Ansur (?)1
M, #19411, d. circa 880
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Ansur (?) died circa 880.
; Per Med Lands:
"ANSUR ---.
"m ---. The name of Ansur's wife is not known.
"Ansur & his wife had two children:
; Per Med Lands:
"ANSUR ---.
"m ---. The name of Ansur's wife is not known.
"Ansur & his wife had two children:
"1. FERNANDO Ansúrez (-930 or after). Conde en Castilla
"2. RODANIO Ansúrez . Abbot."1
"2. RODANIO Ansúrez . Abbot."1
Family | |
Child |
Citations
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CASTILE.htm#_Toc482092966. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
William Sambourne of Fernham, Shrivenham, Berks1
M, #19412
Last Edited | 23 Nov 2002 |
William Sambourne of Fernham, Shrivenham, Berks lived at Fernham, Shrivenham, Berkshire, England.1
Family | |
Child |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Plymouth Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
Joan (?) of Gloucester1,2
F, #19413, b. 1384, d. 16 August 1400
Father | Thomas (?) of Woodstock, Knt., KG, Earl of Buckingham, Duke of Gloucester1,2,3,4 b. 7 Jan 1354/55, d. 8 Sep 1397 |
Mother | Lady Alianor (Eleanor) de Bohun Lg1,2,3,5 b. c 1366, d. 3 Oct 1399 |
Last Edited | 5 Oct 2008 |
Joan (?) of Gloucester was born in 1384.2 She married Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere, son of Sir Richard Talbot 4th Lord Talbot de Blackmere and Ankaret le Strange Baroness Strange of Blackmere, before 20 May 1392
; certainly betrothed to, but she dsp seemingly prior to consummation of the marriage (if any.)1,2
Joan (?) of Gloucester died on 16 August 1400.1,2
; certainly betrothed to, but she dsp seemingly prior to consummation of the marriage (if any.)1,2
Joan (?) of Gloucester died on 16 August 1400.1,2
Family | Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere b. 1383, d. 19 Oct 1418 |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Shrewsbury and Waterford Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Anjou 3 page (The House of Anjou): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/anjou/anjou3.html
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bourchier 8: p. 138. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Thomas of Woodstock: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00005767&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Eleanor de Bohun: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00005768&tree=LEO
Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere1
M, #19414, b. 1383, d. 19 October 1418
Father | Sir Richard Talbot 4th Lord Talbot de Blackmere1 b. c 1361, d. bt 8 Sep 1396 - 9 Sep 1396 |
Mother | Ankaret le Strange Baroness Strange of Blackmere1 b. c 1361, d. 1 Jun 1413 |
Last Edited | 5 Oct 2008 |
Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere was born in 1383.1,2 He married Joan (?) of Gloucester, daughter of Thomas (?) of Woodstock, Knt., KG, Earl of Buckingham, Duke of Gloucester and Lady Alianor (Eleanor) de Bohun Lg, before 20 May 1392
; certainly betrothed to, but she dsp seemingly prior to consummation of the marriage (if any.)1,2 Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere married Beatriz de Sousa circa 1415.3
Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere died on 19 October 1418 at Rouen, Departement de la Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France (now).1,2
He was 5th LORD (Baron) TALBOT.1 He was 5th or 8th LORD (Baron) STRANGE (of Blackmere) according to later doctrine (through his mother.)1
; GILBERT TALBOT, 5th LORD (Baron) TALBOT, KG (1408 or 1409) and through his mother 5th or 8th LORD (Baron) STRANGE (of Blackmere) according to later doctrine; b 1383; defeated Welsh Battle of Grosmount 11 March 1404/5, captured Harlech Castle after a siege Dec 1408-Jan 1408/9, Ch Justice Cheshire 1413, Capt Caen Castle Normandy 1418, besieged and captured Domfront and Caudebec July and Sept 1418 respectively; (?)m 1st(?) (certainly betrothed to) Joan (dsp seemingly prior to consummation of the marriage (if any) 16 Aug 1400), 2nd dau of Thomas (of Woodstock), Duke of Gloucester, yst son of EDWARD III; m 2nd(?) c 1415 Beatrix, of Portugal, possibly a memb of the prominent Pinto family but possibly also of a line descended illegitimately from ALFONSO III of Portugal, and dspm 19 Oct 1418.1
; certainly betrothed to, but she dsp seemingly prior to consummation of the marriage (if any.)1,2 Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere married Beatriz de Sousa circa 1415.3
Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere died on 19 October 1418 at Rouen, Departement de la Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France (now).1,2
He was 5th LORD (Baron) TALBOT.1 He was 5th or 8th LORD (Baron) STRANGE (of Blackmere) according to later doctrine (through his mother.)1
; GILBERT TALBOT, 5th LORD (Baron) TALBOT, KG (1408 or 1409) and through his mother 5th or 8th LORD (Baron) STRANGE (of Blackmere) according to later doctrine; b 1383; defeated Welsh Battle of Grosmount 11 March 1404/5, captured Harlech Castle after a siege Dec 1408-Jan 1408/9, Ch Justice Cheshire 1413, Capt Caen Castle Normandy 1418, besieged and captured Domfront and Caudebec July and Sept 1418 respectively; (?)m 1st(?) (certainly betrothed to) Joan (dsp seemingly prior to consummation of the marriage (if any) 16 Aug 1400), 2nd dau of Thomas (of Woodstock), Duke of Gloucester, yst son of EDWARD III; m 2nd(?) c 1415 Beatrix, of Portugal, possibly a memb of the prominent Pinto family but possibly also of a line descended illegitimately from ALFONSO III of Portugal, and dspm 19 Oct 1418.1
Family 1 | Joan (?) of Gloucester b. 1384, d. 16 Aug 1400 |
Family 2 | Beatriz de Sousa d. 1448 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Shrewsbury and Waterford Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Anjou 3 page (The House of Anjou): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/anjou/anjou3.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Beatriz de Sousa: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00399377&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Dom João (?) Infante de Portugal1,2
M, #19415, b. 23 September 1326, d. 21 June 1327
Father | Afonso IV "o Bravo" (?) King of Portugal1,3,2 b. 8 Feb 1291, d. 28 May 1357 |
Mother | Doña Beatriz Sancha (?) Infanta of Castile-León, Queen Consort of Portugal1,4,2 b. 1293, d. 25 Oct 1359 |
Last Edited | 12 May 2020 |
Dom João (?) Infante de Portugal was born on 23 September 1326.1
Dom João (?) Infante de Portugal died on 21 June 1327; buried Mosteiro de Odivelas.1
Dom João (?) Infante de Portugal died on 21 June 1327; buried Mosteiro de Odivelas.1
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Capet 48 Page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/capet/capet48.html
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PORTUGAL.htm#AffonsoIVdied1357B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Afonso IV 'o Bravo': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020566&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Beatriz of Castile: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020567&tree=LEO
Ankaret Talbot Baroness Talbot and Strange (of Blackmere)1
F, #19416, b. circa 1416, d. 13 December 1421
Father | Sir Gilbert Talbot KG, 5th Lord Talbot, 5th/8th Lord Strange of Blackmere1 b. 1383, d. 19 Oct 1418 |
Mother | Beatriz de Sousa2 d. 1448 |
Last Edited | 7 Nov 2003 |
Ankaret Talbot Baroness Talbot and Strange (of Blackmere) was born circa 1416.1
Ankaret Talbot Baroness Talbot and Strange (of Blackmere) died on 13 December 1421.1
Ankaret Talbot Baroness Talbot and Strange (of Blackmere) died on 13 December 1421.1
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Shrewsbury and Waterford Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Beatriz de Sousa: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00399377&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Gebhard (?) Graf im Ufgau1
M, #19417, d. after 15 January 947
Father | Eberhard (?) Graf im Niederlahngau, Graf in der Ortenau2,1,3 d. bt 902 - 903 |
Mother | Wiltrud (?)4,1,3 d. a 902 |
Last Edited | 5 Apr 2020 |
Gebhard (?) Graf im Ufgau married Adela (?) de Vermandois, daughter of Heribert I (?) Cte de Vermandois, sn de Senlis, de Peronne et de St.Quentin,
; Per Med Lands:
"GEBHARD (-after 15 Jan 947). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Ufgau 940: "Otto…rex" donated "Meriske [Mörsch] in pago Vfgowe in comitatu Gebehardi" to the church of Speier "Baboni eiusdem comitis Burchardi vassallo in pago Hegouue" by charter dated 12 Feb 940 at the request of "Chuonradi…comitis nostri"[251]. "Otto…rex" confirmed the immunities of Kloster Essen including over land "excepta in loco Ruoldinghus quam Eggihart et eius coniunx Rikilt" possessed by hereditary right and in land "in comitatu Ecberti et Cobbonis" by charter dated 15 Jan 947, signed by "Heinrici fratris regis, Herimanni ducis, Cuonradi comitis, Erenfridi comitis, Gebehardi comitis, Ekkihardi comitis, Hugonis comitis"[252].
"m [ADELA], daughter of ---. Graf Gebhard's wife is not named explicitly in the sources so far consulted. However, an "Adela" is named in a name-list in the Reichenau memorial book dated [926/32] which appears to include members of the Konradiner family, Jackman suggesting that she is well placed in the list to be Graf Gebhard's wife[253], although this is not the only possible interpretation. Jackman suggests[254] that she was [Adela] de Vermandois, daughter of Héribert [I] Comte de Vermandois, although based solely only on onomastic grounds."
Med Lands cites:
Gebhard (?) Graf im Ufgau died after 15 January 947.1
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: I 4.7 He was Graf im Ufgau.1
; Per Med Lands:
"GEBHARD (-after 15 Jan 947). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Ufgau 940: "Otto…rex" donated "Meriske [Mörsch] in pago Vfgowe in comitatu Gebehardi" to the church of Speier "Baboni eiusdem comitis Burchardi vassallo in pago Hegouue" by charter dated 12 Feb 940 at the request of "Chuonradi…comitis nostri"[251]. "Otto…rex" confirmed the immunities of Kloster Essen including over land "excepta in loco Ruoldinghus quam Eggihart et eius coniunx Rikilt" possessed by hereditary right and in land "in comitatu Ecberti et Cobbonis" by charter dated 15 Jan 947, signed by "Heinrici fratris regis, Herimanni ducis, Cuonradi comitis, Erenfridi comitis, Gebehardi comitis, Ekkihardi comitis, Hugonis comitis"[252].
"m [ADELA], daughter of ---. Graf Gebhard's wife is not named explicitly in the sources so far consulted. However, an "Adela" is named in a name-list in the Reichenau memorial book dated [926/32] which appears to include members of the Konradiner family, Jackman suggesting that she is well placed in the list to be Graf Gebhard's wife[253], although this is not the only possible interpretation. Jackman suggests[254] that she was [Adela] de Vermandois, daughter of Héribert [I] Comte de Vermandois, although based solely only on onomastic grounds."
Med Lands cites:
[251] D O I 23, p. 110.
[252] D O I 85, p. 166.
[253] Jackman (1997), p. 38.
[254] Jackman (1997), pp. 36 and 38.1,5,6,3
[252] D O I 85, p. 166.
[253] Jackman (1997), p. 38.
[254] Jackman (1997), pp. 36 and 38.1,5,6,3
Gebhard (?) Graf im Ufgau died after 15 January 947.1
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: I 4.7 He was Graf im Ufgau.1
Family | Adela (?) de Vermandois |
Child |
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Gebhard: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120362&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Eberhard: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120361&tree=LEO
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA.htm#Gebharddied947. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Wiltrud: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00313105&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, (Adela) de Vermandois: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00313104&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/nfravalver.htm#AdelaMGebhardKonradiner
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Gebhard: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120362&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Konrad: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120363&tree=LEO
Lope Lopez (?) de Vizcaya, sn de Miranda de Ebro1
M, #19418, d. between 1178 and 1182
Father | Lope Diaz de Haro Lord of Vizcaya2 b. b 1124, d. Apr 1170 |
Mother | Aldonza Rodriguez de Vela2 b. b 1135, d. a 1170 |
Last Edited | 30 Dec 2007 |
Lope Lopez (?) de Vizcaya, sn de Miranda de Ebro married Maria (?) de Urgel, sna de Almenara, daughter of Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel and Elvira Rodriguez de Lara, before 1172.1,2
Lope Lopez (?) de Vizcaya, sn de Miranda de Ebro died between 1178 and 1182.2
Lope Lopez (?) de Vizcaya, sn de Miranda de Ebro died between 1178 and 1182.2
Family | Maria (?) de Urgel, sna de Almenara d. 1196 |
Child |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S2184] Leo van de Pas, "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007: "Descendants Alfonso VI - improved and extended"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/lVvrEhMS2pk/m/lxJSTqSvbG0J) to e-mail address, 23 Sept 2007. Hereinafter cited as "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007."
Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier1
M, #19419, b. circa 1110, d. after 1150
Father | Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier1,2 b. c 1085, d. Oct 1129 |
Mother | Gersende d'Albon1,2 |
Reference | GAV24 |
Last Edited | 12 Jan 2014 |
Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier married Josserande Flote, daughter of Pierre Arnaud dit "Flote" (?).1
Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier was born circa 1110.2
Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier died after 1150.1,2
GAV-24. Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier was also known as Bertran II d’Urgell comte de Forcalquier.2 He was living in 1150.1
Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier was born circa 1110.2
Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier died after 1150.1,2
GAV-24. Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier was also known as Bertran II d’Urgell comte de Forcalquier.2 He was living in 1150.1
Family | Josserande Flote b. c 1105, d. c 1152 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Flote: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Flote.pdf, p. 2. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
Josserande Flote1
F, #19420, b. circa 1105, d. circa 1152
Father | Pierre Arnaud dit "Flote" (?)2,1 b. c 1065 |
Reference | GAV24 |
Last Edited | 12 Jan 2014 |
Josserande Flote married Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier, son of Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier and Gersende d'Albon.2
Josserande Flote was born circa 1105.1
Josserande Flote died circa 1152.1
GAV-24. Josserande Flote was also known as Joscerande de Flotte.2
Josserande Flote was born circa 1105.1
Josserande Flote died circa 1152.1
GAV-24. Josserande Flote was also known as Joscerande de Flotte.2
Family | Bertrand II (?) Comte de Forcalquier b. c 1110, d. a 1150 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Flote: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Flote.pdf, p. 2. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier1,2
M, #19421, b. circa 1085, d. October 1129
Father | Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel2,3,4 b. 1050, d. 28 Mar 1092 |
Mother | Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier2,5 b. c 1040, d. 1129 |
Reference | GAV25 |
Last Edited | 26 Apr 2020 |
Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier married Gersende d'Albon, daughter of Guigues III [VI] “le Comte” d'Albon Count d'Albon, Comte de Grenoble, Dauphin de Viennois and Mathilde (?).1,2
Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier was born circa 1085.
Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier died in October 1129 at Avignon, France.1,2
GAV-25.
Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier was born circa 1085.
Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier died in October 1129 at Avignon, France.1,2
GAV-25.
Family | Gersende d'Albon |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Albon 1 page (Counts d'Albon, Counts de Forez and Sires de Beaujeau): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/albon1.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol IV 'el de Gerb': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120890&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIVUrgeldied1092B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Adelaide: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120891&tree=LEO
- [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Flote: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Flote.pdf, p. 2. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
Gersende d'Albon1,2
F, #19422
Father | Guigues III [VI] “le Comte” d'Albon Count d'Albon, Comte de Grenoble, Dauphin de Viennois1,2,3,4,5 b. bt 1050 - 1060, d. 21 Dec 1125 |
Mother | Mathilde (?)1,3,6,5 d. a 1130 |
Reference | GAV25 |
Last Edited | 1 Sep 2020 |
Gersende d'Albon married Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier, son of Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel and Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier.1,2
GAV-25. Gersende d'Albon was living in 1152.1
GAV-25. Gersende d'Albon was living in 1152.1
Family | Guillaume III (?) Comte de Forcalquier b. c 1085, d. Oct 1129 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Albon 1 page (Counts d'Albon, Counts de Forez and Sires de Beaujeau): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/albon1.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison d'Albon: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_d%27Albon. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Guigues III: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00048724&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/burgkvien.htm#GuiguesIVdied1106B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mathilda: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00048725&tree=LEO
- [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Flote: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Flote.pdf, p. 2. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel1,2
M, #19423, b. 1050, d. 28 March 1092
Father | Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel1,2,3,4,5 b. bt 1032 - 1033, d. 17 Apr 1066 |
Mother | Adelaida (?) de Besalú1,6,7,5 d. b 1055 |
Reference | GAV26 EDV28 |
Last Edited | 25 Sep 2020 |
Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel was born in 1050; Genealogics says b. ca 1056; Med Lands says b. 1050; Genealogy.EU says v. 1056.1,2,3 He married Lucia (?) de la Marche, daughter of Bernard I (?) Comte de la Marche, before 19 June 1063
;
His 1st wife. Genealogics says m. ca 1077; Med Lands says m. bef 19 Jun 1063.1,2,3 Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel married Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier, daughter of Guillaume IV/VI Bertrand (?) Comte de Provence and Adélaïde de Cavenez, in 1079
;
His 2nd wife
Genealogy.EU says m. 1079; Genealogics says m. bef 13 Feb 1081.1,8,9,10,2,3
Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel died on 28 March 1092.1,2,3
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.2
; Per Genealogics:
"Armengol, called 'el de Gerb' or 'Gerp', was born about 1056, the son of Armengol III, conde de Urgel, and his second wife Clemencia de Bigorre. He was count of Urgel from 1066 to his death.
"Armengol inherited Urgel when he was only ten years old and ruled under the tutelage of the dowager countess Sanchia of Aragón, third wife of his father, until he was twelve. During this brief minority, the nobility took the opportunity to plunder and occupy the comital demesna. It was not until 1075 that Armengol was in control of his county and his nobles.
"In 1077 Armengol married Lucia de La Marche, daughter of Bernard, comte de La Marche. With her, he had his son and heir Armengol V, who would have progeny. In 1079 he married Adelaide, comtesse de Forcalquier, daughter of Guillaume VI Bertrand, comte de Provence, and Adelaide de Cavenez. She bore him one son Guillaume who inherited Forcalquier and would have progeny, and a daughter who died young.
"Armengol was a firm supporter of the contemporary Gregorian reform of the Church, which he introduced to Urgel. He was also an active count. During his reign Urgel profited economically by receiving exiles from Lleida and Fraga. In 1076, having brought the nobles to submission, Armengol began a _Reconquista_ of his own, taking the basin of the river Sió with the villages of Agramunt and Almenara that year and Linyola and Belcaire in 1091. He conquered Calassanç and Gerb, where he died on 28 March 1092, in an effort to pave the way to the recapture of Balaguer, which occurred during the reign of his son Armengol V in 1102."2
; NB: There is disagreement about Armengol's mother:
Med Lands says he was born in 1050 and that his mother was Adelaida de Besalú, his father's first wife (saying they m. 1050). Wikipedia reports: "... in another charter, dated 1069 – 1071, he identifies himself as Ego, Ermengaudus comes Urgelli, filius qui sum comitisse Adalaidis (I, Ermengol count of Urgell, son of Countess Adelaide)." [emphasis added by author]
Genealogics says that he was born ca 1055 and that his mother was Clemence de Bigorre, his father's second wife (saying they m. ca 1055).
Futhermore, as shown here, there is disagreement 1) on the date of his birth (1050 vs 1056) and on 2) the date of his first marriage (to Lucia - 1063 vs 1077).
Conclusion: I have chosen to follow Med Lands on these issues. GA Vaut.3,2,11,12,13,14
; Per Wikipédia (Fr.):
"Armengol IV (ou Ermengol IV) (vers 1050 † 28 mars 1092), dit de Gerp, fut comte d'Urgell de 1065 à 1092. Il était fils d'Armengol III, comte d'Urgell, et d'Adélaïde de Besalu1.
Biographie
"Armengol hérita d'Urgell alors qu'il n'avait que dix ans et régna sous la tutelle de sa belle-mère, Sancie d'Aragon, troisième épouse de son père, jusqu'à ses douze ans. Pendant cette courte minorité, la noblesse en profita pour piller et occuper les domaines comtaux. Ce n'est qu'en 1075 qu'Armengol put reprendre le contrôle du comté sur les nobles.
"Armengol fut un comte actif. Pendant son règne, Urgell prospéra économiquement en recevant les exilés des cités musulmanes de Lérida et de Fraga. En 1076, ayant obtenu la soumission des nobles, il commença à prendre part à la Reconquista de son propre chef, en occupant le basin de la rivière Sió avec les villages d'Agramunt et d'Almenara en 1076, puis Linyola et Belcaire en 1091. Il conquit Calassanç et construisit un château à Gerb2, où il mourut, lors des préparatifs d'une campagne pour reprendre Balaguer, ce qui advint durant le règne de son fils, Armengol V, en 1102.
"Armengol a soutenu la réforme grégorienne, qu'il a introduit à Urgel.
Mariages et enfants
"Il épouse en premières noces avant 1063 une Lucie, dont on ne sait rien de plus et qui donne naissance à :
"Veuf, il se remarie vers 1079 avec Adélaïde de Provence († 1129), comtesse de Forcalquier, qui donne naissance à :
Notes et références
1. Armengol IV sur Medieval Lands (Foundation for Medieval Genealogy [archive].
2. Aujourd'hui rattaché à Os de Balaguer.
Voir aussi
Bibliographie
** (en) Cet article est partiellement ou en totalité issu de l’article de Wikipédia en anglais intitulé « Ermengol IV, Count of Urgell » (voir la liste des auteurs).
** William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 1968, p. 11."13
; Per Wikipedia:
"Ermengol (or Armengol) IV (1056–1092), called el de Gerb or Gerp, was the Count of Urgell from 1066 to his death. He was the son of Ermengol III and Adelaide, at an unknown age whose family is not known, even if some scholars made her daughter of Guillem I, Count of Besalu.[3]
"Ermengol inherited Urgell when he was only ten years old and ruled under the tutelage of the countess dowager, Sancha, third wife of his father, until he was twelve. During this brief minority, the nobility took the opportunity to plunder and occupy the comital demesne. It was not until 1075 that Ermengol was in control of his county and his nobles.
"Ermengol was an active count. During his reign, Urgell profited economically collecting tribute from Lleida and Fraga. In 1076, having brought the nobles to submission, he began a Reconquista of his own, taking the basin of the river Sió with the villages of Agramunt and Almenar that year and Linyola and Belcaire in 1091. He conquered Calassanç and built a castle at Gerb, Spain, where he died, in an effort to pave the way to the recapture of Balaguer, which occurred during the reign of his son, Ermengol V, in 1102.
"Ermengol was a firm supporter of the contemporary Gregorian reform of the Church, which he introduced to Urgel.
"In 1077, Ermengol married Lucy, daughter of Artau I, Count of Pallars Sobirà,[3] and granddaughter of Bernard I of La Marche. With her, he had his son and heir, the aforementioned Ermengol.
"In 1079, he remarried to Adelaide of Folcalquier, daughter of William Bertrand of Provence. She bore him one son, William,[4] who inherited Forcalquier, and a daughter who died young.
Notes
a. In a charter dated 1066 – 1076, he appears as Ermengaudum, Urgellensem comitem, filium Adalaidis comitisse (Ermengol, count of Urgell, son of Countess Adelaide),[1] and, in another charter, dated 1069 – 1071, he identifies himself as Ego, Ermengaudus comes Urgelli, filius qui sum comitisse Adalaidis (I, Ermengol count of Urgell, son of Countess Adelaide). In this charter, he swears fealty to his brother-in-law William I, Count of Cerdanya and promises that if he died without issue, the county of Urgell would be inherited by his sister Isabella.[2]
References
1. Baiges, Feliu & Salrach 2010, Doc. 66, pp. 234–38.
2. Baiges, Feliu & Salrach 2010, Doc. 51, pp. 211–12.
3. Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez 2001, p. 15.
4. Turton 2005, p. 11.
Sources
** Baiges, Ignasi J; Feliu, Gaspar; Salrach, Josep M. (2010). Els pergamins de l'Arxiu Comtal de Barcelona, de Ramon Berenguer II a Ramon Berenguer IV (PDF) (in Catalan). Vol. I. (Coord.) Barcelona: Fundació Noguera. ISBN 978-84-9779-958-4.
** Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez, Ernesto (2001). Relaciones del condado de Urgel con Castilla y León (in Spanish). Madrid: E&P Libros Antiguos, S.L. ISBN 84-87860-37-0.
