Kings during a Suebic Civil War Note: the civil war split the kingdom, and multiple kings ruled smaller regions of Galicia.
Maldras
Framta
Richimund
Frumar
Remismund - reunification
Dark Period
Hermeneric
Veremund
Theodemund
Final Suevic Period
Chararic
Ariamir
Theodemar
Miro or Mirón
Eboric, or Euric
Andeca
Malaric
Visigothic Kings of Galicia, Hispania and Septimania
The Visigoth kings took control of Galicia in 585, which became the sixth province of the Kingdom of Toledo. Anyhow, Galicia maintained a distinguishable administrative and legal identity up to the collapse of the Visigothic monarchy:
Wittiza - associated to the throne as king in Galicia until 702; only king after his father's death
Roderic
From the fall of the Visigothic kingdom until the beginning of the 10th century, Galicia was integrated with other Christian kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula.
Kings of Galicia
In 910, Alfonso III the Great was forced to abdicate in favor of his sons, who partitioned the kingdom. This resulted in a briefly independent kingdom of Galicia:
Ordoño II
In 914, Ordoño acquired the throne at León, reuniting his father's kingdom. On the death of his brother Fruela II of León in 925, there was a period of competing claimants, being made king in Galicia:
The death of Sancho led to Galicia again becoming part of the Kingdom of León, with which it was joined until 982, when the Galician nobility crowned in Santiago de Compostela an anti-king:
Bermudo II
Bermudo routed Ramiro III of León in the battle of Portela de Areas, later becoming undisputed ruler of the Leonese kingdom, and so reunifying the realm.
García II - reigned in Galicia and Portugal until deposed by his brother Alfonso in 1072, after which he was kept chained in a castle until his death in 1090.
Alfonso VII – In 1111 he was crowned as the mediatizedking of Galicia in Santiago de Compostela as his mother's heir apparent, and in 1126 he succeeded Urraca as king of León, Castile and Toledo. Galicia was again merged within the larger realm, its size reduced in 1139 when Afonso Henriques won the independence of the County of Portugal. From 1152 on Alfonso VII associated his sons to the throne, Ferdinand receiving the title of King of Galicia. On the death of his father, in 1157, Fernando became King of León.
With the accession to the throne of Ferdinand III of Castile in 1230, the Kingdom of Galicia became dynastically united with the kingdoms of León, Castile and Toledo inside the Crown of Castile, but maintaining its personality as a kingdom, and its own legal institutions. During the early reign Ferdinand IV, his uncle disputed the title with him and claimed to be king of León, Galicia and Seville
Following Peter I of Castile's death, a succession crisis occurred. During this time, the throne of Galiza was offered to Ferdinand I of Portugal, a member of the Portuguese House of Burgundy, and he was acclaimed in Galiza as King. His reign would see the opening of trade between the two nations and economic benefits for both. This reign, however, would be short, once Henry II of Castile demanded that Ferdinand give up the throne to Castile. Ferdinand did so easily, having not seen Galicia as an integral part of the Portuguese nation.
In 1386, John of Gaunt pressed the claim for his wife, to the throne of Castile. He successfully invaded Galicia and held most of the country until he was defeated in 1387.
and Juana la Beltraneja, acclaimed de jure kings of Galicia in 1475, saw their pretensions to the Castilian throne defeated at the Battle of Toro in 1479.