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For succession, rebellion and regency, changes come from Pérez de Urbel, "Jimenos y Velas en Portugal". Revista Portuguesa de História. 5:475-492 (1951)); Pérez de Urbel, "Lo viejo y lo nuevo sobre el origin del Reino de Pamplona" in Al-Andalus, XIX (1954), 1-30; Lévi-Provençal, E. and Emilio Garcia Gómez. "Textos inéditos del "Muqtabis" de Ibn Hayyan sobre los orígines del Reino de Pamplona". Al-Andalus. 19:295-315 (1954). José Maria Lacarra. "Textos navarros del Códice de Roda". Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragon. 1:194-283 (1945).

For marriages, the following are a sampling of the confusion:

Uracca: Lacarra. Textos navarros del Códice de Roda discusses briefly the documentation for Uracca, but draws no conclusion. Antonio Ubieto Arteta. El Matrimonio de la Reina Leodegundia. Medievalia. 10:451-4 (1992), concludes that Uracca married a Garcia from some other part of the kingdom, not Garcia Iñiguez. Ricardo del Arco y Garay, in his chapter on Aragon in the Menendez Pidal Historia de España vol. VI concludes that the document in question was actually refering to king Garcia the Trembler and his mother Uracca of Castile; Thierry Stasser. Consanguinity et Alliances Dynastiques en Espagne au Haut Moyen Age: La Politique Matrimoniale de la Reinne Tota de Navarre. Hidalguia. No. 277: 811-39 (1999) shows Uracca as wife of Garcia Iñiguez.

Leodegundia: Pérez de Urbel, "Jimenos y Velas en Portugal", and several of his other works (including his chapter on Navarre in the same Menendez Pidal Historia volume) writes that Leodegundia married Jimeno, father of Garcia Jimenez. Armando Cotarelo Valledor, Historia Critica y Documentada de la Vida y Acciones de Alfonso III el Magno, Ultimo Rey de Asturias, (1933) concludes that she married Sancho Garces, brother of King Fortun. Ubieto Arteta, "El Matrimonio de la Reina Leodegundia", Medievalia, 10:451-4 (1992), concludes it was Garcia Iñiguez she married, but cites Valls y Tabernor as concluding it was Fortun Garces, an opinion apparently shared by Barrau-Dihigo, L. (1989) Historia politica del reino Asturiano (718-910) (Gijón) (which I have not seen, but I have seen it stated that he rejected the Garcia Iñiguez solution). Agricolae 02:23, 29 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Velasquita

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I have a record of velasquita daughter of sancho II of Pamplona "the Navarra". Who married the 2nd lord of Viscaya Maso Lopez the Grandee Lopez. Or the Lopez house mark of Viscaya. He diverced her and she became a nun to the monastery. As per the writen record sof the lord sof biscaya books and the Lopez House of Viscaya.

http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_creation/Fortun(o)_Sanchez_(Sangiz)_Grandee_Zambrana#Lineage

Jose Luis Zambrano De Santiago (talk)

Jose Luis Zambrano De Santiago (talk) 21:08, 22 October 2012 (UTC)[reply]

This Velasquita is distinct from the one listed on this page. Velasquita, daughter of Sancho I of Pamplona (not Sancho II) married to Munio, lord of Viscaya. This is documented by a 10th century genealogy thought to have been drafted in celebration of the marriage of her nephew, Garcia of Castile to Ava of Ribagorza, and so is believed to be trustworthy in the generations immediately preceding that marriage. It reports not only that Velasquita married Munio, but later she married Galindo Bernard of Ribagorza (Ava's uncle), and then Fortun Galindez, a Basque nobleman. See her father's page for the details. Only one daughter of Sancho II is known, the mother of al-Manzur's son Sanchuelo. Agricolae (talk) 01:17, 23 October 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The Velasquita who appears on this page was named Velasquita Sanchez by one al-Andalus chronicler and Velasquita Garces by another. Neither names her father, so her placement as daughter of Sancho, son of Garcia Iniguez is speculative, though not unlikely. 50.37.126.120 (talk) 13:52, 13 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]