** Turton, William H. (2005) [First published in 1900]. The Plantagenet Ancestry. London: Clearfield Company. ISBN 9780806303307."12 GAV-26 EDV-28. Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud IV Count of Urgel.1
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [IV] de Urgell "el de Gerp", son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Comte de Urgell & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-Gerp 15 or 28 Mar 1092). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus de Gerb filius eius" (named after the castle which he built) succeeded "Ermengaudus…dictus de Barbastre" in 1065, and died in 1092[2110]. As Armengol is recorded as married in a document dated to 1063 (assuming that this is correctly dated), it is likely that he was born from his father´s first marriage, although this has not yet been corroborated by any primary source. He succeeded his father in 1065 as Comte de Urgell. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2111]. "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063 (although this appears misdated if the other dates shown here are correct)[2112]. "Comes Ermengaudus" promised the comte de Cerdanya that, if he died childless, his property would be inherited by "germanam meam Elisabet coniugem tuam", by undated document, but presumably dated to before 20 Dec 1071 when Isabel, wife of Guillem Ramon Comte de Cerdanaya, was deceased[2113]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2114]. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2115]. Monfar cites a testament of Armengol [IV] under which he bequeathes his county to "Ramon, Guillen y Berenguer sus hermanos, y si estos no viviesen…al infante don Pedro su sobrino hijo del rey d´Aragon" if the testator´s own son died[2116]. As the document (as cited by Monfar) does not name the testator´s younger son, it is likely that it was dated to before his second marriage. Monfar cites another testament of "Ermengaudi de Gerp comitis et marchionis Urgelli" but gives no details of the text of the document[2117]. A Fragmentum historicum in the cartulary of Alaon records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus de Gurb”[2118]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus comes Urgell.”[2119]. The martyrology of Solsona Santa Maria records the death "Id Mar" of “comes Ermengaudus in castro de Gerb”[2120].
"m firstly (before 19 Jun 1063) LUCIA, daughter of --- (-before 1079). "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063[2121]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2122].
"m secondly ([1079]) ADELAIDE de Provence Ctss de Forcalquier, daughter of [GUILLAUME [VI] BERTRAND Comte de Provence et de Forcalquier & his second wife Adelais de Cavanez] (-1129). "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2123]. The Histoire Générale de Languedoc records her parentage and marriage but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[2124]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[2125]. "
Med Lands cites:
; Per Genealogy.EU: "C1. Armengol IV "el de Gerp", Cde de Urgel, *1056, +1092; 1m: ca 1077 Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche; 2m: 1079 Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (+1129.)15"
; Per Med Lands:
"ADELAIDE (-1129). The Histoire Générale de Languedoc states that Bouche claimed that Bertrand, son of Comte Guillaume III, inherited Forcalquier from his mother and that he was ancestor of the later comtes de Forcalquier, but adds that this hypothesis was [refuted by Ruffi[294]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and her marriage has not yet been identified. Heiress of Forcalquier. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[295]. "Ermensenz mulier Rostagno Berenguerio" swore homage to "Adalax comitissa filia Adalax comitissa" by undated charter[296]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[297].
"m ([1079]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL [IV] "él de Gerp" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-28 Mar 1092).]"
Med Lands cites:
;
His 1st wife. Genealogics says m. ca 1077; Med Lands says m. bef 19 Jun 1063.1,2,3 Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel married Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier, daughter of Guillaume IV/VI Bertrand (?) Comte de Provence and Adélaïde de Cavenez, in 1079
;
His 2nd wife
Genealogy.EU says m. 1079; Genealogics says m. bef 13 Feb 1081.1,8,9,10,2,3
Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel died on 28 March 1092.1,2,3
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.2
; Per Genealogics:
"Armengol, called 'el de Gerb' or 'Gerp', was born about 1056, the son of Armengol III, conde de Urgel, and his second wife Clemencia de Bigorre. He was count of Urgel from 1066 to his death.
"Armengol inherited Urgel when he was only ten years old and ruled under the tutelage of the dowager countess Sanchia of Aragón, third wife of his father, until he was twelve. During this brief minority, the nobility took the opportunity to plunder and occupy the comital demesna. It was not until 1075 that Armengol was in control of his county and his nobles.
"In 1077 Armengol married Lucia de La Marche, daughter of Bernard, comte de La Marche. With her, he had his son and heir Armengol V, who would have progeny. In 1079 he married Adelaide, comtesse de Forcalquier, daughter of Guillaume VI Bertrand, comte de Provence, and Adelaide de Cavenez. She bore him one son Guillaume who inherited Forcalquier and would have progeny, and a daughter who died young.
"Armengol was a firm supporter of the contemporary Gregorian reform of the Church, which he introduced to Urgel. He was also an active count. During his reign Urgel profited economically by receiving exiles from Lleida and Fraga. In 1076, having brought the nobles to submission, Armengol began a _Reconquista_ of his own, taking the basin of the river Sió with the villages of Agramunt and Almenara that year and Linyola and Belcaire in 1091. He conquered Calassanç and Gerb, where he died on 28 March 1092, in an effort to pave the way to the recapture of Balaguer, which occurred during the reign of his son Armengol V in 1102."2
; NB: There is disagreement about Armengol's mother:
Med Lands says he was born in 1050 and that his mother was Adelaida de Besalú, his father's first wife (saying they m. 1050). Wikipedia reports: "... in another charter, dated 1069 – 1071, he identifies himself as Ego, Ermengaudus comes Urgelli, filius qui sum comitisse Adalaidis (I, Ermengol count of Urgell, son of Countess Adelaide)." [emphasis added by author]
Genealogics says that he was born ca 1055 and that his mother was Clemence de Bigorre, his father's second wife (saying they m. ca 1055).
Futhermore, as shown here, there is disagreement 1) on the date of his birth (1050 vs 1056) and on 2) the date of his first marriage (to Lucia - 1063 vs 1077).
Conclusion: I have chosen to follow Med Lands on these issues. GA Vaut.3,2,11,12,13,14
; Per Wikipédia (Fr.):
"Armengol IV (ou Ermengol IV) (vers 1050 † 28 mars 1092), dit de Gerp, fut comte d'Urgell de 1065 à 1092. Il était fils d'Armengol III, comte d'Urgell, et d'Adélaïde de Besalu1.
Biographie
"Armengol hérita d'Urgell alors qu'il n'avait que dix ans et régna sous la tutelle de sa belle-mère, Sancie d'Aragon, troisième épouse de son père, jusqu'à ses douze ans. Pendant cette courte minorité, la noblesse en profita pour piller et occuper les domaines comtaux. Ce n'est qu'en 1075 qu'Armengol put reprendre le contrôle du comté sur les nobles.
"Armengol fut un comte actif. Pendant son règne, Urgell prospéra économiquement en recevant les exilés des cités musulmanes de Lérida et de Fraga. En 1076, ayant obtenu la soumission des nobles, il commença à prendre part à la Reconquista de son propre chef, en occupant le basin de la rivière Sió avec les villages d'Agramunt et d'Almenara en 1076, puis Linyola et Belcaire en 1091. Il conquit Calassanç et construisit un château à Gerb2, où il mourut, lors des préparatifs d'une campagne pour reprendre Balaguer, ce qui advint durant le règne de son fils, Armengol V, en 1102.
"Armengol a soutenu la réforme grégorienne, qu'il a introduit à Urgel.
Mariages et enfants
"Il épouse en premières noces avant 1063 une Lucie, dont on ne sait rien de plus et qui donne naissance à :
** Armengol V (1071/75 † 1102), comte d'Urgell
"Veuf, il se remarie vers 1079 avec Adélaïde de Provence († 1129), comtesse de Forcalquier, qui donne naissance à :
** Guillaume III († 1129), comte de Forcalquier.
** Sancha, morte jeune.
** Sancha, morte jeune.
Notes et références
1. Armengol IV sur Medieval Lands (Foundation for Medieval Genealogy [archive].
2. Aujourd'hui rattaché à Os de Balaguer.
Voir aussi
Bibliographie
** (en) Cet article est partiellement ou en totalité issu de l’article de Wikipédia en anglais intitulé « Ermengol IV, Count of Urgell » (voir la liste des auteurs).
** William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 1968, p. 11."13
; Per Wikipedia:
"Ermengol (or Armengol) IV (1056–1092), called el de Gerb or Gerp, was the Count of Urgell from 1066 to his death. He was the son of Ermengol III and Adelaide, at an unknown age whose family is not known, even if some scholars made her daughter of Guillem I, Count of Besalu.[3]
"Ermengol inherited Urgell when he was only ten years old and ruled under the tutelage of the countess dowager, Sancha, third wife of his father, until he was twelve. During this brief minority, the nobility took the opportunity to plunder and occupy the comital demesne. It was not until 1075 that Ermengol was in control of his county and his nobles.
"Ermengol was an active count. During his reign, Urgell profited economically collecting tribute from Lleida and Fraga. In 1076, having brought the nobles to submission, he began a Reconquista of his own, taking the basin of the river Sió with the villages of Agramunt and Almenar that year and Linyola and Belcaire in 1091. He conquered Calassanç and built a castle at Gerb, Spain, where he died, in an effort to pave the way to the recapture of Balaguer, which occurred during the reign of his son, Ermengol V, in 1102.
"Ermengol was a firm supporter of the contemporary Gregorian reform of the Church, which he introduced to Urgel.
"In 1077, Ermengol married Lucy, daughter of Artau I, Count of Pallars Sobirà,[3] and granddaughter of Bernard I of La Marche. With her, he had his son and heir, the aforementioned Ermengol.
"In 1079, he remarried to Adelaide of Folcalquier, daughter of William Bertrand of Provence. She bore him one son, William,[4] who inherited Forcalquier, and a daughter who died young.
Notes
a. In a charter dated 1066 – 1076, he appears as Ermengaudum, Urgellensem comitem, filium Adalaidis comitisse (Ermengol, count of Urgell, son of Countess Adelaide),[1] and, in another charter, dated 1069 – 1071, he identifies himself as Ego, Ermengaudus comes Urgelli, filius qui sum comitisse Adalaidis (I, Ermengol count of Urgell, son of Countess Adelaide). In this charter, he swears fealty to his brother-in-law William I, Count of Cerdanya and promises that if he died without issue, the county of Urgell would be inherited by his sister Isabella.[2]
References
1. Baiges, Feliu & Salrach 2010, Doc. 66, pp. 234–38.
2. Baiges, Feliu & Salrach 2010, Doc. 51, pp. 211–12.
3. Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez 2001, p. 15.
4. Turton 2005, p. 11.
Sources
** Baiges, Ignasi J; Feliu, Gaspar; Salrach, Josep M. (2010). Els pergamins de l'Arxiu Comtal de Barcelona, de Ramon Berenguer II a Ramon Berenguer IV (PDF) (in Catalan). Vol. I. (Coord.) Barcelona: Fundació Noguera. ISBN 978-84-9779-958-4.
** Fernández-Xesta y Vázquez, Ernesto (2001). Relaciones del condado de Urgel con Castilla y León (in Spanish). Madrid: E&P Libros Antiguos, S.L. ISBN 84-87860-37-0.
** Turton, William H. (2005) [First published in 1900]. The Plantagenet Ancestry. London: Clearfield Company. ISBN 9780806303307."12 GAV-26 EDV-28. Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud IV Count of Urgel.1
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [IV] de Urgell "el de Gerp", son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Comte de Urgell & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-Gerp 15 or 28 Mar 1092). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus de Gerb filius eius" (named after the castle which he built) succeeded "Ermengaudus…dictus de Barbastre" in 1065, and died in 1092[2110]. As Armengol is recorded as married in a document dated to 1063 (assuming that this is correctly dated), it is likely that he was born from his father´s first marriage, although this has not yet been corroborated by any primary source. He succeeded his father in 1065 as Comte de Urgell. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2111]. "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063 (although this appears misdated if the other dates shown here are correct)[2112]. "Comes Ermengaudus" promised the comte de Cerdanya that, if he died childless, his property would be inherited by "germanam meam Elisabet coniugem tuam", by undated document, but presumably dated to before 20 Dec 1071 when Isabel, wife of Guillem Ramon Comte de Cerdanaya, was deceased[2113]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2114]. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2115]. Monfar cites a testament of Armengol [IV] under which he bequeathes his county to "Ramon, Guillen y Berenguer sus hermanos, y si estos no viviesen…al infante don Pedro su sobrino hijo del rey d´Aragon" if the testator´s own son died[2116]. As the document (as cited by Monfar) does not name the testator´s younger son, it is likely that it was dated to before his second marriage. Monfar cites another testament of "Ermengaudi de Gerp comitis et marchionis Urgelli" but gives no details of the text of the document[2117]. A Fragmentum historicum in the cartulary of Alaon records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus de Gurb”[2118]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus comes Urgell.”[2119]. The martyrology of Solsona Santa Maria records the death "Id Mar" of “comes Ermengaudus in castro de Gerb”[2120].
"m firstly (before 19 Jun 1063) LUCIA, daughter of --- (-before 1079). "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063[2121]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2122].
"m secondly ([1079]) ADELAIDE de Provence Ctss de Forcalquier, daughter of [GUILLAUME [VI] BERTRAND Comte de Provence et de Forcalquier & his second wife Adelais de Cavanez] (-1129). "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2123]. The Histoire Générale de Languedoc records her parentage and marriage but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[2124]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[2125]. "
Med Lands cites:
[2110] Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium 12, RHGF XI, p. 291.
[2111] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2112] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2113] Feudos del real archivo de Barcelona, fol. 87, quoted in Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 356, a footnote commenting that the original document has since disappeared.
[2114] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2115] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2116] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Zurita (1669), Tome I, lib. I, cap. XXX, p. 31.
[2117] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Real archivo de Barcelona, armario de los testamentos, num. 70, a footnote suggesting that the document no longer survives.
[2118] Fragmentum historicum, Ex cartulario Alaonis, España Sagrada XLVI, XXXVI, p. 324.
[2119] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 246.
[2120] Viage Literario, Tome IX, Apéndice, X, Excerpta ex martyrologio Celsonensi, p. 235.
[2121] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2122] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2123] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2124] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome IV, Notes, 14.XXVIII, p. 71.
[2125] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.3
[2111] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2112] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2113] Feudos del real archivo de Barcelona, fol. 87, quoted in Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 356, a footnote commenting that the original document has since disappeared.
[2114] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2115] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2116] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Zurita (1669), Tome I, lib. I, cap. XXX, p. 31.
[2117] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Real archivo de Barcelona, armario de los testamentos, num. 70, a footnote suggesting that the document no longer survives.
[2118] Fragmentum historicum, Ex cartulario Alaonis, España Sagrada XLVI, XXXVI, p. 324.
[2119] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 246.
[2120] Viage Literario, Tome IX, Apéndice, X, Excerpta ex martyrologio Celsonensi, p. 235.
[2121] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2122] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2123] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2124] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome IV, Notes, 14.XXVIII, p. 71.
[2125] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.3
; Per Genealogy.EU: "C1. Armengol IV "el de Gerp", Cde de Urgel, *1056, +1092; 1m: ca 1077 Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche; 2m: 1079 Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (+1129.)15"
; Per Med Lands:
"ADELAIDE (-1129). The Histoire Générale de Languedoc states that Bouche claimed that Bertrand, son of Comte Guillaume III, inherited Forcalquier from his mother and that he was ancestor of the later comtes de Forcalquier, but adds that this hypothesis was [refuted by Ruffi[294]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and her marriage has not yet been identified. Heiress of Forcalquier. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[295]. "Ermensenz mulier Rostagno Berenguerio" swore homage to "Adalax comitissa filia Adalax comitissa" by undated charter[296]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[297].
"m ([1079]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL [IV] "él de Gerp" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-28 Mar 1092).]"
Med Lands cites:
[294] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome IV, Notes, 14.XXVIII, p. 71.
[295] Temple de Barberà, 18, p. 90.
[296] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Fréjus, Col. 201, no. IX.
[297] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.10
He was Conde de Urgel between 1065 and 1092.13[295] Temple de Barberà, 18, p. 90.
[296] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Fréjus, Col. 201, no. IX.
[297] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.10
Family 1 | Lucia (?) de la Marche d. c 1079 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier b. c 1040, d. 1129 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol IV 'el de Gerb': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120890&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIVUrgeldied1092B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol III 'el de Barbastro': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120892&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIIIUrgeldied1065
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Clemencia de Bigorre: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00141476&tree=LEO
- [S2141] Nathaniel Taylor, "Taylor email 7 Mar 2007: "Re: Wife of Armegol III of Urgel"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 7 Mar 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Taylor email 7 Mar 2007."
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Boson page (Bosonides): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/boson.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Adelaide: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120891&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#AdelaideMArmengolIVUrgeldied1092
- [S1549] "Author's comment", various, Gregory A. Vaut (e-mail address), to unknown recipient (unknown recipient address), 26 April 2020; unknown repository, unknown repository address. Hereinafter cited as "GA Vaut Comment."
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ermengol_IV,_Count_of_Urgell. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Armengol IV d'Urgell: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armengol_IV_d%27Urgell. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier1,2,3
F, #19424, b. circa 1040, d. 1129
Father | Guillaume IV/VI Bertrand (?) Comte de Provence2,4,5,6,7,8 b. c 1020, d. 28 Jul 1094 |
Mother | Adélaïde de Cavenez2,4,5,7,9,10 d. a 12 Oct 1113 |
Reference | GAV26 EDV27 |
Last Edited | 25 Sep 2020 |
Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier was rebaptized; Genealogics cites:
;
His 2nd wife
Genealogy.EU says m. 1079; Genealogics says m. bef 13 Feb 1081.1,2,4,5,11,12
Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier died in 1129; Genealogy.EU says d. 1129; Genealogics says d. ca 1144; Med Lands says d. 1129.1,2,4,5
; Per Genealogy.EU: "C1. Armengol IV "el de Gerp", Cde de Urgel, *1056, +1092; 1m: ca 1077 Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche; 2m: 1079 Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (+1129.)13"
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [IV] de Urgell "el de Gerp", son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Comte de Urgell & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-Gerp 15 or 28 Mar 1092). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus de Gerb filius eius" (named after the castle which he built) succeeded "Ermengaudus…dictus de Barbastre" in 1065, and died in 1092[2110]. As Armengol is recorded as married in a document dated to 1063 (assuming that this is correctly dated), it is likely that he was born from his father´s first marriage, although this has not yet been corroborated by any primary source. He succeeded his father in 1065 as Comte de Urgell. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2111]. "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063 (although this appears misdated if the other dates shown here are correct)[2112]. "Comes Ermengaudus" promised the comte de Cerdanya that, if he died childless, his property would be inherited by "germanam meam Elisabet coniugem tuam", by undated document, but presumably dated to before 20 Dec 1071 when Isabel, wife of Guillem Ramon Comte de Cerdanaya, was deceased[2113]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2114]. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2115]. Monfar cites a testament of Armengol [IV] under which he bequeathes his county to "Ramon, Guillen y Berenguer sus hermanos, y si estos no viviesen…al infante don Pedro su sobrino hijo del rey d´Aragon" if the testator´s own son died[2116]. As the document (as cited by Monfar) does not name the testator´s younger son, it is likely that it was dated to before his second marriage. Monfar cites another testament of "Ermengaudi de Gerp comitis et marchionis Urgelli" but gives no details of the text of the document[2117]. A Fragmentum historicum in the cartulary of Alaon records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus de Gurb”[2118]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus comes Urgell.”[2119]. The martyrology of Solsona Santa Maria records the death "Id Mar" of “comes Ermengaudus in castro de Gerb”[2120].
"m firstly (before 19 Jun 1063) LUCIA, daughter of --- (-before 1079). "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063[2121]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2122].
"m secondly ([1079]) ADELAIDE de Provence Ctss de Forcalquier, daughter of [GUILLAUME [VI] BERTRAND Comte de Provence et de Forcalquier & his second wife Adelais de Cavanez] (-1129). "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2123]. The Histoire Générale de Languedoc records her parentage and marriage but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[2124]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[2125]. "
Med Lands cites:
; Per Stasser email [2004]:
"Adelaide or Azalais second wife of Ermengol IV count of Urgell, was the only daughter of Guillaume Bertrand, count of Provence, by his wife Adelaide (charter of jan. 1101: ego Adalais comitissa Fulcalcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio... Gallia Christiana novissima vol 1, col 449, n° 12), of unknown origin, and mar 2nd to Bertrand Raimbaud of Orange (charter of oct 1113: ego Adalaiz comitissa...mansiones quas cum Bertrando Raibaldo marito meo... DUHAMEL, fragments d'anciens cartulaires d'Orange, n° 3, p 386-387).
"She married bef 13 Feb 1081 Ermengol IV of Urgell (Ego Ermengaudus gratia Dei comes urgellitanus sive Provincialis una cum mea conjuge Adalezis nutu dei comitissa...signum Adalezis nutu Dei comitissa urgellitana et provincialis... DIAGO, Historia, f° 136-v° 137). She lived until 1144 (N DIDIER, les eglises de Sisteron et de Forcalquier du XIe siècle à la révolution, Paris, 1954, n° 3, p 65)
"Guillaume Bertrand was the son of Bertrand, count of provence. Bertrand was the second son of Count Guillaume III and Gerberga of Burgundy. he married a lady named Ermengarde (POLY, La Provence, p 34), called Eldegarde in a Montmajour charter dated 1040(Montmajour, p 136-137: ego Bertrannus comes...Eldejarda Eveza uxor eius firmavit...) who survived untill 1077 (S Victor, n° 88...Ermengarda comitissa firmavit...)Her origins are also unknown. They had 2 sons, Guillaume VI and Geoffroy II,counts of Provence (S Victor, n° 659: ego Willelmus et ego Gauzfredus comites sive marchiones Provinciae filii praefati Bertranni...)
"See G de MANTEYER, La Provence du premier au XII e siècle, pp 294-300 and 311-321; J P POLY, La Provence, p 254, 271, 318-319 et 356; M AURELL, Jalons pour une enquête sur les stratégies matrimoniales des comtes catalans, p 354-355."14
; Per Wikipédia (Fr.):
"Adélaïde ou Alix de Provence, parfois Adelaïs, morte en 11291 ou entre 1144 et 1150 à plus de 80 ans2, fut comtesse de Provence puis de Forcalquier de la mort de son père, survenue entre 1063 et 1067 à sa mort. Elle était fille de Guillaume V Bertrand, comte de Provence, et d'Adélaïde de Cavenez.
Biographie
"Elle n'était pas encore mariée à la mort de son père, et donc non dotée, et put ainsi lui succéder comme comtesse de Provence, en indivision avec ses cousins Bertrand Ier de Toulouse et Bertrand II. Elle possédait cependant en propre le château de Forcalquier.
"Elle épousa en 1079 Armengol IV, comte d'Urgell, et fut la mère de :
"En 1092, son mari décéda, le comté d’Urgel passa à son beau-fils Armengol V et elle s'installa avec son fils Guillaume en Provence, à Forcalquier. L'année suivante, la maison de Provence s'éteignit avec la mort de Bertrand II, et ses droits passèrent à Gerberge, mariée à Gilbert de Millau, comte de Gévaudan, puis, en 1115, à la maison de Barcelone. Les conflits d'intérêts entre les maisons de Toulouse et de Barcelone rentrèrent dans le cadre de la Grande guerre méridionale et aboutirent à un partage territorial de la Provence. Grâce à l'éloignement des Toulouse, ils purent en administrer une partie et Adélaïde s'intitula comtesse de Forcalquier à partir de 11103. Toutefois en 1125, les maisons de Toulouse et Barcelone se partagent officiellement la Provence en établissant la frontière le long de la Durance. Forcalquier, se situant sur la rive droite de la rivère, se retrouve inclut dans le Marquisat de Provence, appartenant à Toulouse. Adélaïde tentera avec son fils puis ces descendants de faire reconnaitre leur indépendance.
"Vers 1170, après sa mort, un accord reconnaitra leur droits en partageant le marquisat entre les maisons d'Urgel et de Toulouse.
Sources
** (en) Charles Cawley, « Provence » [archive], sur Medieval Lands, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2006-2016.
** Édouard Baratier, Histoire de la Provence, Toulouse, Editions Privat, 1990, 604 p. (ISBN 2-7089-1649-1) (réédition)
Notes
1. (en) Charles Cawley, « Provence » [archive], sur Medieval Lands, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2006-2016 (consulté le 7 août 2018).
2. Mariacristina Varano, Espace religieux et espace politique en pays provençal au Moyen Âge (IXe-XIIIe siècles). L'exemple de Forcalquier et de sa région [archive], thèse soutenue à l'université d'Aix-Marseille I, 2011, p. 459.
3. Parc naturel du Luberon, Autour de l’An Mil en pays de Forcalquier, catalogue d’exposition, 2007, p. 29."3 GAV-26 EDV-27.
; Per Stewart email [2004]:
"Adelaide, countess of Foucalquier was the third wife of Armengol IV, count of Urgel. Her father was Guillaume VI Bertrand, count of Provence (died after May 1065) and her mother (died after 12 October 1113) was also called Adelaide - her parentage is unknown. It has been sepeculated that she was a daughter of Arduin, count of Ivrea but NB this is certainly not proven. (The surnames given by both Leo and Miroslav are not based on definite information about her origins.)
"Guillaume VI Bertrand was the only son of Fulco Bertrand, count of Provence (died ca 27 April 1051) by his wife of unknown name & origin. It has been speculated that she was named either Hildegarde or Ermengarde and was a daughter of Guillaume III Taillefer, count of Toulouse & Emma of Provence. But NB this too is not based on direct, contemporary evidence.
