We have been privy to a few coronations in the past few years, though none have reached the pomp and circumstance of the ones of yesteryear. Coronations of a new king/queen were regarded as highly important and no expense was spared to show the new ruler off.
However, one of the strangest coronations to have existed goes to Ines De Castro, the wife of Pedro I of Portugal.
For you see, Ines de Castro was already dead a few years. Upon his accension to the throne, Pedro had his secret (some say not legitimate) wife exhumed from her burial plot and presented to the court as a legitimate queen.
Pedro I was madly in love with his wife, Ines de Castro, when she was brutally murdered by Pedro's father, King Afonso V. Ines de Castro started her notorious life at court when she accompanied Pedro's wife, the Infanta Constantia of Castile, as her lady-in-waiting. Although Constantia was his wife, Pedro only had eyes for Ines. Her settled Ines into a monastery outside of the palace and visited frequently and sent many love letters to his darling love.
There were attempts made to separate the pair. Upon the birth of Constantia and Pedro's son, Ines was made the godmother, which in the time period would make Ines a member of the family and therefore, the dalliance between the two to be deemed incestuous. This did nothing to temper the passion between the two. King Afonso banished Ines back to Castile for a time period in 1344. But Pedro would go and visit her in Castile. Fortunately for the couple, they weren't separated for very long as Constantia died in 1345 after giving birth to their third child, Dom Fernando.
After her death, Pedro gave up all sense of propriety and retrieved his Ines and the pair began to live openly together. They had four children together, which raised concern with many at the court inheritance of the crown. The child that Constantia had in 1345 was still living, and many were afraid that the child of Ines and Pedro would try and usurp Dom Fernando's rights to the throne. Additionally, Ines' brothers became close to Pedro and were leading Pedro down a path that would only lead to war and destruction. They were trying to persuade Pedro that he should seize the throne of Castile, which was a very fantastical idea even though Pedro had a claim through his grandfather.

When Pedro found out that Ines had been murdered at the hands of his father, he reacted with fury and swift. Along with Ines' two brothers, he organized a revolt against the King. His troops swept through the country and laid siege to Porto, when his mother, the Queen, intervened to bring some peace between Father and Son. Within 2 years, King Afonso was dead and the new King Pedro brought 2 of 3 Ines' direct killers to justice. He had both men take from Castile, where they had escaped, and had them tortured. He had the hearts of both of them ripped out from their chest cavity watching as he ate his dinner. The third killer would never be found.
In 1360, five years after the death of Ines and three years into his own reign, Pedro announced that he and Ines were secretly married. And as legend has it, he had the body of his beloved exhumed and dressed in regal coronation robes and made his entire court swear fealty and kiss the bottom of her robes. After the ceremony, he had her re-buried in a pomp ceremony deserving of the Queen of Portugal.
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