Nos adentramos en el rodaje de la serie sobre Isabel 'La Católica'. Sus protagonistas nos cuentan los secretos que se escondían detrás de una de las ficciones más premiadas de la televisión.
capítulo especial sobre la vida de la reina más importante de la historia de España
As the series begins, Isabel and her brothers' lives are turned upside down when they are forced into the hostile environment of the court.
The drama and intrigue continue as the nobles begin to put their plot to dethrone Isabel's half-brother Enrique into action.
As the Civil War brings chaos and anarchy to Castille, Isabel learns that her half-brother Enrique has promised her to a man she doesn't love
Tragedy strikes Isabel's family, forcing her to finally make her choice. Should she obey Enrique or rise against him?
Isabel seeks comfort for the death of her brother in his friend Gonzalo. Meanwhile, the Queen receives news that forces her to flee the court.
Empowered by a discovery about her half-brother, Isabel tries to cut a deal with Enrique. However, the king also has a plan up his sleeve.
Isabel deceives King Enrique over her ambitions to marry. But while she may be able to fool her brother, nothing gets past Pacheco.
Disguised as a servant, Fernando begins his secret journey to meet Isabel at the altar. Forced to take perilous backroads, his route is fraught with terrible dangers.
As the wedding approaches, Isabel and Fernando meet for the first time. Bad news throws their big day into jeopardy, leaving King Enrique overjoyed.
Isabel and Fernando welcome a child into the world. But their happiness doesn't last for long as Pacheco sends his troops to capture them.
Pacheco persecutes all those who chose to support Isabel and Fernando. Plus, with her marriage already under strain, Isabel overhears a secret about her husband.
As the Pope dies and a new holyman takes his place. King Juan of Aragon seizes his chance to lay the problems surrounding Isabel and Fernando's papal bull to rest.
A sudden death and a twist of events sees King Enrique flee to Madrid. Later, Castile prepares to crown a new Queen.
Isabel's decision to take the Crown while Fernando is in Aragon angers him, a division that Carrillo is eager to use. Meanwhile, Diego Pacheco seeks support from Portugal and the nobles to dethrone Isabel in favor of Juana.
Reconciled, Fernando and a pregnant Isabel face their biggest test yet as the Portuguese invade Castile. King Alfonso marries Juana to reinforce her claim, but is reluctant to consummate the marriage as his supporters insist him to.
Fernando besieges Burgos while the Portuguese try to send a relief column to the rebels. Meanwhile, Isabel balances the conflicting interests of the Aristocracy, the Church and the Jews to finance the war.
Isabel debates showing mercy to the rebels when the new bread tax causes an uprising in Segovia. Chacón ponders retirement. Juana feels imprisoned during her husband's absence and seeks solace in her stepson, the Prince of Portugal.
Isabel visits Seville, Castile's richest city but also a place plagued by crime and corruption. Juan II accuses Fernando of caring more for his wife's kingdom than for his. A border incident sours relations between Castile and Granada.
The King's long absence throws Portugal in confusion, but Isabel and Fernando are no less divided over their next move. Rome pressures Castile to adopt the Inquisition. In Granada, the jealous Aixa plots against the Emir.
The converts of Seville look at their options in the face of the Inquisition. Juana's unruliness threatens the peace between Portugal and Castile. Beatriz learns her nephew's secret. Muley-Hacén names his heir.
It's time to visit Aragon to nominate Prince Juan as heir to the kingdom, but this is the least of Isabel and Fernando's problems. Granada invades Zahara, Catalonia is divided and the royals must face their most dangerous pregnancy yet.
The war bogs down as the nobles of Spain prefer to pursue their own interests before the Crown's, but a stroke of luck might tip the balance in the fight between Christians and Muslims. In Portugal, the king seeks to reinforce his position.
Fernando makes his authority in Aragon clear. Isabel receives a foreign sailor with a bold proposal. El Zagal rallies all Muslims to make common front against the Christians.
Fernando lays siege to Malaga, El Zagal's stronghold and richest city in Granada, while the Muslims appeal to their brethren outside Europe. Isabel receives the two queens of Granada.
Just as the Granada War nears its end, Prince Juan's sudden illness threatens to give Isabel and Fernando's kingdoms to the Portuguese. Columbus retouches his plan, and Torquemada investigates a murder.
The ultimatum to Boabdil expires. Isabel and Fernando decide on the future of Granada, the Jews, the dispute with France and Columbus' enterprise.
Columbus' voyage is a success but a storm forces him to land on Portugal. The royals travel to Barcelona to sign a treaty with France, who ambitions to conquer Naples. The queen meets her new confessor, and her daughter ponders her future.
Columbus hides his doubts as he is pressed to make a second voyage. Portugal disputes the new lands to Castile, and France invades Italy. In Rome, the Pope juggles the rival countries interests for his own benefit.
Colombus has gone missing, and word travels back that his brothers are abusing the natives. Desperate to defeat the French, Isabel and Fernando must decide whether to use their children tools in their tactical negotiations.
Queen Isabel copes with loss on multiple levels, including Princess Juana's departure for Flanders to live with her husband.
Margarita arrives in Castile to marry Juan, a union that will bring equal parts joy and devastation.
A mere accident in the French court shakes the whole of Europe. Meanwhile, Juana's husband devises his own plan to assert his reign.
When Juana's situation with Felipe becomes desperate, her advisers urge her to return to Castile. Plus, relations with the Muslims in Granada reach a breaking point.
The succession of Castile and Aragon depends on Isabel's grandson. His disappearance unleashes the alarm and the only option is for the Courts to swear Juana and her husband as heirs. In Granada, not even Gonzalo can put down the revolt.
Renewed tensions with the French coincide with Felipe and Juana's visit there, putting their well-being at risk. And after many years, Juana finally returns to Castile.
As Juana is named the official heir of Aragon and Castile, Isabel and Fernando grapple with how to protect their reign against the influence of her husband, Felipe, especially in his allegiance to the French.
Felipe is sent to France to negotiate, while Aragon recuperates his army under this guise of diplomacy. Juana grows madder with the absence of her husband.
As Queen Isabel's health deteriorates, so does Juana's mental state, leaving the future of Castile's crown uncertain.
Queen Isabel's health shows no signs of improvement. Those in power continue to jockey for their place in a future Spain that may be forced to go on without her.