"The standard account of this comital family is Jean-Pierre Poly's _La Provence et la société féodale (879—1166): Contribution à l’étude des structures dites féodales dans le Midi_ (Paris, 1976)."15
; Per Med Lands:
"ADELAIDE (-1129). The Histoire Générale de Languedoc states that Bouche claimed that Bertrand, son of Comte Guillaume III, inherited Forcalquier from his mother and that he was ancestor of the later comtes de Forcalquier, but adds that this hypothesis was [refuted by Ruffi[294]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and her marriage has not yet been identified. Heiress of Forcalquier. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[295]. "Ermensenz mulier Rostagno Berenguerio" swore homage to "Adalax comitissa filia Adalax comitissa" by undated charter[296]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[297].
"m ([1079]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL [IV] "él de Gerp" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-28 Mar 1092).]"
Med Lands cites:
1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.
2. Les Eglises de Sisteron et de Forcalquier du XIe siecle a la revolution, Paris 1954, no 3 p 65, Didier, N.4
She was born circa 1040. She married Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel, son of Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel and Adelaida (?) de Besalú, in 1079 2. Les Eglises de Sisteron et de Forcalquier du XIe siecle a la revolution, Paris 1954, no 3 p 65, Didier, N.4
;
His 2nd wife
Genealogy.EU says m. 1079; Genealogics says m. bef 13 Feb 1081.1,2,4,5,11,12
Adélaïde (?) de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier died in 1129; Genealogy.EU says d. 1129; Genealogics says d. ca 1144; Med Lands says d. 1129.1,2,4,5
; Per Genealogy.EU: "C1. Armengol IV "el de Gerp", Cde de Urgel, *1056, +1092; 1m: ca 1077 Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche; 2m: 1079 Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (+1129.)13"
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [IV] de Urgell "el de Gerp", son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Comte de Urgell & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-Gerp 15 or 28 Mar 1092). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus de Gerb filius eius" (named after the castle which he built) succeeded "Ermengaudus…dictus de Barbastre" in 1065, and died in 1092[2110]. As Armengol is recorded as married in a document dated to 1063 (assuming that this is correctly dated), it is likely that he was born from his father´s first marriage, although this has not yet been corroborated by any primary source. He succeeded his father in 1065 as Comte de Urgell. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2111]. "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063 (although this appears misdated if the other dates shown here are correct)[2112]. "Comes Ermengaudus" promised the comte de Cerdanya that, if he died childless, his property would be inherited by "germanam meam Elisabet coniugem tuam", by undated document, but presumably dated to before 20 Dec 1071 when Isabel, wife of Guillem Ramon Comte de Cerdanaya, was deceased[2113]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2114]. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2115]. Monfar cites a testament of Armengol [IV] under which he bequeathes his county to "Ramon, Guillen y Berenguer sus hermanos, y si estos no viviesen…al infante don Pedro su sobrino hijo del rey d´Aragon" if the testator´s own son died[2116]. As the document (as cited by Monfar) does not name the testator´s younger son, it is likely that it was dated to before his second marriage. Monfar cites another testament of "Ermengaudi de Gerp comitis et marchionis Urgelli" but gives no details of the text of the document[2117]. A Fragmentum historicum in the cartulary of Alaon records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus de Gurb”[2118]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1092 of “Ermengaudus comes Urgell.”[2119]. The martyrology of Solsona Santa Maria records the death "Id Mar" of “comes Ermengaudus in castro de Gerb”[2120].
"m firstly (before 19 Jun 1063) LUCIA, daughter of --- (-before 1079). "Ermengaudus comes atque Lucia comitissa" donated "castrum de Almenara" to "Arnald Dalmad et uxori tua Ermengards" by charter dated 19 Jun 1063[2121]. "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis", by charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73][2122].
"m secondly ([1079]) ADELAIDE de Provence Ctss de Forcalquier, daughter of [GUILLAUME [VI] BERTRAND Comte de Provence et de Forcalquier & his second wife Adelais de Cavanez] (-1129). "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[2123]. The Histoire Générale de Languedoc records her parentage and marriage but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[2124]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[2125]. "
Med Lands cites:
[2110] Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium 12, RHGF XI, p. 291.
[2111] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2112] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2113] Feudos del real archivo de Barcelona, fol. 87, quoted in Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 356, a footnote commenting that the original document has since disappeared.
[2114] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2115] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2116] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Zurita (1669), Tome I, lib. I, cap. XXX, p. 31.
[2117] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Real archivo de Barcelona, armario de los testamentos, num. 70, a footnote suggesting that the document no longer survives.
[2118] Fragmentum historicum, Ex cartulario Alaonis, España Sagrada XLVI, XXXVI, p. 324.
[2119] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 246.
[2120] Viage Literario, Tome IX, Apéndice, X, Excerpta ex martyrologio Celsonensi, p. 235.
[2121] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2122] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2123] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2124] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome IV, Notes, 14.XXVIII, p. 71.
[2125] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.12
[2111] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2112] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2113] Feudos del real archivo de Barcelona, fol. 87, quoted in Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 356, a footnote commenting that the original document has since disappeared.
[2114] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2115] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2116] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Zurita (1669), Tome I, lib. I, cap. XXX, p. 31.
[2117] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 357, citing Real archivo de Barcelona, armario de los testamentos, num. 70, a footnote suggesting that the document no longer survives.
[2118] Fragmentum historicum, Ex cartulario Alaonis, España Sagrada XLVI, XXXVI, p. 324.
[2119] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 246.
[2120] Viage Literario, Tome IX, Apéndice, X, Excerpta ex martyrologio Celsonensi, p. 235.
[2121] Santa Maria de Poblet 18, p. 35.
[2122] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2123] Temple de Barberà 18, p. 90.
[2124] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome IV, Notes, 14.XXVIII, p. 71.
[2125] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.12
; Per Stasser email [2004]:
"Adelaide or Azalais second wife of Ermengol IV count of Urgell, was the only daughter of Guillaume Bertrand, count of Provence, by his wife Adelaide (charter of jan. 1101: ego Adalais comitissa Fulcalcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio... Gallia Christiana novissima vol 1, col 449, n° 12), of unknown origin, and mar 2nd to Bertrand Raimbaud of Orange (charter of oct 1113: ego Adalaiz comitissa...mansiones quas cum Bertrando Raibaldo marito meo... DUHAMEL, fragments d'anciens cartulaires d'Orange, n° 3, p 386-387).
"She married bef 13 Feb 1081 Ermengol IV of Urgell (Ego Ermengaudus gratia Dei comes urgellitanus sive Provincialis una cum mea conjuge Adalezis nutu dei comitissa...signum Adalezis nutu Dei comitissa urgellitana et provincialis... DIAGO, Historia, f° 136-v° 137). She lived until 1144 (N DIDIER, les eglises de Sisteron et de Forcalquier du XIe siècle à la révolution, Paris, 1954, n° 3, p 65)
"Guillaume Bertrand was the son of Bertrand, count of provence. Bertrand was the second son of Count Guillaume III and Gerberga of Burgundy. he married a lady named Ermengarde (POLY, La Provence, p 34), called Eldegarde in a Montmajour charter dated 1040(Montmajour, p 136-137: ego Bertrannus comes...Eldejarda Eveza uxor eius firmavit...) who survived untill 1077 (S Victor, n° 88...Ermengarda comitissa firmavit...)Her origins are also unknown. They had 2 sons, Guillaume VI and Geoffroy II,counts of Provence (S Victor, n° 659: ego Willelmus et ego Gauzfredus comites sive marchiones Provinciae filii praefati Bertranni...)
"See G de MANTEYER, La Provence du premier au XII e siècle, pp 294-300 and 311-321; J P POLY, La Provence, p 254, 271, 318-319 et 356; M AURELL, Jalons pour une enquête sur les stratégies matrimoniales des comtes catalans, p 354-355."14
; Per Wikipédia (Fr.):
"Adélaïde ou Alix de Provence, parfois Adelaïs, morte en 11291 ou entre 1144 et 1150 à plus de 80 ans2, fut comtesse de Provence puis de Forcalquier de la mort de son père, survenue entre 1063 et 1067 à sa mort. Elle était fille de Guillaume V Bertrand, comte de Provence, et d'Adélaïde de Cavenez.
Biographie
"Elle n'était pas encore mariée à la mort de son père, et donc non dotée, et put ainsi lui succéder comme comtesse de Provence, en indivision avec ses cousins Bertrand Ier de Toulouse et Bertrand II. Elle possédait cependant en propre le château de Forcalquier.
"Elle épousa en 1079 Armengol IV, comte d'Urgell, et fut la mère de :
** Guillaume III († 1129), comte de Forcalquier.
** Sancha, morte jeune.
** Sancha, morte jeune.
"En 1092, son mari décéda, le comté d’Urgel passa à son beau-fils Armengol V et elle s'installa avec son fils Guillaume en Provence, à Forcalquier. L'année suivante, la maison de Provence s'éteignit avec la mort de Bertrand II, et ses droits passèrent à Gerberge, mariée à Gilbert de Millau, comte de Gévaudan, puis, en 1115, à la maison de Barcelone. Les conflits d'intérêts entre les maisons de Toulouse et de Barcelone rentrèrent dans le cadre de la Grande guerre méridionale et aboutirent à un partage territorial de la Provence. Grâce à l'éloignement des Toulouse, ils purent en administrer une partie et Adélaïde s'intitula comtesse de Forcalquier à partir de 11103. Toutefois en 1125, les maisons de Toulouse et Barcelone se partagent officiellement la Provence en établissant la frontière le long de la Durance. Forcalquier, se situant sur la rive droite de la rivère, se retrouve inclut dans le Marquisat de Provence, appartenant à Toulouse. Adélaïde tentera avec son fils puis ces descendants de faire reconnaitre leur indépendance.
"Vers 1170, après sa mort, un accord reconnaitra leur droits en partageant le marquisat entre les maisons d'Urgel et de Toulouse.
Sources
** (en) Charles Cawley, « Provence » [archive], sur Medieval Lands, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2006-2016.
** Édouard Baratier, Histoire de la Provence, Toulouse, Editions Privat, 1990, 604 p. (ISBN 2-7089-1649-1) (réédition)
Notes
1. (en) Charles Cawley, « Provence » [archive], sur Medieval Lands, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2006-2016 (consulté le 7 août 2018).
2. Mariacristina Varano, Espace religieux et espace politique en pays provençal au Moyen Âge (IXe-XIIIe siècles). L'exemple de Forcalquier et de sa région [archive], thèse soutenue à l'université d'Aix-Marseille I, 2011, p. 459.
3. Parc naturel du Luberon, Autour de l’An Mil en pays de Forcalquier, catalogue d’exposition, 2007, p. 29."3 GAV-26 EDV-27.
; Per Stewart email [2004]:
"Adelaide, countess of Foucalquier was the third wife of Armengol IV, count of Urgel. Her father was Guillaume VI Bertrand, count of Provence (died after May 1065) and her mother (died after 12 October 1113) was also called Adelaide - her parentage is unknown. It has been sepeculated that she was a daughter of Arduin, count of Ivrea but NB this is certainly not proven. (The surnames given by both Leo and Miroslav are not based on definite information about her origins.)
"Guillaume VI Bertrand was the only son of Fulco Bertrand, count of Provence (died ca 27 April 1051) by his wife of unknown name & origin. It has been speculated that she was named either Hildegarde or Ermengarde and was a daughter of Guillaume III Taillefer, count of Toulouse & Emma of Provence. But NB this too is not based on direct, contemporary evidence.
"The standard account of this comital family is Jean-Pierre Poly's _La Provence et la société féodale (879—1166): Contribution à l’étude des structures dites féodales dans le Midi_ (Paris, 1976)."15
; Per Med Lands:
"ADELAIDE (-1129). The Histoire Générale de Languedoc states that Bouche claimed that Bertrand, son of Comte Guillaume III, inherited Forcalquier from his mother and that he was ancestor of the later comtes de Forcalquier, but adds that this hypothesis was [refuted by Ruffi[294]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and her marriage has not yet been identified. Heiress of Forcalquier. "Ermengaudus comes proles condam…comitis Barbastri…Ermengaudi, comitisse namque Adalaidis meeque coniugis" donated property to the monastery of Santa Maria de la Seu d´Urgell by charter dated 29 Aug 1087[295]. "Ermensenz mulier Rostagno Berenguerio" swore homage to "Adalax comitissa filia Adalax comitissa" by undated charter[296]. "Adalais comitissa Fulcheriensis et mater mea Adalais et filius meus Willelmus marchio Provincie" restored "mediatem…castri…Lurs" to the bishop of Sisteron by charter dated 1110[297].
"m ([1079]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL [IV] "él de Gerp" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his [first wife Adelaida de Besalú] ([1050]-28 Mar 1092).]"
Med Lands cites:
[294] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome IV, Notes, 14.XXVIII, p. 71.
[295] Temple de Barberà, 18, p. 90.
[296] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Fréjus, Col. 201, no. IX.
[297] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.5
[295] Temple de Barberà, 18, p. 90.
[296] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Fréjus, Col. 201, no. IX.
[297] Gallia Christiana Novissima, Tome I, Aix, Instrumenta, Sisteron, Col. 449, no. XII.5
Family | Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel b. 1050, d. 28 Mar 1092 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Boson page (Bosonides): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/boson.html
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Adélaïde de Forcalquier: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad%C3%A9la%C3%AFde_de_Forcalquier. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Adelaide: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120891&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#AdelaideMArmengolIVUrgeldied1092. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Guillaume VI Bertrand: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00174674&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#GuillaumeVIBertrandProvencedied1067
- [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Guillaume Bertrand de Forcalquier, II.: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I14600&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Adelaide de Cavenez: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00174675&tree=LEO
- [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Adelheid de Cavanez: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I14603&tree=1
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol IV 'el de Gerb': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120890&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIVUrgeldied1092B
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1548] Thierry Stasser, "Stasser 13 Jan 2004 email "Re: Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (1040-1129)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/KUfThaeYPKc/m/y3_60mTMtkYJ) to e-mail address, 13 Jan 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Stasser email 13 Jan 2004."
- [S1547] Peter Stewart, "Stewart 13 Jan 2004 email "Re: Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (1040-1129)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 13 Jan 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Stewart email 13 Jan 2004."
Armengol VII "el de Valencia" (?) Conde de Urgel1,2
M, #19425, d. 1184
Father | Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel1,2 b. b 1101, d. 1154 |
Mother | Arsende (?) de Ager1,2 |
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Armengol VII "el de Valencia" (?) Conde de Urgel married Dulce (?) de Foix, daughter of Roger III (?) Comte de Foix et de Couserans and Ximena/Jimena (?) de Barcelona, before 1157.2,3
Armengol VII "el de Valencia" (?) Conde de Urgel died in 1184; killed in battle.1,2
Armengol VII "el de Valencia" (?) Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud VII (?) Count of Urgel.1 He was living in 1132.1
Armengol VII "el de Valencia" (?) Conde de Urgel died in 1184; killed in battle.1,2
Armengol VII "el de Valencia" (?) Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud VII (?) Count of Urgel.1 He was living in 1132.1
Family | Dulce (?) de Foix b. b 1143, d. a 1209 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 231. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Foix 1 page (The House of Foix): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/foix/foix1.html
- [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I28607
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 254.
Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel1,2
M, #19426, b. before 1101, d. 1154
Father | Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel3,2,4 b. bt 1078 - 1079, d. 1102 |
Mother | Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid3,2,4 d. a 1129 |
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel was born before 1101; Genealogy.EU (Barcelona 6 page) says b. 1096.5,2 He married Arsende (?) de Ager, daughter of Ponce de Cabrera Vscde de Ager, in 1119
; his 1st wife.3,2 Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel married Elvira Rodriguez de Lara, daughter of Rodrigo Gonzalez de Lara Cde de Liebana and Sancha (?) Infta of Castile, circa 1135
; his 2nd wife.3,5,2,4
Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel died in 1154.3,2
Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud VI (?) Count of Urgel.3 He was living in 1101.3
; his 1st wife.3,2 Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel married Elvira Rodriguez de Lara, daughter of Rodrigo Gonzalez de Lara Cde de Liebana and Sancha (?) Infta of Castile, circa 1135
; his 2nd wife.3,5,2,4
Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel died in 1154.3,2
Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud VI (?) Count of Urgel.3 He was living in 1101.3
Family 1 | Arsende (?) de Ager |
Children |
Family 2 | Elvira Rodriguez de Lara |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), p. 29. Hereinafter cited as Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 231. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S2184] Leo van de Pas, "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007: "Descendants Alfonso VI - improved and extended"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/lVvrEhMS2pk/m/lxJSTqSvbG0J) to e-mail address, 23 Sept 2007. Hereinafter cited as "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007."
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 305.
Arsende (?) de Ager1
F, #19427
Father | Ponce de Cabrera Vscde de Ager1 |
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Arsende (?) de Ager married Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel, son of Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel and Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid, in 1119
; his 1st wife.2,1
; his 1st wife.2,1
Family | Armengol VI "el Castellano" (?) Conde de Urgel b. b 1101, d. 1154 |
Children |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 231. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel1
M, #19428, b. between 1078 and 1079, d. 1102
Father | Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel1,2,3 b. 1050, d. 28 Mar 1092 |
Mother | Lucia (?) de la Marche1 d. c 1079 |
Last Edited | 8 Oct 2020 |
Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel was born between 1078 and 1079.1 He married Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid, daughter of Pedro Ansúrez (?) Conde en Liébana, Carrión y Saldaña, y Señor de Valladolid and Eilo Alfonso (?), in 1095.1
Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel died in 1102.1
Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud V Count of Urgel.
Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel died in 1102.1
Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud V Count of Urgel.
Family | Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid d. a 1129 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol IV 'el de Gerb': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120890&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIVUrgeldied1092B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#EstefaniaUrgelM1FernandoGarciaCastro
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Estefania Armengol de Urgel: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00518756&tree=LEO
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 231. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S2184] Leo van de Pas, "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007: "Descendants Alfonso VI - improved and extended"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/lVvrEhMS2pk/m/lxJSTqSvbG0J) to e-mail address, 23 Sept 2007. Hereinafter cited as "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007."
Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid1,2
F, #19429, d. after 1129
Father | Pedro Ansúrez (?) Conde en Liébana, Carrión y Saldaña, y Señor de Valladolid3,4 b. 1040, d. 9 Sep 1119 |
Mother | Eilo Alfonso (?)5 d. b 13 Jun 1113 |
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid married Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel, son of Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel and Lucia (?) de la Marche, in 1095.2
Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid died after 1129.2
Maria Perez (?) sna de Valladolid died after 1129.2
Family | Armengol V "el de Mayeruca" de Urgel Conde de Urgel b. bt 1078 - 1079, d. 1102 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 231. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I28637
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, pp. 275-6.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#PedroAnsurezdied1117. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#EstefaniaUrgelM1FernandoGarciaCastro
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Estefania Armengol de Urgel: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00518756&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2184] Leo van de Pas, "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007: "Descendants Alfonso VI - improved and extended"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/lVvrEhMS2pk/m/lxJSTqSvbG0J) to e-mail address, 23 Sept 2007. Hereinafter cited as "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007."
Lucia (?) de la Marche1
F, #19430, d. circa 1079
Father | Bernard I (?) Comte de la Marche2 |
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Lucia (?) de la Marche married Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel, son of Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel and Adelaida (?) de Besalú, before 19 June 1063
;
His 1st wife. Genealogics says m. ca 1077; Med Lands says m. bef 19 Jun 1063.1,3,4
Lucia (?) de la Marche died circa 1079.
; Per Genealogy.EU: "C1. Armengol IV "el de Gerp", Cde de Urgel, *1056, +1092; 1m: ca 1077 Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche; 2m: 1079 Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (+1129.)5"
; Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche.1
;
His 1st wife. Genealogics says m. ca 1077; Med Lands says m. bef 19 Jun 1063.1,3,4
Lucia (?) de la Marche died circa 1079.
; Per Genealogy.EU: "C1. Armengol IV "el de Gerp", Cde de Urgel, *1056, +1092; 1m: ca 1077 Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche; 2m: 1079 Adelaide de Provence, Cts de Forcalquier (+1129.)5"
; Lucia (+ca 1079) dau.of Ct Bernard I de la Marche.1
Family | Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel b. 1050, d. 28 Mar 1092 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol IV 'el de Gerb': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120890&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIVUrgeldied1092B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel1
M, #19431, b. between 1032 and 1033, d. 17 April 1066
Father | Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel1,2,3,4 b. 1009, d. 1038 |
Mother | Constanza Velasquita (?) de Besalú1,2,3,5 b. c 1000 |
Reference | GAV27 EDV28 |
Last Edited | 3 Jul 2020 |
Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel was born between 1032 and 1033.2,3 He married Adelaida (?) de Besalú, daughter of Guillermo I (?) Comte de Besalú i Ripoll and Adelaida (?), circa 1050
;
His 1st wife.1,2,3,6,7 Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel married Clemencia (?) of Bigorre, daughter of Bernardo II de Foix Cte de Bigorre and Clemence (?), circa 1055
;
His 2nd wife.1,8,2,3,9,10 Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel married Doña Sancha Ramirez (?) Infanta de Aragón, daughter of Ramiro I (?) King of Aragon and Gisberge/Hermesenda de Foix Cts de Bigorre, circa 1065
;
His 3rd wife; her 2nd husband.1,2,3,11,12
Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel died on 17 April 1066 at Barbasto; Killed in battle; Genealogics says d. 17 Apr 1066; Med Lands says d. Feb/Mar 1066.1,2,3
; Per Genealogics:
"Armengol, called 'el de Barbastro', was born about 1032, the son of Armengol II, conde de Urgel, and Constanza Velasquita. He was count of Urgel from his father's death in 1038 to his own death.
"He and his contemporary and second cousin Ramon Berenguer I 'el Viejo', conde de Barcelona, shared in the process of erosion of comital authority to the nobility. They also cooperated in the _Reconquista,_ and Armengol received a third part of the conquests, in 1050 occupying Camarasa and Cubells after taking them from Yusuf of Lleida. In 1039-1040 Armengol and Ramon Berenguer signed a pact against Raymond of Cerdanya. Later in that decade Ramon Berenguer paid 20,000 solidi for Armengol's support and military aid.
"Before 1048 Armengol married Adelaida, whose family is not known, though some scholars made her the daughter of Guillermo I, conde de Besalu et de Ripoll. She died before May 1055. Before 7 May 1055 Armengol took as his second wife Clemencia, the daughter of Bernardo II, conde de Bigorre, and his wife Clemencia. Armengol and Clemencia became the parents of four sons and one daughter; only their son Armengol IV and daughter Isabella, who married Sancho I, king of Aragón, would have progeny.
"Clemencia died after 26 June 1057. About 1065 he married his third wife Sanchia of Aragón, widow of Pons de Toulouse and daughter of Ramiro I, king of Aragón and Gilberga (Hermesenda) de Couserans. Their daughter Sancha would have progeny, marrying Hugo II, conde de Ampurias.
"Armengol took part in the Barbastro war of 1064 under the banner of his future son-in-law Sancho I, king of Aragón. When Barbastro was captured, he was given the lordship of the city. He died on 17 April 1066 defending the city from Moorish reprisals."2
; Per Genealogy.EU: "B1. [2m.] Armengol III "el de Barbastro", Cde de Urgel, +1065; 1m: ca 1050 Adelaida (+ca 1055) dau.of Ct Guillermo I of Besalu; 2m: ca 1055 Clemencia de Bigorre (+ca 1065); 3m: ca 1065 Infta Sancha of Navarre (+1072.)13"
; This is the same person as:
”Ermengol III, Count of Urgell” at Wikipedia, as
”Armengol III d'Urgell” at Wikipédia (Fr.),
and as ”Armengol III de Urgel” at Wikipedia (Es.)14,15,16
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.2 GAV-27 EDV-28. Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud III (?) Count of Urgel.
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [III] de Urgell "el de Barbastro" ([1032/33]-killed in battle [Feb/Mar] 1065, bur Ager Sant Pere). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus filius eius…dictus de Barbastre" succeeded "Ermengaudus" in 1038, and died in 1065[2075]. His date of birth is estimated on his being described as 15 years and 10 months old in the charter dated 4 Apr 1048 which is quoted below. He succeeded his father as Comte de Urgell, under the regency of his mother until 1049. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2076]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum matre sua...Constantia...comitissa” donated property to the church of Urgell “anno...nativitate eiusdem...comitis quinto decimo et mensibus decem” by charter dated 4 Apr 1048, subscribed by “Miro vicecomes, Arnaldus Miro de Tost...”[2077]. “Constancia...comitisa et...Ermengaudus comes” sold “kastrum...Malagastro” to “Arnallo Mironis et uxori tue Arssendi” by charter dated 28 Feb 1049[2078]. A charter dated to [1050] records that “Ermengaudus comes de Urgello in potestate Raimundi comitis de Barcelona et Elizabeth comitissæ” gave as hostages “Mironem vicecomitem filium Guillelmi et Dalmacium Isarni” for performance of his alliance with “Raimundus comes de Barchinona et Elizabeth comitissa” against “Raimundum comitem de Cerdania” and explains the causes of the dispute between the parties[2079]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1065 of “interfectus...Ermengaudus comes Urgell”[2080]. His approximate date of death and place of burial are confirmed by the charter dated 12 Apr 1065 under which “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”[2081].
