Mauregatus

King of Asturias from 783 to 789 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mauregatus the Usurper (Spanish: Mauregato) was the king of Asturias from 783 to 788 or 789. He was an illegitimate son of Alfonso I, supposedly by a Moorish serf. He usurped the throne on the death of Silo, the husband of his half sister Adosinda, earning himself the nickname of the Usurper.[1] The nobility had elected Alfonso II at Adosinda's insistence, but Mauregatus assembled a large army of supporters and forced Alfonso into exile in Álava.

Reign783–789
PredecessorAlfonso II
SuccessorBermudo I
Quick facts King of Asturias, Reign ...
Mauregatus
Depiction in the Castilian manuscript Compendium of Chronicles of Kings, c.1312–1325
King of Asturias
Reign783–789
Coronation783
PredecessorAlfonso II
SuccessorBermudo I
BornAsturias
Died789
Pravia, Asturias
Burial
SpouseCreusa
IssueHermenegildo
DynastyAstur-Leonese dynasty
FatherAlfonso I of Asturias
MotherSisalda
ReligionChalcedonian Christianity
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According to folklore, Mauregatus and Moorish rulers agreed to the apocryphal "Tribute of the 100 Maidens," which gifted the Moors 100 Asturian virgins annually as repayment for their assistance in Mauregatus' rise to the throne. This arrangement supposedly ended after Ramiro I's defeat of the Moors at the legendary Battle of Clavijo.[2]

After six years in power, he died of natural causes in 789 and was buried in the Church of San Juan Apóstol y Evangelista in Pravia. Following his death, Bermudo I was chosen as his successor.[3]

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