Late Middle Ages · Europe · Politics

1489

Treaty of Medina del Campo

1489

England and Spain signed a treaty providing for the marriage of Arthur Tudor and Catherine of Aragon. Henry VII had secured English recognition from a major continental power; Ferdinand and Isabella had acquired a northern ally against France. The marriage would eventually unravel into the English Reformation. The treaty's provisions for trade, defense, and dynastic marriage reflected the growing sophistication of late medieval diplomacy.