"m firstly ([1050]) ADELAIDA de Besalú, daughter of GUILLEM [I] Comte de Besalú y Ripoll & his wife Adelaida --- (-before 1055). "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2082]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2083], Adelaida was her husband's second wife, and Clémence his first wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m secondly ([1055]) CLEMENCE de Bigorre, daughter of BERNARD [II] Comte de Bigorre [Foix] & his first wife Clémence --- (-before 1065). “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[2084]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2085], Clémence was her husband's first wife, married in [1048], and Adelaida his second wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m thirdly (before [Feb/Mar] 1065) [as her second husband,] Infanta doña SANCHA de Aragón, [widow of PONS Comte de Toulouse,] daughter of RAMIRO I King of Aragon & his first wife Gerberge [Ermesenda] de Foix (-[5 Apr/16 Aug] 1097, bur Monastery of Santa Cruz, transferred 1622 to Benedictine convent of Jaca[2086]). The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña names "Sancha…et…Teresa" as the two daughters of King Ramiro and his wife "la filla del Comte de Bigorra nombrada Hermissenda et por baptismo Gelberda", stating that Sancha married "al Comte de Tolosa"[2087]. This marriage has not been confirmed by other primary sources. The Crónica is an unreliable source regarding many genealogical details and it is suggested that the marriage be treated with caution until it can be corroborated elsewhere. Her [second] marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 27 Jul [1067/68] under which "Sanctia comitissa" donated "castrum de Pilzano" to "domno Raymundo comiti Barchinonensi et domne Almodi comitisse", specifying that the property came to her from "viri mei Ermengaudi comitis Urgelensis"[2088], read together with a charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73] under which (her stepson) "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis"[2089]. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2090]. "Dona Sancha, filla del Rey do Ramiro et de dona Ermessende regina" donated property which she was given by "frater meus rex Sancius" to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1065[2091]. "Sancia comitissa, Ranimiri regis filia et Armisende regina" donated property to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1076[2092]. "Sancia, filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regine" donated property to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated Oct 1095[2093]. "Sancia commitissa, Ranimiri regis filia" donated property to the monastery of San Juan de la Peña, for the souls of "…regis Sancii fratris mei…et Urrachæ sororis meæ", by charter dated 4 Apr 1096[2094]. A charter dated 17 Dec 1096 records a donation made by the bishop of Huesca with the consent of “Petro rege et princibus eius et Sancia comitissa”[2095]. Pedro I King of Aragon donated “casas que illa comitissa Sancia tenuit...in vita sua in Monte Aragone cum...in Terz et in Kizena” to Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated 16 Aug 1097[2096]. If Sancha's marriage to Armengol [III] Comte de Urgell is correct, it is surprising that she is not referred to as his widow in any of these charters, even the one dated shortly after his death in 1065. The only hint that she married, and that her husband had comital status, is the reference to her as "comitissa" in the charters dated 1076 and 1096."
Med Lands cites:
; Per Med Lands:
"CLEMENCE de Bigorre ([1036][188]-before 1065). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[189].
"m ([1055]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL III "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL II "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his second wife Constanza --- ([1031/33]-[Feb/Mar] 1065). "
Med Lands cites:
; Per Genealogy.EU: "E2. Clemencia, +ca 1065; m.ca 1055 Cde Armengol III de Urgel (+1065.)17"
; Per Med Lands:
"ADELAIDA de Besalú (-before 1055). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[731]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[732], Adelaida was her husband's second wife, and Clémence his first wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m ([1050]) as his first wife, ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Comte de Urgell, son of ARMENGOL [II] "el Pelegrino" Comte de Urgell & his second wife Constanza --- ([1032/33]-[Feb/Mar] 1065)."
Med Lands cites:
; Per Med Lands:
"Infanta doña SANCHA de Aragón (-[5 Apr/16 Aug] 1097, bur Monastery of Santa Cruz, transferred 1622 to Benedictine convent of Jaca[108]). The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña names "Sancha…et…Teresa" as the two daughters of King Ramiro and his wife "la filla del Comte de Bigorra nombrada Hermissenda et por baptismo Gelberda", stating that Sancha married "al Comte de Tolosa"[109]. This marriage has not been confirmed by other primary sources. The Crónica is an unreliable source regarding many genealogical details and it is suggested the marriage be treated with caution until it can be corroborated elsewhere. "Sancius Ranimiri…rex Aragonensium et Pampilonensium" granted property to "dompna Sancia comitissa soror mea" by charter dated 15 Aug 1058[110]. The fact that Sancha is named "comitissa" in this document does suggest that she must have married a "comes" before the date of the document. Her [second] marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 27 Jul [1067/68] under which "Sanctia comitissa" donated "castrum de Pilzano" to "domno Raymundo comiti Barchinonensi et domne Almodi comitisse", specifying that the property came to her from "viri mei Ermengaudi comitis Urgelensis"[111], read together with a charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73] under which (her stepson) "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis"[112]. "Dona Sancha, filla del Rey do Ramiro et de dona Ermessende regina" donated property which she was given by "frater meus rex Sancius" to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1065[113]. Her paternal grandmother "domina Sancia, mater Ranimiri regis" granted the monastery of Santa Cecilia de Aibar "quam dedit michi illa regine domna Eximina mater Sancionis regis" to "nepte mea domna Sancia", in the presence of "abbatissa domne Mennose soror episcopi domni Sancii Aragonensium", by charter dated 27 Oct 1070[114]. "Sancia comitissa Ranimiri regis filia et Armissende regina" donated property to the monastery of Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated Oct 1076[115]. "Sancius…rex Aragonensium" granted privileges to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated 4 Sep 1082, the dating clause of which refers to "regnante rege Sancio…in Aragone…domna Sancia comitissa atque sorore regis presidente in Siresia…"[116]. "Sancia comitissa" granted property to "Acenar Garces" by charter dated 1083[117]. "Sancia, filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regine" donated property to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated Oct 1095[118]. The testament of "Sancia filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regina" is dated Oct 1095[119]. "Sancia commitissa, Ranimiri regis filia" donated property to the monastery of San Juan de la Peña, for the souls of "…regis Sancii fratris mei…et Urrachæ sororis meæ", by charter dated 4 Apr 1096[120]. A charter dated 17 Dec 1096 records a donation made by the bishop of Huesca with the consent of “Petro rege et princibus eius et Sancia comitissa”[121]. Pedro I King of Aragon donated “casas que illa comitissa Sancia tenuit...in vita sua in Monte Aragone cum...in Terz et in Kizena” to Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated 16 Aug 1097[122]. If Sancha's marriage to Armengol [III] Conde de Urgel is correct, it is surprising that she is not referred to as his widow in any of these charters, even the one dated shortly after his death in 1065. The only hint that she married, and that her husband had comital status, is the reference to her as "comitissa" in the charters dated 1076 and 1096.
"[m firstly as his [third] wife, PONS Comte de Toulouse, son of GUILLAUME III "Taillefer" Comte de Toulouse & his second wife Emma de Provence ([991]-1060, bur Toulouse, Saint-Sernin).]
"m [secondly] (before [Feb/Mar] 1065) as his third wife, ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL [II] "el Pelegrino" Conde de Urgel & his second wife Constanza --- ([1031/33]-killed in battle [Feb/Mar] 1065, bur San Pedro de Ager). "
Med Lands cites:
;
His 1st wife.1,2,3,6,7 Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel married Clemencia (?) of Bigorre, daughter of Bernardo II de Foix Cte de Bigorre and Clemence (?), circa 1055
;
His 2nd wife.1,8,2,3,9,10 Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel married Doña Sancha Ramirez (?) Infanta de Aragón, daughter of Ramiro I (?) King of Aragon and Gisberge/Hermesenda de Foix Cts de Bigorre, circa 1065
;
His 3rd wife; her 2nd husband.1,2,3,11,12
Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel died on 17 April 1066 at Barbasto; Killed in battle; Genealogics says d. 17 Apr 1066; Med Lands says d. Feb/Mar 1066.1,2,3
; Per Genealogics:
"Armengol, called 'el de Barbastro', was born about 1032, the son of Armengol II, conde de Urgel, and Constanza Velasquita. He was count of Urgel from his father's death in 1038 to his own death.
"He and his contemporary and second cousin Ramon Berenguer I 'el Viejo', conde de Barcelona, shared in the process of erosion of comital authority to the nobility. They also cooperated in the _Reconquista,_ and Armengol received a third part of the conquests, in 1050 occupying Camarasa and Cubells after taking them from Yusuf of Lleida. In 1039-1040 Armengol and Ramon Berenguer signed a pact against Raymond of Cerdanya. Later in that decade Ramon Berenguer paid 20,000 solidi for Armengol's support and military aid.
"Before 1048 Armengol married Adelaida, whose family is not known, though some scholars made her the daughter of Guillermo I, conde de Besalu et de Ripoll. She died before May 1055. Before 7 May 1055 Armengol took as his second wife Clemencia, the daughter of Bernardo II, conde de Bigorre, and his wife Clemencia. Armengol and Clemencia became the parents of four sons and one daughter; only their son Armengol IV and daughter Isabella, who married Sancho I, king of Aragón, would have progeny.
"Clemencia died after 26 June 1057. About 1065 he married his third wife Sanchia of Aragón, widow of Pons de Toulouse and daughter of Ramiro I, king of Aragón and Gilberga (Hermesenda) de Couserans. Their daughter Sancha would have progeny, marrying Hugo II, conde de Ampurias.
"Armengol took part in the Barbastro war of 1064 under the banner of his future son-in-law Sancho I, king of Aragón. When Barbastro was captured, he was given the lordship of the city. He died on 17 April 1066 defending the city from Moorish reprisals."2
; Per Genealogy.EU: "B1. [2m.] Armengol III "el de Barbastro", Cde de Urgel, +1065; 1m: ca 1050 Adelaida (+ca 1055) dau.of Ct Guillermo I of Besalu; 2m: ca 1055 Clemencia de Bigorre (+ca 1065); 3m: ca 1065 Infta Sancha of Navarre (+1072.)13"
; This is the same person as:
”Ermengol III, Count of Urgell” at Wikipedia, as
”Armengol III d'Urgell” at Wikipédia (Fr.),
and as ”Armengol III de Urgel” at Wikipedia (Es.)14,15,16
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.2 GAV-27 EDV-28. Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud III (?) Count of Urgel.
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [III] de Urgell "el de Barbastro" ([1032/33]-killed in battle [Feb/Mar] 1065, bur Ager Sant Pere). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus filius eius…dictus de Barbastre" succeeded "Ermengaudus" in 1038, and died in 1065[2075]. His date of birth is estimated on his being described as 15 years and 10 months old in the charter dated 4 Apr 1048 which is quoted below. He succeeded his father as Comte de Urgell, under the regency of his mother until 1049. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2076]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum matre sua...Constantia...comitissa” donated property to the church of Urgell “anno...nativitate eiusdem...comitis quinto decimo et mensibus decem” by charter dated 4 Apr 1048, subscribed by “Miro vicecomes, Arnaldus Miro de Tost...”[2077]. “Constancia...comitisa et...Ermengaudus comes” sold “kastrum...Malagastro” to “Arnallo Mironis et uxori tue Arssendi” by charter dated 28 Feb 1049[2078]. A charter dated to [1050] records that “Ermengaudus comes de Urgello in potestate Raimundi comitis de Barcelona et Elizabeth comitissæ” gave as hostages “Mironem vicecomitem filium Guillelmi et Dalmacium Isarni” for performance of his alliance with “Raimundus comes de Barchinona et Elizabeth comitissa” against “Raimundum comitem de Cerdania” and explains the causes of the dispute between the parties[2079]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1065 of “interfectus...Ermengaudus comes Urgell”[2080]. His approximate date of death and place of burial are confirmed by the charter dated 12 Apr 1065 under which “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”[2081].
"m firstly ([1050]) ADELAIDA de Besalú, daughter of GUILLEM [I] Comte de Besalú y Ripoll & his wife Adelaida --- (-before 1055). "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2082]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2083], Adelaida was her husband's second wife, and Clémence his first wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m secondly ([1055]) CLEMENCE de Bigorre, daughter of BERNARD [II] Comte de Bigorre [Foix] & his first wife Clémence --- (-before 1065). “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[2084]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2085], Clémence was her husband's first wife, married in [1048], and Adelaida his second wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m thirdly (before [Feb/Mar] 1065) [as her second husband,] Infanta doña SANCHA de Aragón, [widow of PONS Comte de Toulouse,] daughter of RAMIRO I King of Aragon & his first wife Gerberge [Ermesenda] de Foix (-[5 Apr/16 Aug] 1097, bur Monastery of Santa Cruz, transferred 1622 to Benedictine convent of Jaca[2086]). The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña names "Sancha…et…Teresa" as the two daughters of King Ramiro and his wife "la filla del Comte de Bigorra nombrada Hermissenda et por baptismo Gelberda", stating that Sancha married "al Comte de Tolosa"[2087]. This marriage has not been confirmed by other primary sources. The Crónica is an unreliable source regarding many genealogical details and it is suggested that the marriage be treated with caution until it can be corroborated elsewhere. Her [second] marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 27 Jul [1067/68] under which "Sanctia comitissa" donated "castrum de Pilzano" to "domno Raymundo comiti Barchinonensi et domne Almodi comitisse", specifying that the property came to her from "viri mei Ermengaudi comitis Urgelensis"[2088], read together with a charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73] under which (her stepson) "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis"[2089]. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2090]. "Dona Sancha, filla del Rey do Ramiro et de dona Ermessende regina" donated property which she was given by "frater meus rex Sancius" to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1065[2091]. "Sancia comitissa, Ranimiri regis filia et Armisende regina" donated property to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1076[2092]. "Sancia, filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regine" donated property to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated Oct 1095[2093]. "Sancia commitissa, Ranimiri regis filia" donated property to the monastery of San Juan de la Peña, for the souls of "…regis Sancii fratris mei…et Urrachæ sororis meæ", by charter dated 4 Apr 1096[2094]. A charter dated 17 Dec 1096 records a donation made by the bishop of Huesca with the consent of “Petro rege et princibus eius et Sancia comitissa”[2095]. Pedro I King of Aragon donated “casas que illa comitissa Sancia tenuit...in vita sua in Monte Aragone cum...in Terz et in Kizena” to Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated 16 Aug 1097[2096]. If Sancha's marriage to Armengol [III] Comte de Urgell is correct, it is surprising that she is not referred to as his widow in any of these charters, even the one dated shortly after his death in 1065. The only hint that she married, and that her husband had comital status, is the reference to her as "comitissa" in the charters dated 1076 and 1096."
Med Lands cites:
[2075] Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium 12, RHGF XI, p. 290.
[2076] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2077] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXIII, col. 1093.
[2078] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 27, p. 236.
[2079] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXV, col. 1096.
[2080] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 245.
[2081] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2082] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2083] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2084] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.
[2085] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2086] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956), p. 194.
[2087] Crónica de San Juan de la Peña XVI, p. 45.
[2088] Libro primero de los Feudos, fol. 147, quoted in Monfar y Sors, D. (1853) Historia de los Condes de Urgel (Barcelona) Tomo I, p. 330.
[2089] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2090] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2091] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 1, p. 195.
[2092] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 2, p. 197.
[2093] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 3, p. 199.
[2094] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 4, p. 201.
[2095] Ubieto Arteta, A. (1951) Colección diplomática de Pedro I de Aragón y Navarra (Zaragoza), 24, p. 241.
[2096] Ubieto Arteta (1951), 35, p. 258.3
[2076] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2077] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXIII, col. 1093.
[2078] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 27, p. 236.
[2079] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXV, col. 1096.
[2080] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 245.
[2081] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2082] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2083] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2084] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.
[2085] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2086] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956), p. 194.
[2087] Crónica de San Juan de la Peña XVI, p. 45.
[2088] Libro primero de los Feudos, fol. 147, quoted in Monfar y Sors, D. (1853) Historia de los Condes de Urgel (Barcelona) Tomo I, p. 330.
[2089] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2090] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2091] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 1, p. 195.
[2092] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 2, p. 197.
[2093] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 3, p. 199.
[2094] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 4, p. 201.
[2095] Ubieto Arteta, A. (1951) Colección diplomática de Pedro I de Aragón y Navarra (Zaragoza), 24, p. 241.
[2096] Ubieto Arteta (1951), 35, p. 258.3
; Per Med Lands:
"CLEMENCE de Bigorre ([1036][188]-before 1065). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[189].
"m ([1055]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL III "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL II "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his second wife Constanza --- ([1031/33]-[Feb/Mar] 1065). "
Med Lands cites:
[188] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre' (1978), Vol. 2, p. 396.
[189] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.10
[189] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.10
; Per Genealogy.EU: "E2. Clemencia, +ca 1065; m.ca 1055 Cde Armengol III de Urgel (+1065.)17"
; Per Med Lands:
"ADELAIDA de Besalú (-before 1055). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[731]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[732], Adelaida was her husband's second wife, and Clémence his first wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m ([1050]) as his first wife, ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Comte de Urgell, son of ARMENGOL [II] "el Pelegrino" Comte de Urgell & his second wife Constanza --- ([1032/33]-[Feb/Mar] 1065)."
Med Lands cites:
[731] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[732] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.7
[732] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.7
; Per Med Lands:
"Infanta doña SANCHA de Aragón (-[5 Apr/16 Aug] 1097, bur Monastery of Santa Cruz, transferred 1622 to Benedictine convent of Jaca[108]). The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña names "Sancha…et…Teresa" as the two daughters of King Ramiro and his wife "la filla del Comte de Bigorra nombrada Hermissenda et por baptismo Gelberda", stating that Sancha married "al Comte de Tolosa"[109]. This marriage has not been confirmed by other primary sources. The Crónica is an unreliable source regarding many genealogical details and it is suggested the marriage be treated with caution until it can be corroborated elsewhere. "Sancius Ranimiri…rex Aragonensium et Pampilonensium" granted property to "dompna Sancia comitissa soror mea" by charter dated 15 Aug 1058[110]. The fact that Sancha is named "comitissa" in this document does suggest that she must have married a "comes" before the date of the document. Her [second] marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 27 Jul [1067/68] under which "Sanctia comitissa" donated "castrum de Pilzano" to "domno Raymundo comiti Barchinonensi et domne Almodi comitisse", specifying that the property came to her from "viri mei Ermengaudi comitis Urgelensis"[111], read together with a charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73] under which (her stepson) "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis"[112]. "Dona Sancha, filla del Rey do Ramiro et de dona Ermessende regina" donated property which she was given by "frater meus rex Sancius" to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1065[113]. Her paternal grandmother "domina Sancia, mater Ranimiri regis" granted the monastery of Santa Cecilia de Aibar "quam dedit michi illa regine domna Eximina mater Sancionis regis" to "nepte mea domna Sancia", in the presence of "abbatissa domne Mennose soror episcopi domni Sancii Aragonensium", by charter dated 27 Oct 1070[114]. "Sancia comitissa Ranimiri regis filia et Armissende regina" donated property to the monastery of Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated Oct 1076[115]. "Sancius…rex Aragonensium" granted privileges to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated 4 Sep 1082, the dating clause of which refers to "regnante rege Sancio…in Aragone…domna Sancia comitissa atque sorore regis presidente in Siresia…"[116]. "Sancia comitissa" granted property to "Acenar Garces" by charter dated 1083[117]. "Sancia, filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regine" donated property to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated Oct 1095[118]. The testament of "Sancia filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regina" is dated Oct 1095[119]. "Sancia commitissa, Ranimiri regis filia" donated property to the monastery of San Juan de la Peña, for the souls of "…regis Sancii fratris mei…et Urrachæ sororis meæ", by charter dated 4 Apr 1096[120]. A charter dated 17 Dec 1096 records a donation made by the bishop of Huesca with the consent of “Petro rege et princibus eius et Sancia comitissa”[121]. Pedro I King of Aragon donated “casas que illa comitissa Sancia tenuit...in vita sua in Monte Aragone cum...in Terz et in Kizena” to Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated 16 Aug 1097[122]. If Sancha's marriage to Armengol [III] Conde de Urgel is correct, it is surprising that she is not referred to as his widow in any of these charters, even the one dated shortly after his death in 1065. The only hint that she married, and that her husband had comital status, is the reference to her as "comitissa" in the charters dated 1076 and 1096.
"[m firstly as his [third] wife, PONS Comte de Toulouse, son of GUILLAUME III "Taillefer" Comte de Toulouse & his second wife Emma de Provence ([991]-1060, bur Toulouse, Saint-Sernin).]
"m [secondly] (before [Feb/Mar] 1065) as his third wife, ARMENGOL [III] "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL [II] "el Pelegrino" Conde de Urgel & his second wife Constanza --- ([1031/33]-killed in battle [Feb/Mar] 1065, bur San Pedro de Ager). "
Med Lands cites:
[108] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956), p. 194.
[109] Crónica de San Juan de la Peña XVI, p. 45.
[110] Santa Cruz de la Serós 4, p. 16.
[111] Libro primero de los Feudos, fol. 147, quoted in Monfar y Sors, D. (1853) Historia de los Condes de Urgel (Barcelona) Tomo I, p. 330.
[112] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[113] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', 1, p. 195.
[114] Santa Cruz de la Serós 4, p. 16.
[115] Santa Cruz de la Serós 6, p. 18.
[116] Siresa 13, p. 35.
[117] Siresa 15, p. 39.
[118] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', 3, p. 199.
[119] Santa Cruz de la Serós 15, p. 33.
[120] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', 4, p. 201.
[121] Ubieto Arteta, A. (1951) Colección diplomática de Pedro I de Aragón y Navarra (Zaragoza), 24, p. 241.
[122] Ubieto Arteta (1951), 35, p. 258.12
He was Conde de Urgel between 1038 and 1065.16,18[109] Crónica de San Juan de la Peña XVI, p. 45.
[110] Santa Cruz de la Serós 4, p. 16.
[111] Libro primero de los Feudos, fol. 147, quoted in Monfar y Sors, D. (1853) Historia de los Condes de Urgel (Barcelona) Tomo I, p. 330.
[112] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[113] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', 1, p. 195.
[114] Santa Cruz de la Serós 4, p. 16.
[115] Santa Cruz de la Serós 6, p. 18.
[116] Siresa 13, p. 35.
[117] Siresa 15, p. 39.
[118] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', 3, p. 199.
[119] Santa Cruz de la Serós 15, p. 33.
[120] González Miranda 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', 4, p. 201.
[121] Ubieto Arteta, A. (1951) Colección diplomática de Pedro I de Aragón y Navarra (Zaragoza), 24, p. 241.
[122] Ubieto Arteta (1951), 35, p. 258.12
Family 1 | Adelaida (?) de Besalú d. b 1055 |
Child |
Family 2 | Clemencia (?) of Bigorre b. 1036, d. b 1065 |
Children |
Family 3 | Doña Sancha Ramirez (?) Infanta de Aragón d. 1072 |
Child |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol III 'el de Barbastro': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120892&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIIIUrgeldied1065. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol II 'the Pilgrim': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120893&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Constanza Velasquita: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120894&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00502247&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#AdelaidaBesaluMArmengolIII
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Foix 1 page (The House of Foix): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/foix/foix1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Clemencia de Bigorre: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00141476&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/gascbebig.htm#ClemenciaBigorrediedbefore1065
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sanchia of Aragón: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00439158&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ARAGON%20&%20CATALONIA.htm#Sanchadied1072MPonsToulouseM2
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ermengol_III,_Count_of_Urgell. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Armengol III d'Urgell: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armengol_III_d%27Urgell. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S4760] Wikipédia - Llaenciclopedia libre, online https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Portada, Armengol III de Urgel: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armengol_III_de_Urgel. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia (ES).
