic, and cultural centres of the peninsula, one that had been in the possession of the Muslims since the early 8th century. His name is also associated with Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar (El Cid), who was alternatively his enemy and indifferent supporter.
Alfonso VI probably grew up in the palace at León along with his brothers and sisters. He was either the third or fourth child; the sources give conflicting evidence, some suggesting that both sisters, Urraca and Elvira, were born before Alfonso. In either case, the first child was Urraca, and the second child was Sancho. Thus Alfonso VI was the second son, a position with which his father, also a second son, may have empathised. Given the later conflicts between the siblings, it is all too likely that the family dynamics were stormy from the beginning and split into various factions.
By his will, King Fernando divided his kingdom among his three sons: the eldest, Sancho, received Castile; the second, Alfonso, León; and from the latter the region of Galicia was carved off to create a separate state for García. Ferdinand’s two daughters each received cities: Elvira that of Toro and Urraca that of Zamora. In giving them these territories, he expressed his desire that they respect his wishes and abide by the split. However, soon after Fernando’s death, Sancho and Alfonso turned on García and defeated him.They then fought each other, the victorious Sancho reuniting their father’s possessions under his control in 1072. However, Sancho was killed that same year and the territories passed to Alfonso. García was imprisoned by Alfonso for life, leaving Alfonso in uncontested control of the reunited territories of their father. In recognition of this and his role as the preeminent Christian monarch on the peninsula, in 1077 Alfonso proclaimed himself “Emperor of all Spain”.
The twelfth-century Historia Silense famously describes Alfonso’s relationship with his elder sister, Urraca. It says that she looked after him in loco matris, in place of a mother, that she fed and dressed him, and that she loved him, as a sister, medulitus, deep in her heart, more than her other brothers. Although this relationship later became the subject of literary scandal, there is nothing here to suggest that it was more than a strong alliance formed in the midst of sibling rivalries.
Alfonso VI’s reign coincided in time with the origins and first development of the Crusading phenomenon, promoted by pope Urban II from 1095 onwards. This fact influenced the very nature and character of warfare against Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula. Alfonso VI stands out as a strong king whose interest was in law and order. He was a leader of his state during the Reconquista who was regarded by the Arabs as a very fierce and astute enemy, but also as a man who kept his word.
Alfonso showed a greater degree of interest than his predecessors in increasing the links between Iberia and the rest of Christian Europe. The past marital practices of the Iberian royalty had been to limit the choice of partners to the peninsula and Gascony, but Alfonso had French and Italian consorts, and arranged to marry his daughters to French princes and a king of Sicily. The influences from across the Pyrenees showed themselves in the introduction of the Romanesque style in art, the adoption of the Roman instead of the Mozarabic liturgy, the replacement of Visigothic by Carolingian script, and the energetic support that Alfonso gave to Cluniac monasticism, as well as in his reconstruction and safeguarding of the pilgrim road to Santiago.
According some chronicle, Alfonso VI had five wives and two concubines nobilissimas (most noble). The wives were Agnes of Aquitaine, Constance of Burgundy, Bertha, Isabel, and Beatrice of Aquitaine and the concubines Jimena Muñoz and Zaida of Seville. Zaida is also counted among the wives of Alfonso VI with the name Isabel and mother of his son Sancho Alfónsez. Some chroniclers from north of the Pyrenees report an earlier espousal, to a daughter of William the Conqueror, King of England and Duke of Normandy named Agatha.
The final stage of Alfonso’s reign was marked by a series of frustrating defeats at the hands of the Almoravid Berbers, who invaded Spain at the behest of Spanish Muslim leaders worried about growing Christian power, and a family crisis. Alfonso VI cunningly defeated a conspiracy of his sons-in-law Raymond and Henry of Burgundy who had plotted to divide the kingdom at his death.To turn them against each other, he gave Henry and his daughter Teresa the government of the County of Portugal, until then ruled by Raymond and his daughter Urraca, while the government of Raymond and Urraca was limited to Galicia. Accordingly, both cousins, instead of being allies, became rivals with conflicting interests; the succession pact went up in smoke and, henceforth, each would try to garner the favor of King Alfonso VI. Alfonso’s designated successor, his son Sancho, was slain after being routed at the Battle of Uclés in 1108, making Alfonso’s eldest legitimate daughter, the widowed Urraca as his heir. In order to strengthen her position as his successor, Alfonso began negotiations for her to marry her second cousin, Alfonso I of Aragon and Navarre, but died before the marriage could take place.
Sources:
Carlos de Ayala, ON THE ORIGINS OF CRUSADING IN THE PENINSULA: THE REIGN OF ALFONSO VI (1065-1109)
http://www.1066.co.nz/Mosaic%20DVD/stamford%20bridge/Alfonso%20VI%20of%20Leon%20and%20Castile.htm
http://homepages.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy2/ps07/ps07_001.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfonso_VI_of_León_and_Castile
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Todo el mundo usa el ejemplo de Hitler y Napoleón como muestra de ‘aprender de los errores de otros’
Pero en el fail mítico este que conoce todo el mundo
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No se aprendió de este anterior.
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Aunque la ejecución es mejor, francamente.
Enviado por @JaimeOlias
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Jaime Olías protagoniza el videoclip de Apollo Flytrap
El protagonista de Ángel o Demonio, el madrileño Jaime Olías, debuta en el formato videoclip junto…
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Jaime Olías as the Tin Soldier
Once Upon a Time series by Rebeca Saray
#jaime olías#jaime olias#rebeca saray#photo#photoshoot#photography#hot spanish guys#i love him#he's HOT
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@asongofstarkandtargaryen
You’re no longer a child. You’re a true prince.
El Cid (2020–): Alfonso VI de León x Urraca de Zamora
#El Cid#Alfonso VI de León#Urraca de Zamora#Alfonso VI of Leon#Urraca of Zamora#Jaime Olías#Alicia Sanz#edit#(also with Jaime Olías footage in Toledo and El Final del Camino series)
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Jaime Olías as Alfonso (El Cid)
#jaime olías#jaime olias gifs#jaime olias#jaime olías gifs#periodedit#perioddramaedit#perioddrama#weloveperioddrama#userperioddrama#perioddramacentral#period fc#dailytvedit#dailytvgifs#dailytvsource#dailytvandfilm#ressources rpg#ressources gifs#gif#underused faceclaims#underused male fc#underused fc#fc help#fch#forum rpg#french rpg#faceclaim rpg#faceclaim ressources#fcressources#gifs#el cid 2020
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"El Cid " (2020) :
Infante Alfonso (future Alfonso VI of Leon)
Infanta Urraca (Urraca of Zamora)
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