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, The House of Foix: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/foix/foix1.html#CB2
- [S4742] Wikipédia (FR), online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Liste des comtes d'Urgell: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_comtes_d%27Urgell
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol IV 'el de Gerb': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120890&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIVUrgeldied1092B
Clemencia (?) of Bigorre1,2,3
F, #19432, b. 1036, d. before 1065
Father | Bernardo II de Foix Cte de Bigorre2,4,5,6 b. c 1003, d. b 24 Jun 1077 |
Mother | Clemence (?)2,5,6 b. c 1003, d. c 1062 |
Last Edited | 3 Jun 2020 |
Clemencia (?) of Bigorre was born in 1036.6 She married Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel, son of Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel and Constanza Velasquita (?) de Besalú, circa 1055
;
His 2nd wife.1,2,7,8,5,6
Clemencia (?) of Bigorre died before 1065.1,2,5,6
; Per Genealogy.EU: "B1. [2m.] Armengol III "el de Barbastro", Cde de Urgel, +1065; 1m: ca 1050 Adelaida (+ca 1055) dau.of Ct Guillermo I of Besalu; 2m: ca 1055 Clemencia de Bigorre (+ca 1065); 3m: ca 1065 Infta Sancha of Navarre (+1072.)9"
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [III] de Urgell "el de Barbastro" ([1032/33]-killed in battle [Feb/Mar] 1065, bur Ager Sant Pere). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus filius eius…dictus de Barbastre" succeeded "Ermengaudus" in 1038, and died in 1065[2075]. His date of birth is estimated on his being described as 15 years and 10 months old in the charter dated 4 Apr 1048 which is quoted below. He succeeded his father as Comte de Urgell, under the regency of his mother until 1049. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2076]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum matre sua...Constantia...comitissa” donated property to the church of Urgell “anno...nativitate eiusdem...comitis quinto decimo et mensibus decem” by charter dated 4 Apr 1048, subscribed by “Miro vicecomes, Arnaldus Miro de Tost...”[2077]. “Constancia...comitisa et...Ermengaudus comes” sold “kastrum...Malagastro” to “Arnallo Mironis et uxori tue Arssendi” by charter dated 28 Feb 1049[2078]. A charter dated to [1050] records that “Ermengaudus comes de Urgello in potestate Raimundi comitis de Barcelona et Elizabeth comitissæ” gave as hostages “Mironem vicecomitem filium Guillelmi et Dalmacium Isarni” for performance of his alliance with “Raimundus comes de Barchinona et Elizabeth comitissa” against “Raimundum comitem de Cerdania” and explains the causes of the dispute between the parties[2079]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1065 of “interfectus...Ermengaudus comes Urgell”[2080]. His approximate date of death and place of burial are confirmed by the charter dated 12 Apr 1065 under which “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”[2081].
"m firstly ([1050]) ADELAIDA de Besalú, daughter of GUILLEM [I] Comte de Besalú y Ripoll & his wife Adelaida --- (-before 1055). "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2082]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2083], Adelaida was her husband's second wife, and Clémence his first wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m secondly ([1055]) CLEMENCE de Bigorre, daughter of BERNARD [II] Comte de Bigorre [Foix] & his first wife Clémence --- (-before 1065). “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[2084]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2085], Clémence was her husband's first wife, married in [1048], and Adelaida his second wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m thirdly (before [Feb/Mar] 1065) [as her second husband,] Infanta doña SANCHA de Aragón, [widow of PONS Comte de Toulouse,] daughter of RAMIRO I King of Aragon & his first wife Gerberge [Ermesenda] de Foix (-[5 Apr/16 Aug] 1097, bur Monastery of Santa Cruz, transferred 1622 to Benedictine convent of Jaca[2086]). The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña names "Sancha…et…Teresa" as the two daughters of King Ramiro and his wife "la filla del Comte de Bigorra nombrada Hermissenda et por baptismo Gelberda", stating that Sancha married "al Comte de Tolosa"[2087]. This marriage has not been confirmed by other primary sources. The Crónica is an unreliable source regarding many genealogical details and it is suggested that the marriage be treated with caution until it can be corroborated elsewhere. Her [second] marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 27 Jul [1067/68] under which "Sanctia comitissa" donated "castrum de Pilzano" to "domno Raymundo comiti Barchinonensi et domne Almodi comitisse", specifying that the property came to her from "viri mei Ermengaudi comitis Urgelensis"[2088], read together with a charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73] under which (her stepson) "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis"[2089]. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2090]. "Dona Sancha, filla del Rey do Ramiro et de dona Ermessende regina" donated property which she was given by "frater meus rex Sancius" to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1065[2091]. "Sancia comitissa, Ranimiri regis filia et Armisende regina" donated property to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1076[2092]. "Sancia, filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regine" donated property to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated Oct 1095[2093]. "Sancia commitissa, Ranimiri regis filia" donated property to the monastery of San Juan de la Peña, for the souls of "…regis Sancii fratris mei…et Urrachæ sororis meæ", by charter dated 4 Apr 1096[2094]. A charter dated 17 Dec 1096 records a donation made by the bishop of Huesca with the consent of “Petro rege et princibus eius et Sancia comitissa”[2095]. Pedro I King of Aragon donated “casas que illa comitissa Sancia tenuit...in vita sua in Monte Aragone cum...in Terz et in Kizena” to Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated 16 Aug 1097[2096]. If Sancha's marriage to Armengol [III] Comte de Urgell is correct, it is surprising that she is not referred to as his widow in any of these charters, even the one dated shortly after his death in 1065. The only hint that she married, and that her husband had comital status, is the reference to her as "comitissa" in the charters dated 1076 and 1096."
Med Lands cites:
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.5
; Per Genealogy.EU: "E2. Clemencia, +ca 1065; m.ca 1055 Cde Armengol III de Urgel (+1065.)10"
; Per Med Lands:
"CLEMENCE de Bigorre ([1036][188]-before 1065). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[189].
"m ([1055]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL III "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL II "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his second wife Constanza --- ([1031/33]-[Feb/Mar] 1065). "
Med Lands cites:
;
His 2nd wife.1,2,7,8,5,6
Clemencia (?) of Bigorre died before 1065.1,2,5,6
; Per Genealogy.EU: "B1. [2m.] Armengol III "el de Barbastro", Cde de Urgel, +1065; 1m: ca 1050 Adelaida (+ca 1055) dau.of Ct Guillermo I of Besalu; 2m: ca 1055 Clemencia de Bigorre (+ca 1065); 3m: ca 1065 Infta Sancha of Navarre (+1072.)9"
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [III] de Urgell "el de Barbastro" ([1032/33]-killed in battle [Feb/Mar] 1065, bur Ager Sant Pere). The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus filius eius…dictus de Barbastre" succeeded "Ermengaudus" in 1038, and died in 1065[2075]. His date of birth is estimated on his being described as 15 years and 10 months old in the charter dated 4 Apr 1048 which is quoted below. He succeeded his father as Comte de Urgell, under the regency of his mother until 1049. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2076]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum matre sua...Constantia...comitissa” donated property to the church of Urgell “anno...nativitate eiusdem...comitis quinto decimo et mensibus decem” by charter dated 4 Apr 1048, subscribed by “Miro vicecomes, Arnaldus Miro de Tost...”[2077]. “Constancia...comitisa et...Ermengaudus comes” sold “kastrum...Malagastro” to “Arnallo Mironis et uxori tue Arssendi” by charter dated 28 Feb 1049[2078]. A charter dated to [1050] records that “Ermengaudus comes de Urgello in potestate Raimundi comitis de Barcelona et Elizabeth comitissæ” gave as hostages “Mironem vicecomitem filium Guillelmi et Dalmacium Isarni” for performance of his alliance with “Raimundus comes de Barchinona et Elizabeth comitissa” against “Raimundum comitem de Cerdania” and explains the causes of the dispute between the parties[2079]. The Chronicon alterum Rivipullense records the death in 1065 of “interfectus...Ermengaudus comes Urgell”[2080]. His approximate date of death and place of burial are confirmed by the charter dated 12 Apr 1065 under which “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”[2081].
"m firstly ([1050]) ADELAIDA de Besalú, daughter of GUILLEM [I] Comte de Besalú y Ripoll & his wife Adelaida --- (-before 1055). "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2082]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2083], Adelaida was her husband's second wife, and Clémence his first wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m secondly ([1055]) CLEMENCE de Bigorre, daughter of BERNARD [II] Comte de Bigorre [Foix] & his first wife Clémence --- (-before 1065). “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[2084]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. According to Szabolcs de Vajay[2085], Clémence was her husband's first wife, married in [1048], and Adelaida his second wife, although he cites no source in support of this.
"m thirdly (before [Feb/Mar] 1065) [as her second husband,] Infanta doña SANCHA de Aragón, [widow of PONS Comte de Toulouse,] daughter of RAMIRO I King of Aragon & his first wife Gerberge [Ermesenda] de Foix (-[5 Apr/16 Aug] 1097, bur Monastery of Santa Cruz, transferred 1622 to Benedictine convent of Jaca[2086]). The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña names "Sancha…et…Teresa" as the two daughters of King Ramiro and his wife "la filla del Comte de Bigorra nombrada Hermissenda et por baptismo Gelberda", stating that Sancha married "al Comte de Tolosa"[2087]. This marriage has not been confirmed by other primary sources. The Crónica is an unreliable source regarding many genealogical details and it is suggested that the marriage be treated with caution until it can be corroborated elsewhere. Her [second] marriage is confirmed by the charter dated 27 Jul [1067/68] under which "Sanctia comitissa" donated "castrum de Pilzano" to "domno Raymundo comiti Barchinonensi et domne Almodi comitisse", specifying that the property came to her from "viri mei Ermengaudi comitis Urgelensis"[2088], read together with a charter dated 23 Apr [1072/73] under which (her stepson) "Ermengaudus comes Urgelensis et Luciana comitissa uxor eius" confirmed that "castro de Pilzano" had been given by "pater meus Ermengaudus comes" to "Sanctiæ comitissæ filiæ Ranimiri regis"[2089]. “Sancia comitissa et Ermengaudus proles Ermengaudi...meus prevignus” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, in memory of “domnus Ermengaudus comes Urgellensis...in Ispania interfectus a sarracenis, postea inde a suis fuit levatus et ad civitatem Barbastri...[et] ad castrum Ageris...ecclesiæ sancti Petri sepultus”, by charter dated 12 Apr 1065, subscribed by “...Berengarii Ermengaudi, Arnalli Mironis, Mironis vicecomitis...”[2090]. "Dona Sancha, filla del Rey do Ramiro et de dona Ermessende regina" donated property which she was given by "frater meus rex Sancius" to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1065[2091]. "Sancia comitissa, Ranimiri regis filia et Armisende regina" donated property to the monastery of Santa Cruz by charter dated Oct 1076[2092]. "Sancia, filia regis Ranimiri et Ermesendis regine" donated property to the monastery of San Pedro de Siresa by charter dated Oct 1095[2093]. "Sancia commitissa, Ranimiri regis filia" donated property to the monastery of San Juan de la Peña, for the souls of "…regis Sancii fratris mei…et Urrachæ sororis meæ", by charter dated 4 Apr 1096[2094]. A charter dated 17 Dec 1096 records a donation made by the bishop of Huesca with the consent of “Petro rege et princibus eius et Sancia comitissa”[2095]. Pedro I King of Aragon donated “casas que illa comitissa Sancia tenuit...in vita sua in Monte Aragone cum...in Terz et in Kizena” to Santa Cruz de la Serós by charter dated 16 Aug 1097[2096]. If Sancha's marriage to Armengol [III] Comte de Urgell is correct, it is surprising that she is not referred to as his widow in any of these charters, even the one dated shortly after his death in 1065. The only hint that she married, and that her husband had comital status, is the reference to her as "comitissa" in the charters dated 1076 and 1096."
Med Lands cites:
[2075] Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium 12, RHGF XI, p. 290.
[2076] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2077] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXIII, col. 1093.
[2078] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 27, p. 236.
[2079] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXV, col. 1096.
[2080] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 245.
[2081] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2082] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2083] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2084] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.
[2085] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2086] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956), p. 194.
[2087] Crónica de San Juan de la Peña XVI, p. 45.
[2088] Libro primero de los Feudos, fol. 147, quoted in Monfar y Sors, D. (1853) Historia de los Condes de Urgel (Barcelona) Tomo I, p. 330.
[2089] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2090] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2091] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 1, p. 195.
[2092] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 2, p. 197.
[2093] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 3, p. 199.
[2094] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 4, p. 201.
[2095] Ubieto Arteta, A. (1951) Colección diplomática de Pedro I de Aragón y Navarra (Zaragoza), 24, p. 241.
[2096] Ubieto Arteta (1951), 35, p. 258.8
[2076] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2077] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXIII, col. 1093.
[2078] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 27, p. 236.
[2079] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXV, col. 1096.
[2080] Viage Literario, Tome V, Apendice, Chronicon alterum Rivipullense, p. 245.
[2081] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2082] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2083] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2084] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.
[2085] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Contribution à l'histoire de l'attitude des royaumes pirénéens dans la querelle des investitures: de l'origine de Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre', Estudios Genealógicos, Heráldicos y Nobiliarios, en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (Hidalguía, Madrid, 1978), Vol. 2, pp. 375-402, 396.
[2086] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956), p. 194.
[2087] Crónica de San Juan de la Peña XVI, p. 45.
[2088] Libro primero de los Feudos, fol. 147, quoted in Monfar y Sors, D. (1853) Historia de los Condes de Urgel (Barcelona) Tomo I, p. 330.
[2089] Monfar y Sors (1853) Tomo I, p. 331.
[2090] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 69, p. 299.
[2091] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 1, p. 195.
[2092] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 2, p. 197.
[2093] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 3, p. 199.
[2094] González Miranda, M. 'La condesa doña Sancha y el monasterio de Santa Cruz de la Seros', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. VI (Zaragoza, 1956) 4, p. 201.
[2095] Ubieto Arteta, A. (1951) Colección diplomática de Pedro I de Aragón y Navarra (Zaragoza), 24, p. 241.
[2096] Ubieto Arteta (1951), 35, p. 258.8
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.5
; Per Genealogy.EU: "E2. Clemencia, +ca 1065; m.ca 1055 Cde Armengol III de Urgel (+1065.)10"
; Per Med Lands:
"CLEMENCE de Bigorre ([1036][188]-before 1065). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. “Arnallum Mironem de Tost” acknowledged vassalship of “comitem Ermengaudum Urgellensem” by charter dated 17 Oct 1059, subscribed by “Ermengaudi comitis...Clemencia comitissa, Arnalli Mironis...”[189].
"m ([1055]) as his second wife, ARMENGOL III "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel, son of ARMENGOL II "él de Barbastro" Conde de Urgel & his second wife Constanza --- ([1031/33]-[Feb/Mar] 1065). "
Med Lands cites:
[188] Szabolcs de Vajay 'Berthe, reine d'Aragon et de Navarre' (1978), Vol. 2, p. 396.
[189] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.6
[189] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 42, p. 261.6
Family | Armengol III "el de Barbastro", (?) Cde de Urgel b. bt 1032 - 1033, d. 17 Apr 1066 |
Children |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Foix 1 page (The House of Foix): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/foix/foix1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Clemencia de Bigorre: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00141476&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Bernardo II: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00141477&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Clemencia de Bigorre: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00141476&tree=LEO
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/gascbebig.htm#ClemenciaBigorrediedbefore1065. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol III 'el de Barbastro': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120892&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIIIUrgeldied1065
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, The House of Foix: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/foix/foix1.html#CB2
Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel1,2
M, #19433, b. 1009, d. 1038
Father | Armengol I 'el de Córdoba' (?) Conde de Urgel1,3,2,4 b. c 975, d. 11 Sep 1010 |
Mother | Tetberga/Thetberge/Geriberga (?) de Provence1,5,2,4 d. a 1010 |
Reference | GAV30 EDV30 |
Last Edited | 3 Jul 2020 |
Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel was born in 1009.6,1,2 He married Arsenda (?)
;
His 1st wife.1,4 Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel married Constanza Velasquita (?) de Besalú, daughter of Bernardo I Talliaferro (?) comte de Besalú et de Ripoll and Toda/Adelaide (?) de Provence, Ctse de Besalú, circa 1030
;
His 2nd wife.6,1,7,4,2
Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel died in 1038; pilgrimage to Jerusalem.6,1,2
; Per Genealogy.EU (Bellonides): “[parentage unproved] Constanza Velasquita; m. Ct Armengol II of Urgel (*1009 +1038)”.6
Reference: Genalogics cites:
1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.
2. Biogr. details drawn from Wikipedia.2
; Per Genealogics:
“Armengol, called 'the Pilgrim', was born about 1009, the son of Armengol I, conde de Urgel, and Tetberga (de Provence). He was count of Urgel from 1011 to his death. He was a child when he succeeded his father and was put under the regency of his uncle Ramon Borrell I, conde de Barcelona, until 1018.
“With his uncle's help, Armengol began a successful war of reconquest to the south, taking Montmagastre, Alòs, Malagastre, Rubió, and Artesa. Around 1015 Hermengaudius, bishop of Urgel, repopulated the region of Guissona. Finally the Catalan nobleman of Urgel, Arnau Mir de Tost, the lord of Llordà, occupied the castle of Ager in 1034. Arnau was a major figure in the eleventh-century _Reconquista_ in Catalonia. The taifa kings of Lleida and Saragossa also granted lands to him and to the church of Urgel.
“Before 24 November 1031 Armengol married Constanza, also called Velasquita. She survived until 1059 at least and acted as regent for their son Armengol III. She may have been the daughter with that name of Bernardo I 'Tallaferro', conde de Besalu et de Ripoll, and Toda (de Provence), named in her father's will in October 1021.
“Armengol went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and died at Jerusalem in 1038.”.2
; Per Genealogy.EU (Barcelona 6): “A1. Armengol II "el Pelegrino", Cde de Urgel, *1009, +1038; 1m: Arsenda N; 2m: ca 1030 Constanza Velasquita, probably dau.of Ct Bernardo I Tallaferro of Besalu”.8
; This is the same person as:
”Ermengol II, Count of Urgell” at Wikipedia and as
”Armengol II de Urgel” at Wikipedia (Es.)9,10 GAV-30 EDV-30. Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud II (?) Count of Urgel.
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [II] de Urgell "el Pelegrino" (1009-Jerusalem after 12 Oct 1039, bur Jerusalem, Church of the Holy Sepulchre). He succeeded his father in 1010 as Comte de Urgell. The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus" held the county of Urgell for 28 years and died in 1038[2078]. It is likely that Ramon Borrell Comte de Barcelona (who died in 1017) acted as regent for Urgell during the early part of the minority of Armengol [II]. This conclusion is indicated by the charter dated 22 Apr 1037 which records that “Borrellus Urgellensis (comes) et marchio” granted “castrum et villam de Artesia” to “Mir Arnallo de Ceruaria”, subscribed by “Ermengaudus comes, Borelli donationes feci firmare...”[2079]. The subscription suggests that the original donation was granted earlier by Comte Ramon Borrell, presumably as regent, the date of the document relating to the subscription confirmation by Armengoll [II]. After Comte Ramon Borrell died, his role was adopted by his widow while Armengol [II] was still a minor: “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum Ermesinde...comitissa et filio suo Berengario...comes et marchio” donated property at “podio de Sicxo...[et] Campo de Rasio” to the church of Sant Miquel de Montmagastre by charter dated 28 Sep “anno XV regnante Roberto rege” [equivalent to 1010, but presumably misdated because of the absence the second donor´s husband who was alive until 1017], witnessed by “Bremundo vicecomitis Cardonensis, Arnallus Mironis de Tost, Trasuarii de Capoladi, Reimundus filio suo...”[2080]. "Ermengaudo…comes et marchio" granted "alodes…in comitato Orgello in apenditio de Sancto Azisclo…in villa Ortoneoves" to "Atto" by charter dated 28 Feb 1029, subscribed by "…Guillemo vicecomite…"[2081]. “Ermengaudus...comes simul cum conjuge mea Belischita quæ vocant Constancia” donated property to Urgell Sant Saturnin by charter dated 28 Dec 1033[2082]. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2083]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio coniuxque mea Constantia comitissa” donated “medietate de ipsum castrum de Sanct Lizine” to the Urgell cathedral by charter dated 15 Aug 1036[2084]. “Ermengaudus chomes...cum coniuge mea Belaschita que vocant Constancia” sold “kastrum de Artesa...in comitatum Orgellitensis” to “Arnaldo et uxori tue Arsendis” by charter dated 12 Oct 1039[2085]. A Fragmentum historicum in the cartulary of Alaon records the death in 1038 of “Ermengaudus peregrinus”[2086], although the date must be incorrect if the charter dated 12 Oct 1039 is correctly dated.
"m firstly ([1026]) ARSENDA, daughter of --- (-before [1030]). The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified.
"m secondly ([1030]) VELASQUITA [Constanza], daughter of --- (-after 25 Mar 1066). “Ermengaudus...comes simul cum conjuge mea Belischita quæ vocant Constancia” donated property to Urgell Sant Saturnin by charter dated 28 Dec 1033[2087]. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2088]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio coniuxque mea Constantia comitissa” donated “medietate de ipsum castrum de Sanct Lizine” to the Urgell cathedral by charter dated 15 Aug 1036[2089]. “Ermengaudus chomes...cum coniuge mea Belaschita que vocant Constancia” sold “kastrum de Artesa...in comitatum Orgellitensis” to “Arnaldo et uxori tue Arsendis” by charter dated 12 Oct 1039[2090]. She was regent for her son, as indicated by the charters dated 1048 and 1049 (see below), although the charter dated to [1050] which is quoted below under the paragraph dealing with her son suggests that his guardian at that date was Ramon Berenguer I Comte de Barcelona. When the cathedral of Urgell was dedicated 26 Oct 1040, she ceded (in the name of her infant son) her rights over Andorra to Eribaldus Bishop of Urgell. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum matre sua...Constantia...comitissa” donated property to the church of Urgell “anno...nativitate eiusdem...comitis quinto decimo et mensibus decem” by charter dated 4 Apr 1048, subscribed by “Miro vicecomes, Arnaldus Miro de Tost...”[2091]. “Constancia...comitisa et...Ermengaudus comes” sold “kastrum...Malagastro” to “Arnallo Mironis et uxori tue Arssendi” by charter dated 28 Feb 1049[2092]. “Constancia...comitissa Urgellensis” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, for the soul of “mei filii Ermengaudi comitis”, by charter dated 25 Mar 1066[2093]."
Med Lands cites:
;
His 1st wife.1,4 Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel married Constanza Velasquita (?) de Besalú, daughter of Bernardo I Talliaferro (?) comte de Besalú et de Ripoll and Toda/Adelaide (?) de Provence, Ctse de Besalú, circa 1030
;
His 2nd wife.6,1,7,4,2
Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel died in 1038; pilgrimage to Jerusalem.6,1,2
; Per Genealogy.EU (Bellonides): “[parentage unproved] Constanza Velasquita; m. Ct Armengol II of Urgel (*1009 +1038)”.6
Reference: Genalogics cites:
1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.
2. Biogr. details drawn from Wikipedia.2
; Per Genealogics:
“Armengol, called 'the Pilgrim', was born about 1009, the son of Armengol I, conde de Urgel, and Tetberga (de Provence). He was count of Urgel from 1011 to his death. He was a child when he succeeded his father and was put under the regency of his uncle Ramon Borrell I, conde de Barcelona, until 1018.
“With his uncle's help, Armengol began a successful war of reconquest to the south, taking Montmagastre, Alòs, Malagastre, Rubió, and Artesa. Around 1015 Hermengaudius, bishop of Urgel, repopulated the region of Guissona. Finally the Catalan nobleman of Urgel, Arnau Mir de Tost, the lord of Llordà, occupied the castle of Ager in 1034. Arnau was a major figure in the eleventh-century _Reconquista_ in Catalonia. The taifa kings of Lleida and Saragossa also granted lands to him and to the church of Urgel.
“Before 24 November 1031 Armengol married Constanza, also called Velasquita. She survived until 1059 at least and acted as regent for their son Armengol III. She may have been the daughter with that name of Bernardo I 'Tallaferro', conde de Besalu et de Ripoll, and Toda (de Provence), named in her father's will in October 1021.
“Armengol went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and died at Jerusalem in 1038.”.2
; Per Genealogy.EU (Barcelona 6): “A1. Armengol II "el Pelegrino", Cde de Urgel, *1009, +1038; 1m: Arsenda N; 2m: ca 1030 Constanza Velasquita, probably dau.of Ct Bernardo I Tallaferro of Besalu”.8
; This is the same person as:
”Ermengol II, Count of Urgell” at Wikipedia and as
”Armengol II de Urgel” at Wikipedia (Es.)9,10 GAV-30 EDV-30. Armengol II "el Pelegrino", (?) Cde de Urgel was also known as Ermengaud II (?) Count of Urgel.
; Per Med Lands:
"ARMENGOL [II] de Urgell "el Pelegrino" (1009-Jerusalem after 12 Oct 1039, bur Jerusalem, Church of the Holy Sepulchre). He succeeded his father in 1010 as Comte de Urgell. The Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium records that "Ermengaudus" held the county of Urgell for 28 years and died in 1038[2078]. It is likely that Ramon Borrell Comte de Barcelona (who died in 1017) acted as regent for Urgell during the early part of the minority of Armengol [II]. This conclusion is indicated by the charter dated 22 Apr 1037 which records that “Borrellus Urgellensis (comes) et marchio” granted “castrum et villam de Artesia” to “Mir Arnallo de Ceruaria”, subscribed by “Ermengaudus comes, Borelli donationes feci firmare...”[2079]. The subscription suggests that the original donation was granted earlier by Comte Ramon Borrell, presumably as regent, the date of the document relating to the subscription confirmation by Armengoll [II]. After Comte Ramon Borrell died, his role was adopted by his widow while Armengol [II] was still a minor: “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum Ermesinde...comitissa et filio suo Berengario...comes et marchio” donated property at “podio de Sicxo...[et] Campo de Rasio” to the church of Sant Miquel de Montmagastre by charter dated 28 Sep “anno XV regnante Roberto rege” [equivalent to 1010, but presumably misdated because of the absence the second donor´s husband who was alive until 1017], witnessed by “Bremundo vicecomitis Cardonensis, Arnallus Mironis de Tost, Trasuarii de Capoladi, Reimundus filio suo...”[2080]. "Ermengaudo…comes et marchio" granted "alodes…in comitato Orgello in apenditio de Sancto Azisclo…in villa Ortoneoves" to "Atto" by charter dated 28 Feb 1029, subscribed by "…Guillemo vicecomite…"[2081]. “Ermengaudus...comes simul cum conjuge mea Belischita quæ vocant Constancia” donated property to Urgell Sant Saturnin by charter dated 28 Dec 1033[2082]. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2083]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio coniuxque mea Constantia comitissa” donated “medietate de ipsum castrum de Sanct Lizine” to the Urgell cathedral by charter dated 15 Aug 1036[2084]. “Ermengaudus chomes...cum coniuge mea Belaschita que vocant Constancia” sold “kastrum de Artesa...in comitatum Orgellitensis” to “Arnaldo et uxori tue Arsendis” by charter dated 12 Oct 1039[2085]. A Fragmentum historicum in the cartulary of Alaon records the death in 1038 of “Ermengaudus peregrinus”[2086], although the date must be incorrect if the charter dated 12 Oct 1039 is correctly dated.
"m firstly ([1026]) ARSENDA, daughter of --- (-before [1030]). The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified.
"m secondly ([1030]) VELASQUITA [Constanza], daughter of --- (-after 25 Mar 1066). “Ermengaudus...comes simul cum conjuge mea Belischita quæ vocant Constancia” donated property to Urgell Sant Saturnin by charter dated 28 Dec 1033[2087]. "Ermengaudus…chomes marchio et uxori mea Constancia comitissa" granted privileges to the inhabitants of Santa Licinia by charter dated 2 Jul "anno V regnante Enrico rege", transcribed 3 May "A. D. MCCXC" (dated to 1036 in the collection consulted), subscribed by "Ermengaudus comes filius Ermengaudi et Adalaiz comitissa uxor sua"[2088]. The dating of this document is problematic. If the names of the donor and the subscriber are correct, it is impossible as the subscriber could not then have been married. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio coniuxque mea Constantia comitissa” donated “medietate de ipsum castrum de Sanct Lizine” to the Urgell cathedral by charter dated 15 Aug 1036[2089]. “Ermengaudus chomes...cum coniuge mea Belaschita que vocant Constancia” sold “kastrum de Artesa...in comitatum Orgellitensis” to “Arnaldo et uxori tue Arsendis” by charter dated 12 Oct 1039[2090]. She was regent for her son, as indicated by the charters dated 1048 and 1049 (see below), although the charter dated to [1050] which is quoted below under the paragraph dealing with her son suggests that his guardian at that date was Ramon Berenguer I Comte de Barcelona. When the cathedral of Urgell was dedicated 26 Oct 1040, she ceded (in the name of her infant son) her rights over Andorra to Eribaldus Bishop of Urgell. “Ermengaudus...comes et marchio...cum matre sua...Constantia...comitissa” donated property to the church of Urgell “anno...nativitate eiusdem...comitis quinto decimo et mensibus decem” by charter dated 4 Apr 1048, subscribed by “Miro vicecomes, Arnaldus Miro de Tost...”[2091]. “Constancia...comitisa et...Ermengaudus comes” sold “kastrum...Malagastro” to “Arnallo Mironis et uxori tue Arssendi” by charter dated 28 Feb 1049[2092]. “Constancia...comitissa Urgellensis” donated property to Ager Sant Pere, for the soul of “mei filii Ermengaudi comitis”, by charter dated 25 Mar 1066[2093]."
Med Lands cites:
[2078] Gesta Comitum Barcinonensium 12, RHGF XI, p. 290.
[2079] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 6, p. 206.
[2080] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 1, p. 201.
[2081] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome V, Preuves, Chartes et Diplômes, 187, col. 383.
[2082] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXI, col. 1056.
[2083] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2084] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 5, p. 205.
[2085] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 10, p. 211.
[2086] Fragmentum historicum, Ex cartulario Alaonis, España Sagrada XLVI, XXXVI, p. 324.
[2087] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXI, col. 1056.
[2088] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2089] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 5, p. 205.
[2090] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 10, p. 211.
[2091] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXIII, col. 1093.
[2092] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 27, p. 236.
[2093] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 73, p. 304.4
He was Conde de Urgel between 1011 and 1038.10[2079] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 6, p. 206.
[2080] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 1, p. 201.
[2081] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome V, Preuves, Chartes et Diplômes, 187, col. 383.
[2082] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXI, col. 1056.
[2083] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2084] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 5, p. 205.
[2085] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 10, p. 211.
[2086] Fragmentum historicum, Ex cartulario Alaonis, España Sagrada XLVI, XXXVI, p. 324.
[2087] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXI, col. 1056.
[2088] Muñoz Romero (1847), Tome I, p. 185.
[2089] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 5, p. 205.
[2090] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 10, p. 211.
[2091] Marca Hispanica (1688), Appendix, CCXXXIII, col. 1093.
[2092] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 27, p. 236.
[2093] Ager Sant Pere, Vol. I, 73, p. 304.4
Family 1 | Arsenda (?) |
Family 2 | Constanza Velasquita (?) de Besalú b. c 1000 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol II 'the Pilgrim': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120893&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol I 'el de Córdoba': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120895&tree=LEO
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CATALAN%20NOBILITY.htm#ArmengolIIIUrgeldied1065. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Tetberga (de Provence): https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120896&tree=LEO
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 1 page (Bellonides): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Constanza Velasquita: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120894&tree=LEO
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Barcelona 6: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/barcelona/barcelona6.html#A2
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ermengol_II,_Count_of_Urgell. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S4760] Wikipédia - Llaenciclopedia libre, online https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Portada, Armengol II de Urgel: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armengol_II_de_Urgel. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia (ES).
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Armengol III 'el de Barbastro': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120892&tree=LEO
Richard Talbot1
M, #19434
Father | Sir Richard Talbot 4th Lord Talbot de Blackmere1 b. c 1361, d. bt 8 Sep 1396 - 9 Sep 1396 |
Mother | Ankaret le Strange Baroness Strange of Blackmere1 b. c 1361, d. 1 Jun 1413 |
Last Edited | 23 Nov 2002 |
Richard Talbot was Archbp Dublin 1417-49, Ld Chllr Ireland 1423-April 1426 and Oct 1426-31, Ld Justice Ireland, Ld Dep Ireland 1435-36, 1437 and 1447-49.1
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Shrewsbury and Waterford Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
Pedro Fruelas de Trava Conde de Trava1
M, #19435, d. 1071
Father | Fruelo Bermudez de Trastamare b. c 968, d. c 997 |
Mother | Sancha Rodriguez |
Last Edited | 15 Aug 2020 |
Pedro Fruelas de Trava Conde de Trava married Aurembuiz de Aza, daughter of Fernan Gonsalez de Aza.
Pedro Fruelas de Trava Conde de Trava died in 1071. He married Mayor de Urgel, daughter of Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel and Lucia (?) de la Marche, in 1095.
Pedro Fruelas de Trava Conde de Trava died in 1071. He married Mayor de Urgel, daughter of Armengol IV "el de Gerb" (?) Conde de Urgel and Lucia (?) de la Marche, in 1095.
Family 1 | Aurembuiz de Aza |
Child |
|
Family 2 | Mayor de Urgel |
Child |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Iberia 3 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/iberia/iberia3.html
Mayor/Amilia Manriquez de Lara1
F, #19436, d. after 27 May 1182
Father | Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne2,1 b. b 1134, d. 9 Jul 1164 |
Mother | Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne2,1 d. 7 Jan 1177 |
Last Edited | 8 Oct 2020 |
Mayor/Amilia Manriquez de Lara married Count Gomez Gonsalez de Manzanedo before 1162.3
Mayor/Amilia Manriquez de Lara died after 27 May 1182.4
Mayor/Amilia Manriquez de Lara died after 27 May 1182.4
Family | Count Gomez Gonsalez de Manzanedo b. b 1148, d. 9 Sep 1181 |
Child |
Citations
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 305. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 264.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, pp. 252, 305.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 252.
Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne1,2,3,4
M, #19437, b. before 1134, d. 9 July 1164
Father | Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara1,2,5,3,4,6,7 b. bt 1080 - 1085, d. 16 Oct 1130 |
Mother | Eva de Traba1,2,3,4,6,7 |
Last Edited | 8 Oct 2020 |
Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne was born before 1134; Barton [1997] says b. bef 1134; Med Lands says b. 1110.8,6 He married Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne, daughter of Aimera/Aimerico II (?) Vicomte de Narbonne and Hermensinde (?), between 1150 and 1153
; Barton says m. bef 5 Dec 1153; Med Lands says m. 1150/53.1,2,9,10,4
Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne died on 9 July 1164 at Garcianarro, Spain (now); Killed in battle.1,2,4,6
Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne was buried after 9 July 1164 at Monasterio de Santa María de Huerta, Campo de Gómara comarca, Soria, Castilla y León, Spain.6,11
; Per de Almeida email [2007]:
Almost all of the last generation have long ahnentafels.
at an unknown age Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica, Instituto Português de Heráldic a Lisboa, 1986.
[b] Nobiliário das Famílias de Portugal Felgueiras Gayo, Carvalhos de Basto, 2ª Edição, Braga, 1989.
[c] A Herança Genética de D. Afonso Henriques. Luiz de Mello Vaz de São Payo, Universidade Moderna, 1ª Edição. Porto, 2002.3
Reference: Genealogics cites:
; See entries on Wikipedia and Wikipédia (Fr.) for more information. References cites on Wikipedia include:
** Simon Barton. The Aristocracy in Twelfth-century León and Castile. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
** Simon Barton and Richard A. Fletcher, edd. The World of El Cid: Chronicles of the Spanish Reconquest. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000.
** José María Canal Sánchez-Pagín, "El conde García Ordóñez, rival del Cid Campeador: su familia, sus servicios a Alfonso VI." Anuario de Estudios Medievales, 27:749–73 (1997).
** Simon R. Doubleday. The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2001.
** Joseph J. Duggan. The Cantar de Mio Cid: Poetic Creation in Its Economic and Social Contexts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.
** Nancy Joe Dyer. "Alfonsine Historiography: The Literary Narrative". Emperor of Culture: Alfonso X the Learned of Castile and His Thirteenth-Century Renaissance. Robert I. Burns, ed. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1990, 141–158.
** Richard A. Fletcher. The Episcopate in the Kingdom of León in the Twelfth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978.
** Enrique Flórez. España Sagrada, XXIII. Madrid: 1767.
** Glenn Edward Lipskey. The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor: A Translation of the Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris. PhD dissertation, Northwestern University. 1972.
** Faustino Menéndez Pidal de Navascués. "Los sellos de los señores de Molina". Anuario de estudios medievales, 14(1984), 101–119.
** James F. Powers. A Society Organized for War: The Iberian Municipal Militias in the Central Middle Ages, 1000–1284. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
** Luis Sánchez Belda. "Notas de diplomática: En torno a tres diplomas de Alfonso VII". Hispania, 11(1951):42, 47–61.
** Antonio Sánchez de Mora, La nobleza castellana en la plena Edad Media: el linaje de Lara (SS. XI–XIII), Doctoral Thesis (University of Seville, 2003).11,12
; Per Med Lands:
"MANRIQUE Pérez de Lara ([1110]-killed in battle Garcianarro 9 Jul 1164, bur Cistercian abbey of Santa María de Huerta). His mother names her children (in order) Manrique, Álvaro, Nuño, Elvira, María and Milia in a charter dated 1147[1384]. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Manrique de Lara, D. Nuño de Lara, D. Rodrigo sin hijos" as the children of "El Conde D. Pedro" and his wife "D. Eva"[1385]. Señor de Molina y Mesa. Alférez of Alfonso VII King of Castile 26 Dec 1134 to 2 Jun 1137. "...Almaricus Armiger..." subscribed the charter dated 1136 which records the settlement of a dispute between Sahagún and “Maria Gomez et filios suos super villa Vincentii” before King Alfonso VII[1386]. "Rodericus comes…cum consanguinibus meis: Semeno Enechez et mater eius dompna Maria, Don Garcia, D. Malrico, Gonsalbo de Marañon, Don Nuño, Don Rodrico, Don Alvaro, Don Pedro Garciaz, comitissa Doña Elbira, Domna Milia, Domna Santia Garciaz, Domna Mayor Garciaz, Domna Maria Garciaz" donated "villam…Gormeces" to San Pedro de Arlança, by charter dated 7 Feb 1140[1387]. "…Almanrique alferiz imperatoris…" subscribed the charter dated 1 Jul 1140 under which King Alfonso VII donated various property between Salamanca and Zamora to Santiago de Compostela[1388]. Conde 1145. The Poem of Almería, included in the Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris, records the participation of "Count Manrique…[son of] Count Pedro de Lara" in the capture of Almería[1389]. “Comes Malricus…cum fratribus et sororibus nostris Albar Petriz et Nun Petriz, comitissa domna Elvira, Mari Petriz, Milia Petriz” conferred rights on San Juan de Tardajos by charter dated 31 Jan 1147[1390]. "Malrric…comes, et domnus Alvarus, Munionis, Ferrandus comes, et suos filios, Gomez Gonçalviz, Garci Gomez, et suos filios, Petrus Semeniz et Roderico Semeniz, et Gonçalvo Roiz" donated "casas de Toleto" to "Gonscalvo de Marannon" by charter dated 9 Nov 1148[1391]. "Comes Amalricus" granted land in "Cidello…[et] Ualaguera" to named settlers by charter dated Feb 1152[1392]. The dating clause of a charter dated Feb 1154, under which "Greo Petri" placed himself under the protection of "comite domno Petro Adefonso et uxori uestra comitissa domna Maria Froilaz", names "…comes Almarricus tenente Beaciam et alia multa oppida…"[1393]. "Aldefonsus…tocius Hyspanie imperator…cum uxore mea imperatrice domna Rica et…filiis meis Sanctio et Ferrando regibus" donated property to the abbey of Silos by charter dated 28 Oct 1155, confirmed by "…Comes Almandricus tenens Bæciam…"[1394]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1156, under which "Didago Moniz et uxor mea Urraca Tellez…" donated property in San Martín de los Álamos to San Zoilo de Carrión, records "in Baecia, comes Almarricus, comes Poncius maiordomus imperatoris, Nuno Petrez in Auia, Didago Moniuz medietatem in Carrione et tota Saldana, Michael Alarez suo merino, Guter Ferrandiz medietatem in Carrion"[1395]. He was regent for King Alfonso VIII on his accession as an infant in 1158. The Anales Toledanos record that “Conde Manrich” was killed 9 Jul 1164[1396]. He was killed by Fernán Ruíz de Castro in the battle of Huete[1397].
"m ([1150/53]) ERMESINDE de Narbonne, daughter of AIMERY [II] Vicomte de Narbonne & his [second wife Ermesinde ---] (-7 Jan 1177, bur Santa María de Huerta). The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos records that "D. Manrique de Lara" married "D. Hermesenda, hija de D. Almerique el primer señor de Narbonna"[1398]. Her marriage date in the early 1150s is based on the chronology of her children’s lives, bearing in mind the death of her father in 1134. This date suggests the possibility of an otherwise unrecorded earlier marriage of Manrique, considering his likely birth date. "Emerssenda cometissa quondam uxor Almarrici comitis…cum filiis meis…domno Amelrico et domno Petro atque domno Guillelmo et domna Maria et domna Sancia et domna Ermengard" donated "villa…Madrigal" to Burgos Cathedral, for the soul of "Almarrici mariti mei", by charter dated 14 Aug 1164, witnessed by "domnus Alvarus Petri, comes Nunus Petri, Rodericus Petri monachus, Rodericus Ferdinandi, Petrus Roderici, Ordonius Garciez, domnus Gomez Gundisalui, domnus Alvarus Roderici, Petrus Roderici, Ferdinandus Roderici…"[1399]. “Armesen cometissa uxor comitis Almarich et filia Aimerich de Narbonna” donated property “Arandilla” in Molina to the monastery of Santa María de Huerta by charter dated 14 Mar 1167, confirmed by "Petrus Marrich comes"[1400]. "Dopna Ermesenda…comitissa" donated "medietatem meam de Molina" held by "comite Almarrico bonæ memore marito meo", to "nepoti meo Garsie Petri hijo comitis Petri, et Santiæ Infantisle", by charter dated 1175[1401]."
Med Lands cites:
; Per Med Lands:
"[EVA . Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba according to Salazar y Castro[2708]. This tradition goes back further. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Eva, D. Estevaina Perez, D. Elvira Perez" as the daughters of "Conde D. Pedro Fernandez de Trava que pobló el castillo de Trava"[2709]. Argote Molina also stated in 1588 that "doña Eva Perez de Trava…hija de el Conde don Pedro de Trava Señor de Trastamara" was the wife of "el Conde don Garcia que murio en la batalla de Ucles"[2710]. Barton says that there is no documentary proof to substantiate this claim[2711]. Menéndez Pidal de Navascués[2712] suggests that she was a countess of French origin, Szabolcs de Vajay and Salazar[2713] hypothesising more specifically that she was the daughter of Aimery II Vicomte de Rochechouart whose mother was named Eva, and whose name in the form "Almanricus" may have been the origin of the name "Manrique" given to her son by her second marriage. It is all the more improbable that Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz as her son by her first husband married one of Pedro's younger daughters who would have been his aunt if the relationship was correct.
"m firstly (before 1105) as his second wife, conde GARCÍA Ordóñez de Nájera y Grañon, son of ORDOÑO Ordóñez & his wife Anderquina --- (-killed in battle Uclés 30 May 1108).
"m secondly PEDRO González de Lara, son of GONZALO Núñez de Lara & his wife Godo González ([1085]-Bayonne 16 Oct 1130).]"
Med Lands cites:
; Per Stasser email [2003]: "dans l'article 027c01c36266$6f591080$78f4fea9@old, Leo van de Pas à leov...@bigpond.com a écrit le 14/08/03 15:30 :
- hide quoted text -
> Before 1265 Sybille de Foix married Aimery Vicomte de Narbonne.
>
> Does anyone know whether he was Aimery IV or Aimery VI and can anyone help me with his ancestor list?
"Aimery IV of Narbonne married Sibylle, dau of Roger IV count of Foix and Brunissende of Cardonna
"He died in october 1298, and was the son of Amaury I,viscount of narbonne, by Philippa, dau of Pierre Bermond of Sauve and Anduze, and Gauceranne of Poitiers
"Amaury I of Narbonne was the second son of Aimery III by his 2nd wife Marguerite, dau of Mathieu of Montmorency, lord of Marly, and Mathilde of Garlande
"Aimery III of Narbonne was the son of Pierre Manrique of Lara, viscount of narbonne, by his 1st wife sancia, dau of King Garcia V of Navarra, and his 2nd wife Sancia of Castilla
"Pierre Manrique of Lara was the 2nd son of Manrique Perez of Lara by Ermessinde, 2nd dau of Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne
"Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne had by his first wife Ermengarde a son, Aimery, who died young, and a daughter, Ermengarde, who inherited Narbonne. By his 2nd wife Ermessinde, he had another daughter, Ermessinde, mar to Manrique Perez of Lara
"Viscount Aimery II was the eldest son of viscount Aimery I of Narbonne by his wife Mathilde, 2nd daughter of Robert Guiscard of hauteville, duke of Apulia and Calabria, prince of Salerno and duke of Amalfi, by his 2nd wife Sichelgaita, dau of Prince Gaimar IV of Salerno by his 2nd wife Gemma, dau of a count Laidulf, presumably of Teano
"Aimey I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Bernard Berenger by his wife Fides, who may have been the dau of Count Hugues of Rouergue
"Bernard Berenger of Narbonne was the 2nd son of Viscount Berenger by garsinde, dau of Count Bernard I of Besalu and Tota/Adelaide, presumably dau of Raymond count of Toulouse and Adelaide of Anjou
"Berenger of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Raymond I of Narbonne by his wife Ricarda, presumably dau of Berenger I of Millau
"Raymond I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Matfred by his wife Adelaide, dau of Arnaud count of Carcassonne and Arsinde of Rouergue
"Matfred of Narbonne was the son of viscount Eudes by his wife Richilde, dau of Guifred II of Barcelona and his wife Garsinde
"Eudes of narbonne was the son of viscount Franco by his wife Arsinde, presumably dau of either Raymond I of Toulouse and his wife Bertheiz, or of Eudes of Toulouse and his wife Garsinde
I hope this helps, Thierry”.14 He was Alférez del rey (Armiger of the king) between 1134 and 1137.11 He was living on 26 December 1134.2
; Barton says m. bef 5 Dec 1153; Med Lands says m. 1150/53.1,2,9,10,4
Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne died on 9 July 1164 at Garcianarro, Spain (now); Killed in battle.1,2,4,6
Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne was buried after 9 July 1164 at Monasterio de Santa María de Huerta, Campo de Gómara comarca, Soria, Castilla y León, Spain.6,11
; Per de Almeida email [2007]:
1. Manrique Perez de Lara, 1. lord of Molina, d. 1164 at an unknown age
2. Pedro González de Lara, count, d. 1130 (lover of Queen Urraca of
León y Castilla) at an unknown age [b]
3. Eva
4. Gonzalo Muñoz, count in Lara at an unknown age
5. Sandina Rodríguez
8. Munio González, count of the Astúrias, d. 1097 at an unknown age
9. Maior Rodríguez
16. Gonzalo Muñoz, count of the Astúrias, d. 1053 at an unknown age
17. Eyla Muñoz
32. Munio González, d. 1047 at an unknown age
33. Tigridia Ansúrez
64. Gonzalo Garcia de Castilla, d. 1011 at an unknown age
65. N...
128. García Fernández, count sovereign of Castilla, d. 995 at an unknown age
129. Ava de Ribagorza
256. Fernando González, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b]
257. Sancha Sánchez of Pamplona
258. Raimundo II., count of Ribagorza
259. Gersende de Fézensac
512. Gonzalo Fernández, count in Burgos, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b][c]
513. Muniadona Nuñez, "la Cometissima"
514. Sancho I Garcez, King of Pamplona
515. Toda Aznares of Aragón
516. Bernardo, count of Ribagorza
517. Toda Galíndez of Aragón, señora de Sobrarbe
518. Guillaume Garcez de Gascogne, count of Fézensac [c]
519. Gracinde de Rouerge
1024. Fernando González "el Negro" de Castrosiero at an unknown age [b][c]
1025. Gontiña Muñoz
1026. Nuño Ordóñez, Infante de Galiza [c]
1027. N... de Castilla
1028. García Ximenez at an unknown age
1029. Daldidis de Paillars
1030. Aznar II Galindes, count of Aragón, d. 893 at an unknown age
1031. Onega Garcez de Pamplona
1034. Galindo III. Aznar, count of Aragón, d. 922 at an unknown age
1035. Acibelle de Gascogne
1036. García Sanchez "el Curvo", duc de Gascogne [c]
1037. Amuna d'Agen
1038. Raymond II, count of Toulouse and Rouerge at an unknown age [c]
1039. Gunilda de Barcelona
2. Pedro González de Lara, count, d. 1130 (lover of Queen Urraca of
León y Castilla) at an unknown age [b]
3. Eva
4. Gonzalo Muñoz, count in Lara at an unknown age
5. Sandina Rodríguez
8. Munio González, count of the Astúrias, d. 1097 at an unknown age
9. Maior Rodríguez
16. Gonzalo Muñoz, count of the Astúrias, d. 1053 at an unknown age
17. Eyla Muñoz
32. Munio González, d. 1047 at an unknown age
33. Tigridia Ansúrez
64. Gonzalo Garcia de Castilla, d. 1011 at an unknown age
65. N...
128. García Fernández, count sovereign of Castilla, d. 995 at an unknown age
129. Ava de Ribagorza
256. Fernando González, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b]
257. Sancha Sánchez of Pamplona
258. Raimundo II., count of Ribagorza
259. Gersende de Fézensac
512. Gonzalo Fernández, count in Burgos, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b][c]
513. Muniadona Nuñez, "la Cometissima"
514. Sancho I Garcez, King of Pamplona
515. Toda Aznares of Aragón
516. Bernardo, count of Ribagorza
517. Toda Galíndez of Aragón, señora de Sobrarbe
518. Guillaume Garcez de Gascogne, count of Fézensac [c]
519. Gracinde de Rouerge
1024. Fernando González "el Negro" de Castrosiero at an unknown age [b][c]
1025. Gontiña Muñoz
1026. Nuño Ordóñez, Infante de Galiza [c]
1027. N... de Castilla
1028. García Ximenez at an unknown age
1029. Daldidis de Paillars
1030. Aznar II Galindes, count of Aragón, d. 893 at an unknown age
1031. Onega Garcez de Pamplona
1034. Galindo III. Aznar, count of Aragón, d. 922 at an unknown age
1035. Acibelle de Gascogne
1036. García Sanchez "el Curvo", duc de Gascogne [c]
1037. Amuna d'Agen
1038. Raymond II, count of Toulouse and Rouerge at an unknown age [c]
1039. Gunilda de Barcelona
Almost all of the last generation have long ahnentafels.
at an unknown age Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica, Instituto Português de Heráldic a Lisboa, 1986.
[b] Nobiliário das Famílias de Portugal Felgueiras Gayo, Carvalhos de Basto, 2ª Edição, Braga, 1989.
[c] A Herança Genética de D. Afonso Henriques. Luiz de Mello Vaz de São Payo, Universidade Moderna, 1ª Edição. Porto, 2002.3
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.
2. Actas do 17 Congresso Internacional de Ciéncias Genealógica e Heráldica, Inst. Port. de Heráldica, Lisboa, 1986.4
2. Actas do 17 Congresso Internacional de Ciéncias Genealógica e Heráldica, Inst. Port. de Heráldica, Lisboa, 1986.4
; See entries on Wikipedia and Wikipédia (Fr.) for more information. References cites on Wikipedia include:
** Simon Barton. The Aristocracy in Twelfth-century León and Castile. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
** Simon Barton and Richard A. Fletcher, edd. The World of El Cid: Chronicles of the Spanish Reconquest. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2000.
** José María Canal Sánchez-Pagín, "El conde García Ordóñez, rival del Cid Campeador: su familia, sus servicios a Alfonso VI." Anuario de Estudios Medievales, 27:749–73 (1997).
** Simon R. Doubleday. The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2001.
** Joseph J. Duggan. The Cantar de Mio Cid: Poetic Creation in Its Economic and Social Contexts. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.
** Nancy Joe Dyer. "Alfonsine Historiography: The Literary Narrative". Emperor of Culture: Alfonso X the Learned of Castile and His Thirteenth-Century Renaissance. Robert I. Burns, ed. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1990, 141–158.
** Richard A. Fletcher. The Episcopate in the Kingdom of León in the Twelfth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978.
** Enrique Flórez. España Sagrada, XXIII. Madrid: 1767.
** Glenn Edward Lipskey. The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor: A Translation of the Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris. PhD dissertation, Northwestern University. 1972.
** Faustino Menéndez Pidal de Navascués. "Los sellos de los señores de Molina". Anuario de estudios medievales, 14(1984), 101–119.
** James F. Powers. A Society Organized for War: The Iberian Municipal Militias in the Central Middle Ages, 1000–1284. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987.
** Luis Sánchez Belda. "Notas de diplomática: En torno a tres diplomas de Alfonso VII". Hispania, 11(1951):42, 47–61.
** Antonio Sánchez de Mora, La nobleza castellana en la plena Edad Media: el linaje de Lara (SS. XI–XIII), Doctoral Thesis (University of Seville, 2003).11,12
; Per Med Lands:
"MANRIQUE Pérez de Lara ([1110]-killed in battle Garcianarro 9 Jul 1164, bur Cistercian abbey of Santa María de Huerta). His mother names her children (in order) Manrique, Álvaro, Nuño, Elvira, María and Milia in a charter dated 1147[1384]. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Manrique de Lara, D. Nuño de Lara, D. Rodrigo sin hijos" as the children of "El Conde D. Pedro" and his wife "D. Eva"[1385]. Señor de Molina y Mesa. Alférez of Alfonso VII King of Castile 26 Dec 1134 to 2 Jun 1137. "...Almaricus Armiger..." subscribed the charter dated 1136 which records the settlement of a dispute between Sahagún and “Maria Gomez et filios suos super villa Vincentii” before King Alfonso VII[1386]. "Rodericus comes…cum consanguinibus meis: Semeno Enechez et mater eius dompna Maria, Don Garcia, D. Malrico, Gonsalbo de Marañon, Don Nuño, Don Rodrico, Don Alvaro, Don Pedro Garciaz, comitissa Doña Elbira, Domna Milia, Domna Santia Garciaz, Domna Mayor Garciaz, Domna Maria Garciaz" donated "villam…Gormeces" to San Pedro de Arlança, by charter dated 7 Feb 1140[1387]. "…Almanrique alferiz imperatoris…" subscribed the charter dated 1 Jul 1140 under which King Alfonso VII donated various property between Salamanca and Zamora to Santiago de Compostela[1388]. Conde 1145. The Poem of Almería, included in the Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris, records the participation of "Count Manrique…[son of] Count Pedro de Lara" in the capture of Almería[1389]. “Comes Malricus…cum fratribus et sororibus nostris Albar Petriz et Nun Petriz, comitissa domna Elvira, Mari Petriz, Milia Petriz” conferred rights on San Juan de Tardajos by charter dated 31 Jan 1147[1390]. "Malrric…comes, et domnus Alvarus, Munionis, Ferrandus comes, et suos filios, Gomez Gonçalviz, Garci Gomez, et suos filios, Petrus Semeniz et Roderico Semeniz, et Gonçalvo Roiz" donated "casas de Toleto" to "Gonscalvo de Marannon" by charter dated 9 Nov 1148[1391]. "Comes Amalricus" granted land in "Cidello…[et] Ualaguera" to named settlers by charter dated Feb 1152[1392]. The dating clause of a charter dated Feb 1154, under which "Greo Petri" placed himself under the protection of "comite domno Petro Adefonso et uxori uestra comitissa domna Maria Froilaz", names "…comes Almarricus tenente Beaciam et alia multa oppida…"[1393]. "Aldefonsus…tocius Hyspanie imperator…cum uxore mea imperatrice domna Rica et…filiis meis Sanctio et Ferrando regibus" donated property to the abbey of Silos by charter dated 28 Oct 1155, confirmed by "…Comes Almandricus tenens Bæciam…"[1394]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1156, under which "Didago Moniz et uxor mea Urraca Tellez…" donated property in San Martín de los Álamos to San Zoilo de Carrión, records "in Baecia, comes Almarricus, comes Poncius maiordomus imperatoris, Nuno Petrez in Auia, Didago Moniuz medietatem in Carrione et tota Saldana, Michael Alarez suo merino, Guter Ferrandiz medietatem in Carrion"[1395]. He was regent for King Alfonso VIII on his accession as an infant in 1158. The Anales Toledanos record that “Conde Manrich” was killed 9 Jul 1164[1396]. He was killed by Fernán Ruíz de Castro in the battle of Huete[1397].
"m ([1150/53]) ERMESINDE de Narbonne, daughter of AIMERY [II] Vicomte de Narbonne & his [second wife Ermesinde ---] (-7 Jan 1177, bur Santa María de Huerta). The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos records that "D. Manrique de Lara" married "D. Hermesenda, hija de D. Almerique el primer señor de Narbonna"[1398]. Her marriage date in the early 1150s is based on the chronology of her children’s lives, bearing in mind the death of her father in 1134. This date suggests the possibility of an otherwise unrecorded earlier marriage of Manrique, considering his likely birth date. "Emerssenda cometissa quondam uxor Almarrici comitis…cum filiis meis…domno Amelrico et domno Petro atque domno Guillelmo et domna Maria et domna Sancia et domna Ermengard" donated "villa…Madrigal" to Burgos Cathedral, for the soul of "Almarrici mariti mei", by charter dated 14 Aug 1164, witnessed by "domnus Alvarus Petri, comes Nunus Petri, Rodericus Petri monachus, Rodericus Ferdinandi, Petrus Roderici, Ordonius Garciez, domnus Gomez Gundisalui, domnus Alvarus Roderici, Petrus Roderici, Ferdinandus Roderici…"[1399]. “Armesen cometissa uxor comitis Almarich et filia Aimerich de Narbonna” donated property “Arandilla” in Molina to the monastery of Santa María de Huerta by charter dated 14 Mar 1167, confirmed by "Petrus Marrich comes"[1400]. "Dopna Ermesenda…comitissa" donated "medietatem meam de Molina" held by "comite Almarrico bonæ memore marito meo", to "nepoti meo Garsie Petri hijo comitis Petri, et Santiæ Infantisle", by charter dated 1175[1401]."
Med Lands cites:
[1384] Serrano, L. Obispado de Burgos III, doc. 107, quoted in Torres (1999), p. 225.
[1385] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 7 p. 76.
[1386] Sahagún (Pérez), Apéndice III, Escritura CLX, p. 526.
[1387] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1388] López Ferreiro (1901), Tomo IV, Apéndice, IX, p. 25.
[1389] Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris II, 319, p. 261.
[1390] Martínez Díez, G. (1982) Fueros locales en el territorio de la provincia de Burgos (Burgos), no. 22, quoted in Sánchez de Mora (2003), Tomo I, p. 202.
[1391] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1392] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, V, p. 313.
[1393] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, VII, p. 315.
[1394] Silos 57, p. 85.
[1395] San Zoilo de Carrión 37, p. 61.
[1396] Anales Toledanos I, España Sagrada XXIII, p. 391.
[1397] Barton (2002), p. 264.
[1398] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 10 p. 77.
[1399] Burgos Cathedral, 167, p. 270.
[1400] García Luján, J. A. (ed) (1981) Cartulario del monasterio de Santa María de Huerta (Huerta) ("Santa María de Huerta"), 7, p. 15.
[1401] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 11.6
[1385] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 7 p. 76.
[1386] Sahagún (Pérez), Apéndice III, Escritura CLX, p. 526.
[1387] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1388] López Ferreiro (1901), Tomo IV, Apéndice, IX, p. 25.
[1389] Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris II, 319, p. 261.
[1390] Martínez Díez, G. (1982) Fueros locales en el territorio de la provincia de Burgos (Burgos), no. 22, quoted in Sánchez de Mora (2003), Tomo I, p. 202.
[1391] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1392] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, V, p. 313.
[1393] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, VII, p. 315.
[1394] Silos 57, p. 85.
[1395] San Zoilo de Carrión 37, p. 61.
[1396] Anales Toledanos I, España Sagrada XXIII, p. 391.
[1397] Barton (2002), p. 264.
[1398] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 10 p. 77.
[1399] Burgos Cathedral, 167, p. 270.
[1400] García Luján, J. A. (ed) (1981) Cartulario del monasterio de Santa María de Huerta (Huerta) ("Santa María de Huerta"), 7, p. 15.
[1401] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 11.6
; Per Med Lands:
"[EVA . Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba according to Salazar y Castro[2708]. This tradition goes back further. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Eva, D. Estevaina Perez, D. Elvira Perez" as the daughters of "Conde D. Pedro Fernandez de Trava que pobló el castillo de Trava"[2709]. Argote Molina also stated in 1588 that "doña Eva Perez de Trava…hija de el Conde don Pedro de Trava Señor de Trastamara" was the wife of "el Conde don Garcia que murio en la batalla de Ucles"[2710]. Barton says that there is no documentary proof to substantiate this claim[2711]. Menéndez Pidal de Navascués[2712] suggests that she was a countess of French origin, Szabolcs de Vajay and Salazar[2713] hypothesising more specifically that she was the daughter of Aimery II Vicomte de Rochechouart whose mother was named Eva, and whose name in the form "Almanricus" may have been the origin of the name "Manrique" given to her son by her second marriage. It is all the more improbable that Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz as her son by her first husband married one of Pedro's younger daughters who would have been his aunt if the relationship was correct.
"m firstly (before 1105) as his second wife, conde GARCÍA Ordóñez de Nájera y Grañon, son of ORDOÑO Ordóñez & his wife Anderquina --- (-killed in battle Uclés 30 May 1108).
"m secondly PEDRO González de Lara, son of GONZALO Núñez de Lara & his wife Godo González ([1085]-Bayonne 16 Oct 1130).]"
Med Lands cites:
[2708] Salazar y Castro, L. de (1696-7) Historia genealogica de la Casa de Lara, 3 vols. (Madrid), Vol 1, p. 99.
[2709] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. VII, Pereiras, 30 p. 63, 2 p. 65, and 9 p. 76.
[2710] Argote Molina (1588), p. 49.
[2711] Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2712] Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, E. 'Los sellos', p. 102, cited in Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2713] Salazar Acha, J. 'El linaje castellano de Castro en el siglo XII: consideraciones e hipótesis sobre su origen' Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía I (1991), pp. 33-68, 54 footnote 106, cited in Torres (1999), p. 223.13
[2709] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. VII, Pereiras, 30 p. 63, 2 p. 65, and 9 p. 76.
[2710] Argote Molina (1588), p. 49.
[2711] Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2712] Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, E. 'Los sellos', p. 102, cited in Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2713] Salazar Acha, J. 'El linaje castellano de Castro en el siglo XII: consideraciones e hipótesis sobre su origen' Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía I (1991), pp. 33-68, 54 footnote 106, cited in Torres (1999), p. 223.13
; Per Stasser email [2003]: "dans l'article 027c01c36266$6f591080$78f4fea9@old, Leo van de Pas à leov...@bigpond.com a écrit le 14/08/03 15:30 :
- hide quoted text -
> Before 1265 Sybille de Foix married Aimery Vicomte de Narbonne.
>
> Does anyone know whether he was Aimery IV or Aimery VI and can anyone help me with his ancestor list?
"Aimery IV of Narbonne married Sibylle, dau of Roger IV count of Foix and Brunissende of Cardonna
"He died in october 1298, and was the son of Amaury I,viscount of narbonne, by Philippa, dau of Pierre Bermond of Sauve and Anduze, and Gauceranne of Poitiers
"Amaury I of Narbonne was the second son of Aimery III by his 2nd wife Marguerite, dau of Mathieu of Montmorency, lord of Marly, and Mathilde of Garlande
"Aimery III of Narbonne was the son of Pierre Manrique of Lara, viscount of narbonne, by his 1st wife sancia, dau of King Garcia V of Navarra, and his 2nd wife Sancia of Castilla
"Pierre Manrique of Lara was the 2nd son of Manrique Perez of Lara by Ermessinde, 2nd dau of Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne
"Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne had by his first wife Ermengarde a son, Aimery, who died young, and a daughter, Ermengarde, who inherited Narbonne. By his 2nd wife Ermessinde, he had another daughter, Ermessinde, mar to Manrique Perez of Lara
"Viscount Aimery II was the eldest son of viscount Aimery I of Narbonne by his wife Mathilde, 2nd daughter of Robert Guiscard of hauteville, duke of Apulia and Calabria, prince of Salerno and duke of Amalfi, by his 2nd wife Sichelgaita, dau of Prince Gaimar IV of Salerno by his 2nd wife Gemma, dau of a count Laidulf, presumably of Teano
"Aimey I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Bernard Berenger by his wife Fides, who may have been the dau of Count Hugues of Rouergue
"Bernard Berenger of Narbonne was the 2nd son of Viscount Berenger by garsinde, dau of Count Bernard I of Besalu and Tota/Adelaide, presumably dau of Raymond count of Toulouse and Adelaide of Anjou
"Berenger of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Raymond I of Narbonne by his wife Ricarda, presumably dau of Berenger I of Millau
"Raymond I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Matfred by his wife Adelaide, dau of Arnaud count of Carcassonne and Arsinde of Rouergue
"Matfred of Narbonne was the son of viscount Eudes by his wife Richilde, dau of Guifred II of Barcelona and his wife Garsinde
"Eudes of narbonne was the son of viscount Franco by his wife Arsinde, presumably dau of either Raymond I of Toulouse and his wife Bertheiz, or of Eudes of Toulouse and his wife Garsinde
I hope this helps, Thierry”.14 He was Alférez del rey (Armiger of the king) between 1134 and 1137.11 He was living on 26 December 1134.2
Family | Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne d. 7 Jan 1177 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), p. 189. Hereinafter cited as Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 264. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S2151] Francisco Tavares de Almeida, "de Almeida email 7 Oct 2007: "Re: manrique de lara"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/83Ttp72p5m8/m/ex0K4muXITkJ) to e-mail address, 7 Oct 2007. Hereinafter cited as "de Almeida email 7 Oct 2007."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Manrique Perez de Lara: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00126919&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 280.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#ManriquePerezdied1164. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#PedroGonzalezdied1130B
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 305.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE%20NOBILITY.htm#ErmesindeNarbonnedied1175
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Ermesenda de Narbonne: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00126920&tree=LEO
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manrique_P%C3%A9rez_de_Lara. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Manrique Pérez de Lara: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manrique_P%C3%A9rez_de_Lara. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#EvaM1GarciaOrdonez
- [S1463] Thierry Stasser, "Stasser email "Re: Aimeri de Narbonne"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/t-7jjfjHxVo/m/4YzombalQZ0J) to e-mail address, 16 August 2003, https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/soc.genealogy.medieval/t-7jjfjHxVo/4YzombalQZ0J;context-place=forum/soc.genealogy.medieval. Hereinafter cited as "Stasser email 16 August 2003."
- [S1499] Maria Emma Escobar, "Escobar email "Diego Lopez de Haro, de Vizcaya/Biscay"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 6 November 2003. Hereinafter cited as "Escobar email 6 November 2003."
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family, pp. 40-46, 189.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 282.
Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne1,2
F, #19438, d. 7 January 1177
Father | Aimera/Aimerico II (?) Vicomte de Narbonne3,4,5,2,6,7 b. c 1087, d. 17 Jul 1134 |
Mother | Hermensinde (?)2,7 |
Last Edited | 6 Oct 2020 |
Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne married Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne, son of Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara and Eva de Traba, between 1150 and 1153
; Barton says m. bef 5 Dec 1153; Med Lands says m. 1150/53.8,3,2,7,9
Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne died on 7 January 1177.3,2
; Per Med Lands:
"MANRIQUE Pérez de Lara ([1110]-killed in battle Garcianarro 9 Jul 1164, bur Cistercian abbey of Santa María de Huerta). His mother names her children (in order) Manrique, Álvaro, Nuño, Elvira, María and Milia in a charter dated 1147[1384]. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Manrique de Lara, D. Nuño de Lara, D. Rodrigo sin hijos" as the children of "El Conde D. Pedro" and his wife "D. Eva"[1385]. Señor de Molina y Mesa. Alférez of Alfonso VII King of Castile 26 Dec 1134 to 2 Jun 1137. "...Almaricus Armiger..." subscribed the charter dated 1136 which records the settlement of a dispute between Sahagún and “Maria Gomez et filios suos super villa Vincentii” before King Alfonso VII[1386]. "Rodericus comes…cum consanguinibus meis: Semeno Enechez et mater eius dompna Maria, Don Garcia, D. Malrico, Gonsalbo de Marañon, Don Nuño, Don Rodrico, Don Alvaro, Don Pedro Garciaz, comitissa Doña Elbira, Domna Milia, Domna Santia Garciaz, Domna Mayor Garciaz, Domna Maria Garciaz" donated "villam…Gormeces" to San Pedro de Arlança, by charter dated 7 Feb 1140[1387]. "…Almanrique alferiz imperatoris…" subscribed the charter dated 1 Jul 1140 under which King Alfonso VII donated various property between Salamanca and Zamora to Santiago de Compostela[1388]. Conde 1145. The Poem of Almería, included in the Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris, records the participation of "Count Manrique…[son of] Count Pedro de Lara" in the capture of Almería[1389]. “Comes Malricus…cum fratribus et sororibus nostris Albar Petriz et Nun Petriz, comitissa domna Elvira, Mari Petriz, Milia Petriz” conferred rights on San Juan de Tardajos by charter dated 31 Jan 1147[1390]. "Malrric…comes, et domnus Alvarus, Munionis, Ferrandus comes, et suos filios, Gomez Gonçalviz, Garci Gomez, et suos filios, Petrus Semeniz et Roderico Semeniz, et Gonçalvo Roiz" donated "casas de Toleto" to "Gonscalvo de Marannon" by charter dated 9 Nov 1148[1391]. "Comes Amalricus" granted land in "Cidello…[et] Ualaguera" to named settlers by charter dated Feb 1152[1392]. The dating clause of a charter dated Feb 1154, under which "Greo Petri" placed himself under the protection of "comite domno Petro Adefonso et uxori uestra comitissa domna Maria Froilaz", names "…comes Almarricus tenente Beaciam et alia multa oppida…"[1393]. "Aldefonsus…tocius Hyspanie imperator…cum uxore mea imperatrice domna Rica et…filiis meis Sanctio et Ferrando regibus" donated property to the abbey of Silos by charter dated 28 Oct 1155, confirmed by "…Comes Almandricus tenens Bæciam…"[1394]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1156, under which "Didago Moniz et uxor mea Urraca Tellez…" donated property in San Martín de los Álamos to San Zoilo de Carrión, records "in Baecia, comes Almarricus, comes Poncius maiordomus imperatoris, Nuno Petrez in Auia, Didago Moniuz medietatem in Carrione et tota Saldana, Michael Alarez suo merino, Guter Ferrandiz medietatem in Carrion"[1395]. He was regent for King Alfonso VIII on his accession as an infant in 1158. The Anales Toledanos record that “Conde Manrich” was killed 9 Jul 1164[1396]. He was killed by Fernán Ruíz de Castro in the battle of Huete[1397].
"m ([1150/53]) ERMESINDE de Narbonne, daughter of AIMERY [II] Vicomte de Narbonne & his [second wife Ermesinde ---] (-7 Jan 1177, bur Santa María de Huerta). The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos records that "D. Manrique de Lara" married "D. Hermesenda, hija de D. Almerique el primer señor de Narbonna"[1398]. Her marriage date in the early 1150s is based on the chronology of her children’s lives, bearing in mind the death of her father in 1134. This date suggests the possibility of an otherwise unrecorded earlier marriage of Manrique, considering his likely birth date. "Emerssenda cometissa quondam uxor Almarrici comitis…cum filiis meis…domno Amelrico et domno Petro atque domno Guillelmo et domna Maria et domna Sancia et domna Ermengard" donated "villa…Madrigal" to Burgos Cathedral, for the soul of "Almarrici mariti mei", by charter dated 14 Aug 1164, witnessed by "domnus Alvarus Petri, comes Nunus Petri, Rodericus Petri monachus, Rodericus Ferdinandi, Petrus Roderici, Ordonius Garciez, domnus Gomez Gundisalui, domnus Alvarus Roderici, Petrus Roderici, Ferdinandus Roderici…"[1399]. “Armesen cometissa uxor comitis Almarich et filia Aimerich de Narbonna” donated property “Arandilla” in Molina to the monastery of Santa María de Huerta by charter dated 14 Mar 1167, confirmed by "Petrus Marrich comes"[1400]. "Dopna Ermesenda…comitissa" donated "medietatem meam de Molina" held by "comite Almarrico bonæ memore marito meo", to "nepoti meo Garsie Petri hijo comitis Petri, et Santiæ Infantisle", by charter dated 1175[1401]."
Med Lands cites:
; Per Med Lands:
"ERMESINDE de Narbonne (-7 Jan 1177, bur Santa María de Huerta). The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos records that "D. Manrique de Lara" married "D. Hermesenda, hija de D. Almerique el primer señor de Narbonna"[1076]. "Emerssenda cometissa quondam uxor Almarrici comitis…cum filiis meis…domno Amelrico et domno Petro atque domno Guillelmo et domna Maria et domna Sancia et domna Ermengard" donated "villa…Madrigal" to Burgos Cathedral, for the soul of "Almarrici mariti mei", by charter dated 14 Aug 1164, witnessed by "domnus Alvarus Petri, comes Nunus Petri, Rodericus Petri monachus, Rodericus Ferdinandi, Petrus Roderici, Ordonius Garciez, domnus Gomez Gundisalui, domnus Alvarus Roderici, Petrus Roderici, Ferdinandus Roderici…"[1077]. “Armesen cometissa uxor comitis Almarich et filia Aimerich de Narbonna” donated property “Arandilla” in Molina to the monastery of Santa María de Huerta by charter dated 14 Mar 1167, confirmed by "Petrus Marrich comes"[1078]. If it is correct, as suggested above, that Aimery [II] married twice, Ermesinde´s name suggests that she was the daughter of his second wife but this is not beyond all doubt. Her marriage date in the early 1150s is based on the chronology of her children’s lives, bearing in mind the death of her father in 1134.
"m ([1150/53]) MANRIQUE Pérez de Lara, son of PEDRO González de Lara & his wife Eva --- ([1110]-killed in battle Garcianarro 9 Jul 1164, bur Cistercian abbey of Santa María de Huerta)."
Med Lands cites:
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.7 Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne was also known as Hermesinde (?) de Narbonne.3
; Per Stasser email [2003]: "dans l'article 027c01c36266$6f591080$78f4fea9@old, Leo van de Pas à leov...@bigpond.com a écrit le 14/08/03 15:30 :
- hide quoted text -
> Before 1265 Sybille de Foix married Aimery Vicomte de Narbonne.
>
> Does anyone know whether he was Aimery IV or Aimery VI and can anyone help me with his ancestor list?
"Aimery IV of Narbonne married Sibylle, dau of Roger IV count of Foix and Brunissende of Cardonna
"He died in october 1298, and was the son of Amaury I,viscount of narbonne, by Philippa, dau of Pierre Bermond of Sauve and Anduze, and Gauceranne of Poitiers
"Amaury I of Narbonne was the second son of Aimery III by his 2nd wife Marguerite, dau of Mathieu of Montmorency, lord of Marly, and Mathilde of Garlande
"Aimery III of Narbonne was the son of Pierre Manrique of Lara, viscount of narbonne, by his 1st wife sancia, dau of King Garcia V of Navarra, and his 2nd wife Sancia of Castilla
"Pierre Manrique of Lara was the 2nd son of Manrique Perez of Lara by Ermessinde, 2nd dau of Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne
"Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne had by his first wife Ermengarde a son, Aimery, who died young, and a daughter, Ermengarde, who inherited Narbonne. By his 2nd wife Ermessinde, he had another daughter, Ermessinde, mar to Manrique Perez of Lara
"Viscount Aimery II was the eldest son of viscount Aimery I of Narbonne by his wife Mathilde, 2nd daughter of Robert Guiscard of hauteville, duke of Apulia and Calabria, prince of Salerno and duke of Amalfi, by his 2nd wife Sichelgaita, dau of Prince Gaimar IV of Salerno by his 2nd wife Gemma, dau of a count Laidulf, presumably of Teano
"Aimey I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Bernard Berenger by his wife Fides, who may have been the dau of Count Hugues of Rouergue
"Bernard Berenger of Narbonne was the 2nd son of Viscount Berenger by garsinde, dau of Count Bernard I of Besalu and Tota/Adelaide, presumably dau of Raymond count of Toulouse and Adelaide of Anjou
"Berenger of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Raymond I of Narbonne by his wife Ricarda, presumably dau of Berenger I of Millau
"Raymond I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Matfred by his wife Adelaide, dau of Arnaud count of Carcassonne and Arsinde of Rouergue
"Matfred of Narbonne was the son of viscount Eudes by his wife Richilde, dau of Guifred II of Barcelona and his wife Garsinde
"Eudes of narbonne was the son of viscount Franco by his wife Arsinde, presumably dau of either Raymond I of Toulouse and his wife Bertheiz, or of Eudes of Toulouse and his wife Garsinde
I hope this helps, Thierry”.11
; Barton says m. bef 5 Dec 1153; Med Lands says m. 1150/53.8,3,2,7,9
Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne died on 7 January 1177.3,2
; Per Med Lands:
"MANRIQUE Pérez de Lara ([1110]-killed in battle Garcianarro 9 Jul 1164, bur Cistercian abbey of Santa María de Huerta). His mother names her children (in order) Manrique, Álvaro, Nuño, Elvira, María and Milia in a charter dated 1147[1384]. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Manrique de Lara, D. Nuño de Lara, D. Rodrigo sin hijos" as the children of "El Conde D. Pedro" and his wife "D. Eva"[1385]. Señor de Molina y Mesa. Alférez of Alfonso VII King of Castile 26 Dec 1134 to 2 Jun 1137. "...Almaricus Armiger..." subscribed the charter dated 1136 which records the settlement of a dispute between Sahagún and “Maria Gomez et filios suos super villa Vincentii” before King Alfonso VII[1386]. "Rodericus comes…cum consanguinibus meis: Semeno Enechez et mater eius dompna Maria, Don Garcia, D. Malrico, Gonsalbo de Marañon, Don Nuño, Don Rodrico, Don Alvaro, Don Pedro Garciaz, comitissa Doña Elbira, Domna Milia, Domna Santia Garciaz, Domna Mayor Garciaz, Domna Maria Garciaz" donated "villam…Gormeces" to San Pedro de Arlança, by charter dated 7 Feb 1140[1387]. "…Almanrique alferiz imperatoris…" subscribed the charter dated 1 Jul 1140 under which King Alfonso VII donated various property between Salamanca and Zamora to Santiago de Compostela[1388]. Conde 1145. The Poem of Almería, included in the Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris, records the participation of "Count Manrique…[son of] Count Pedro de Lara" in the capture of Almería[1389]. “Comes Malricus…cum fratribus et sororibus nostris Albar Petriz et Nun Petriz, comitissa domna Elvira, Mari Petriz, Milia Petriz” conferred rights on San Juan de Tardajos by charter dated 31 Jan 1147[1390]. "Malrric…comes, et domnus Alvarus, Munionis, Ferrandus comes, et suos filios, Gomez Gonçalviz, Garci Gomez, et suos filios, Petrus Semeniz et Roderico Semeniz, et Gonçalvo Roiz" donated "casas de Toleto" to "Gonscalvo de Marannon" by charter dated 9 Nov 1148[1391]. "Comes Amalricus" granted land in "Cidello…[et] Ualaguera" to named settlers by charter dated Feb 1152[1392]. The dating clause of a charter dated Feb 1154, under which "Greo Petri" placed himself under the protection of "comite domno Petro Adefonso et uxori uestra comitissa domna Maria Froilaz", names "…comes Almarricus tenente Beaciam et alia multa oppida…"[1393]. "Aldefonsus…tocius Hyspanie imperator…cum uxore mea imperatrice domna Rica et…filiis meis Sanctio et Ferrando regibus" donated property to the abbey of Silos by charter dated 28 Oct 1155, confirmed by "…Comes Almandricus tenens Bæciam…"[1394]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1156, under which "Didago Moniz et uxor mea Urraca Tellez…" donated property in San Martín de los Álamos to San Zoilo de Carrión, records "in Baecia, comes Almarricus, comes Poncius maiordomus imperatoris, Nuno Petrez in Auia, Didago Moniuz medietatem in Carrione et tota Saldana, Michael Alarez suo merino, Guter Ferrandiz medietatem in Carrion"[1395]. He was regent for King Alfonso VIII on his accession as an infant in 1158. The Anales Toledanos record that “Conde Manrich” was killed 9 Jul 1164[1396]. He was killed by Fernán Ruíz de Castro in the battle of Huete[1397].
"m ([1150/53]) ERMESINDE de Narbonne, daughter of AIMERY [II] Vicomte de Narbonne & his [second wife Ermesinde ---] (-7 Jan 1177, bur Santa María de Huerta). The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos records that "D. Manrique de Lara" married "D. Hermesenda, hija de D. Almerique el primer señor de Narbonna"[1398]. Her marriage date in the early 1150s is based on the chronology of her children’s lives, bearing in mind the death of her father in 1134. This date suggests the possibility of an otherwise unrecorded earlier marriage of Manrique, considering his likely birth date. "Emerssenda cometissa quondam uxor Almarrici comitis…cum filiis meis…domno Amelrico et domno Petro atque domno Guillelmo et domna Maria et domna Sancia et domna Ermengard" donated "villa…Madrigal" to Burgos Cathedral, for the soul of "Almarrici mariti mei", by charter dated 14 Aug 1164, witnessed by "domnus Alvarus Petri, comes Nunus Petri, Rodericus Petri monachus, Rodericus Ferdinandi, Petrus Roderici, Ordonius Garciez, domnus Gomez Gundisalui, domnus Alvarus Roderici, Petrus Roderici, Ferdinandus Roderici…"[1399]. “Armesen cometissa uxor comitis Almarich et filia Aimerich de Narbonna” donated property “Arandilla” in Molina to the monastery of Santa María de Huerta by charter dated 14 Mar 1167, confirmed by "Petrus Marrich comes"[1400]. "Dopna Ermesenda…comitissa" donated "medietatem meam de Molina" held by "comite Almarrico bonæ memore marito meo", to "nepoti meo Garsie Petri hijo comitis Petri, et Santiæ Infantisle", by charter dated 1175[1401]."
Med Lands cites:
[1384] Serrano, L. Obispado de Burgos III, doc. 107, quoted in Torres (1999), p. 225.
[1385] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 7 p. 76.
[1386] Sahagún (Pérez), Apéndice III, Escritura CLX, p. 526.
[1387] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1388] López Ferreiro (1901), Tomo IV, Apéndice, IX, p. 25.
[1389] Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris II, 319, p. 261.
[1390] Martínez Díez, G. (1982) Fueros locales en el territorio de la provincia de Burgos (Burgos), no. 22, quoted in Sánchez de Mora (2003), Tomo I, p. 202.
[1391] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1392] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, V, p. 313.
[1393] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, VII, p. 315.
[1394] Silos 57, p. 85.
[1395] San Zoilo de Carrión 37, p. 61.
[1396] Anales Toledanos I, España Sagrada XXIII, p. 391.
[1397] Barton (2002), p. 264.
[1398] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 10 p. 77.
[1399] Burgos Cathedral, 167, p. 270.
[1400] García Luján, J. A. (ed) (1981) Cartulario del monasterio de Santa María de Huerta (Huerta) ("Santa María de Huerta"), 7, p. 15.
[1401] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 11.10
[1385] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 7 p. 76.
[1386] Sahagún (Pérez), Apéndice III, Escritura CLX, p. 526.
[1387] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1388] López Ferreiro (1901), Tomo IV, Apéndice, IX, p. 25.
[1389] Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris II, 319, p. 261.
[1390] Martínez Díez, G. (1982) Fueros locales en el territorio de la provincia de Burgos (Burgos), no. 22, quoted in Sánchez de Mora (2003), Tomo I, p. 202.
[1391] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 8.
[1392] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, V, p. 313.
[1393] Barton (2002), Appendix 3, VII, p. 315.
[1394] Silos 57, p. 85.
[1395] San Zoilo de Carrión 37, p. 61.
[1396] Anales Toledanos I, España Sagrada XXIII, p. 391.
[1397] Barton (2002), p. 264.
[1398] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 10 p. 77.
[1399] Burgos Cathedral, 167, p. 270.
[1400] García Luján, J. A. (ed) (1981) Cartulario del monasterio de Santa María de Huerta (Huerta) ("Santa María de Huerta"), 7, p. 15.
[1401] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Pruebas, p. 11.10
; Per Med Lands:
"ERMESINDE de Narbonne (-7 Jan 1177, bur Santa María de Huerta). The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos records that "D. Manrique de Lara" married "D. Hermesenda, hija de D. Almerique el primer señor de Narbonna"[1076]. "Emerssenda cometissa quondam uxor Almarrici comitis…cum filiis meis…domno Amelrico et domno Petro atque domno Guillelmo et domna Maria et domna Sancia et domna Ermengard" donated "villa…Madrigal" to Burgos Cathedral, for the soul of "Almarrici mariti mei", by charter dated 14 Aug 1164, witnessed by "domnus Alvarus Petri, comes Nunus Petri, Rodericus Petri monachus, Rodericus Ferdinandi, Petrus Roderici, Ordonius Garciez, domnus Gomez Gundisalui, domnus Alvarus Roderici, Petrus Roderici, Ferdinandus Roderici…"[1077]. “Armesen cometissa uxor comitis Almarich et filia Aimerich de Narbonna” donated property “Arandilla” in Molina to the monastery of Santa María de Huerta by charter dated 14 Mar 1167, confirmed by "Petrus Marrich comes"[1078]. If it is correct, as suggested above, that Aimery [II] married twice, Ermesinde´s name suggests that she was the daughter of his second wife but this is not beyond all doubt. Her marriage date in the early 1150s is based on the chronology of her children’s lives, bearing in mind the death of her father in 1134.
"m ([1150/53]) MANRIQUE Pérez de Lara, son of PEDRO González de Lara & his wife Eva --- ([1110]-killed in battle Garcianarro 9 Jul 1164, bur Cistercian abbey of Santa María de Huerta)."
Med Lands cites:
[1076] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. X, Lara, 10 p. 77.
[1077] Burgos Cathedral, 167, p. 270.
[1078] Santa María de Huerta, 7, p. 15.2
[1077] Burgos Cathedral, 167, p. 270.
[1078] Santa María de Huerta, 7, p. 15.2
Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3:132.7 Ermesenda (?) de Narbonne was also known as Hermesinde (?) de Narbonne.3
; Per Stasser email [2003]: "dans l'article 027c01c36266$6f591080$78f4fea9@old, Leo van de Pas à leov...@bigpond.com a écrit le 14/08/03 15:30 :
- hide quoted text -
> Before 1265 Sybille de Foix married Aimery Vicomte de Narbonne.
>
> Does anyone know whether he was Aimery IV or Aimery VI and can anyone help me with his ancestor list?
"Aimery IV of Narbonne married Sibylle, dau of Roger IV count of Foix and Brunissende of Cardonna
"He died in october 1298, and was the son of Amaury I,viscount of narbonne, by Philippa, dau of Pierre Bermond of Sauve and Anduze, and Gauceranne of Poitiers
"Amaury I of Narbonne was the second son of Aimery III by his 2nd wife Marguerite, dau of Mathieu of Montmorency, lord of Marly, and Mathilde of Garlande
"Aimery III of Narbonne was the son of Pierre Manrique of Lara, viscount of narbonne, by his 1st wife sancia, dau of King Garcia V of Navarra, and his 2nd wife Sancia of Castilla
"Pierre Manrique of Lara was the 2nd son of Manrique Perez of Lara by Ermessinde, 2nd dau of Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne
"Viscount Aimery II of Narbonne had by his first wife Ermengarde a son, Aimery, who died young, and a daughter, Ermengarde, who inherited Narbonne. By his 2nd wife Ermessinde, he had another daughter, Ermessinde, mar to Manrique Perez of Lara
"Viscount Aimery II was the eldest son of viscount Aimery I of Narbonne by his wife Mathilde, 2nd daughter of Robert Guiscard of hauteville, duke of Apulia and Calabria, prince of Salerno and duke of Amalfi, by his 2nd wife Sichelgaita, dau of Prince Gaimar IV of Salerno by his 2nd wife Gemma, dau of a count Laidulf, presumably of Teano
"Aimey I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Bernard Berenger by his wife Fides, who may have been the dau of Count Hugues of Rouergue
"Bernard Berenger of Narbonne was the 2nd son of Viscount Berenger by garsinde, dau of Count Bernard I of Besalu and Tota/Adelaide, presumably dau of Raymond count of Toulouse and Adelaide of Anjou
"Berenger of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Raymond I of Narbonne by his wife Ricarda, presumably dau of Berenger I of Millau
"Raymond I of Narbonne was the son of Viscount Matfred by his wife Adelaide, dau of Arnaud count of Carcassonne and Arsinde of Rouergue
"Matfred of Narbonne was the son of viscount Eudes by his wife Richilde, dau of Guifred II of Barcelona and his wife Garsinde
"Eudes of narbonne was the son of viscount Franco by his wife Arsinde, presumably dau of either Raymond I of Toulouse and his wife Bertheiz, or of Eudes of Toulouse and his wife Garsinde
I hope this helps, Thierry”.11
Family | Manrique Perez de Lara Count de Lara, Lord of Molina, Visconde de Narbonne b. b 1134, d. 9 Jul 1164 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 305. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE%20NOBILITY.htm#ErmesindeNarbonnedied1175. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 264.
- [S1463] Thierry Stasser, "Stasser email "Re: Aimeri de Narbonne"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/t-7jjfjHxVo/m/4YzombalQZ0J) to e-mail address, 16 August 2003. Hereinafter cited as "Stasser email 16 August 2003."
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE%20NOBILITY.htm#AmauryINarbonnedied1105
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Aimeri II: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00197720&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Ermesenda de Narbonne: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00126920&tree=LEO
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), p. 189. Hereinafter cited as Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Manrique Perez de Lara: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00126919&tree=LEO
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#ManriquePerezdied1164
- [S1463] Thierry Stasser, "Stasser email 16 August 2003," e-mail to e-mail address, 16 August 2003, https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/soc.genealogy.medieval/t-7jjfjHxVo/4YzombalQZ0J;context-place=forum/soc.genealogy.medieval.
- [S1499] Maria Emma Escobar, "Escobar email "Diego Lopez de Haro, de Vizcaya/Biscay"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 6 November 2003. Hereinafter cited as "Escobar email 6 November 2003."
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family, pp. 40-46, 189.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 282.
Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara1,2,3
M, #19439, b. between 1080 and 1085, d. 16 October 1130
Father | Gonzalo Muñoz de Lara Count de Lara4,2,3 d. c 1160 |
Mother | Goda Nunez (?); de Almeida says Pedro's mother was Sandina Rodriguez5,2,6,3 |
Last Edited | 8 Oct 2020 |
Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara was born between 1080 and 1085.7,3 He married Eva de Traba before November 1127
;
Her 2nd husband.4,8,2,9,3
Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara died on 16 October 1130; killed during the siege of Bayonne.10,4,2,6,3
He was Count of Lara.10
; Per de Almeida:
"1. Manrique Perez de Lara, 1. lord of Molina, d. 1164 at an unknown age
2. Pedro González de Lara, count, d. 1130 (lover of Queen Urraca of
León y Castilla) at an unknown age [b]
3. Eva
4. Gonzalo Muñoz, count in Lara at an unknown age
5. Sandina Rodríguez
8. Munio González, count of the Astúrias, d. 1097 at an unknown age
9. Maior Rodríguez
16. Gonzalo Muñoz, count of the Astúrias, d. 1053 at an unknown age
17. Eyla Muñoz
32. Munio González, d. 1047 at an unknown age
33. Tigridia Ansúrez
64. Gonzalo Garcia de Castilla, d. 1011 at an unknown age
65. N...
128. García Fernández, count sovereign of Castilla, d. 995 at an unknown age
129. Ava de Ribagorza
256. Fernando González, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b]
257. Sancha Sánchez of Pamplona
258. Raimundo II., count of Ribagorza
259. Gersende de Fézensac
512. Gonzalo Fernández, count in Burgos, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b][c]
513. Muniadona Nuñez, "la Cometissima"
514. Sancho I Garcez, King of Pamplona
515. Toda Aznares of Aragón
516. Bernardo, count of Ribagorza
517. Toda Galíndez of Aragón, señora de Sobrarbe
518. Guillaume Garcez de Gascogne, count of Fézensac [c]
519. Gracinde de Rouerge
1024. Fernando González "el Negro" de Castrosiero at an unknown age [b][c]
1025. Gontiña Muñoz
1026. Nuño Ordóñez, Infante de Galiza [c]
1027. N... de Castilla
1028. García Ximenez at an unknown age
1029. Daldidis de Paillars
1030. Aznar II Galindes, count of Aragón, d. 893 at an unknown age
1031. Onega Garcez de Pamplona
1034. Galindo III. Aznar, count of Aragón, d. 922 at an unknown age
1035. Acibelle de Gascogne
1036. García Sanchez "el Curvo", duc de Gascogne [c]
1037. Amuna d'Agen
1038. Raymond II, count of Toulouse and Rouerge at an unknown age [c]
1039. Gunilda de Barcelona
Almost all of the last generation have long ahnentafels.
at an unknown age Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica Instituto Português de Heráldica Lisboa, 1986
[b] Nobiliário das Famílias de Portugal Felgueiras Gayo Carvalhos de Basto, 2ª Edição Braga, 1989
[c] A Herança Genética de D. Afonso Henriques Luiz de Mello Vaz de São Payo Universidade Moderna, 1ª Edição Porto, 2002“.6 He and Infanta doña Urraca Alfonsez (?) Queen of Galicia, Castile & Leon were associated; Mistress.3 Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara was living in 1088.2
;
Her 2nd husband.4,8,2,9,3
Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara died on 16 October 1130; killed during the siege of Bayonne.10,4,2,6,3
He was Count of Lara.10
; Per de Almeida:
"1. Manrique Perez de Lara, 1. lord of Molina, d. 1164 at an unknown age
2. Pedro González de Lara, count, d. 1130 (lover of Queen Urraca of
León y Castilla) at an unknown age [b]
3. Eva
4. Gonzalo Muñoz, count in Lara at an unknown age
5. Sandina Rodríguez
8. Munio González, count of the Astúrias, d. 1097 at an unknown age
9. Maior Rodríguez
16. Gonzalo Muñoz, count of the Astúrias, d. 1053 at an unknown age
17. Eyla Muñoz
32. Munio González, d. 1047 at an unknown age
33. Tigridia Ansúrez
64. Gonzalo Garcia de Castilla, d. 1011 at an unknown age
65. N...
128. García Fernández, count sovereign of Castilla, d. 995 at an unknown age
129. Ava de Ribagorza
256. Fernando González, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b]
257. Sancha Sánchez of Pamplona
258. Raimundo II., count of Ribagorza
259. Gersende de Fézensac
512. Gonzalo Fernández, count in Burgos, count of Castilla at an unknown age [b][c]
513. Muniadona Nuñez, "la Cometissima"
514. Sancho I Garcez, King of Pamplona
515. Toda Aznares of Aragón
516. Bernardo, count of Ribagorza
517. Toda Galíndez of Aragón, señora de Sobrarbe
518. Guillaume Garcez de Gascogne, count of Fézensac [c]
519. Gracinde de Rouerge
1024. Fernando González "el Negro" de Castrosiero at an unknown age [b][c]
1025. Gontiña Muñoz
1026. Nuño Ordóñez, Infante de Galiza [c]
1027. N... de Castilla
1028. García Ximenez at an unknown age
1029. Daldidis de Paillars
1030. Aznar II Galindes, count of Aragón, d. 893 at an unknown age
1031. Onega Garcez de Pamplona
1034. Galindo III. Aznar, count of Aragón, d. 922 at an unknown age
1035. Acibelle de Gascogne
1036. García Sanchez "el Curvo", duc de Gascogne [c]
1037. Amuna d'Agen
1038. Raymond II, count of Toulouse and Rouerge at an unknown age [c]
1039. Gunilda de Barcelona
Almost all of the last generation have long ahnentafels.
at an unknown age Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica Instituto Português de Heráldica Lisboa, 1986
[b] Nobiliário das Famílias de Portugal Felgueiras Gayo Carvalhos de Basto, 2ª Edição Braga, 1989
[c] A Herança Genética de D. Afonso Henriques Luiz de Mello Vaz de São Payo Universidade Moderna, 1ª Edição Porto, 2002“.6 He and Infanta doña Urraca Alfonsez (?) Queen of Galicia, Castile & Leon were associated; Mistress.3 Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara was living in 1088.2
Family 1 | Infanta doña Urraca Alfonsez (?) Queen of Galicia, Castile & Leon b. bt 1081 - 1082, d. 4 Mar 1126 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Eva de Traba |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), pp. 21-22. Hereinafter cited as Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 280. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#PedroGonzalezdied1130B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family, p. 189.
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family, pp. 16, 189.
- [S2151] Francisco Tavares de Almeida, "de Almeida email 7 Oct 2007: "Re: manrique de lara"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/83Ttp72p5m8/m/ex0K4muXITkJ) to e-mail address, 7 Oct 2007. Hereinafter cited as "de Almeida email 7 Oct 2007."
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 305.
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family, p. 141, footnote 56.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#EvaM1GarciaOrdonez
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (New York, NY: Barnes & Noble Books, 2002), Table 45: Aragon and Castile: Early Kings. Hereinafter cited as Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession.
- [S2184] Leo van de Pas, "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007: "Descendants Alfonso VI - improved and extended"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/lVvrEhMS2pk/m/lxJSTqSvbG0J) to e-mail address, 23 Sept 2007. Hereinafter cited as "van de Pas email 23 Sept 2007."
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#ElviraPerezdiedafter1174
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 264.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Manrique Perez de Lara: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00126919&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#ManriquePerezdied1164
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, pp. 269, 305.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 229.
Eva de Traba1,2
F, #19440
Last Edited | 14 Nov 2020 |
Eva de Traba married Garcia Ordoñez de Aza Conde de Nájera y de Grañón, son of Ordóño Ordóñez (?) Sire de Lemos and Anderquina/Enderquina (?), before 1106
;
His 2nd wife; her 1st husband.3,1,4,2 Eva de Traba married Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara, son of Gonzalo Muñoz de Lara Count de Lara and Goda Nunez (?), before November 1127
;
Her 2nd husband.5,6,7,2,8
; Per Med Lands:
"[EVA . Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba according to Salazar y Castro[2708]. This tradition goes back further. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Eva, D. Estevaina Perez, D. Elvira Perez" as the daughters of "Conde D. Pedro Fernandez de Trava que pobló el castillo de Trava"[2709]. Argote Molina also stated in 1588 that "doña Eva Perez de Trava…hija de el Conde don Pedro de Trava Señor de Trastamara" was the wife of "el Conde don Garcia que murio en la batalla de Ucles"[2710]. Barton says that there is no documentary proof to substantiate this claim[2711]. Menéndez Pidal de Navascués[2712] suggests that she was a countess of French origin, Szabolcs de Vajay and Salazar[2713] hypothesising more specifically that she was the daughter of Aimery II Vicomte de Rochechouart whose mother was named Eva, and whose name in the form "Almanricus" may have been the origin of the name "Manrique" given to her son by her second marriage. It is all the more improbable that Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz as her son by her first husband married one of Pedro's younger daughters who would have been his aunt if the relationship was correct.
"m firstly (before 1105) as his second wife, conde GARCÍA Ordóñez de Nájera y Grañon, son of ORDOÑO Ordóñez & his wife Anderquina --- (-killed in battle Uclés 30 May 1108).
"m secondly PEDRO González de Lara, son of GONZALO Núñez de Lara & his wife Godo González ([1085]-Bayonne 16 Oct 1130).]"
Med Lands cites:
; Per Med Lands:
"GARCÍA Ordóñez, son of ORDOÑO Ordóñez & his wife Anderquina --- (-killed in battle Uclés 30 May 1108). Alférez of Alfonso VI King of Castile: “...Sanctio Ordoniz...Garsia Ordoniz armiger regis...” confirmed the charter dated 20 Feb 1074 under which "Maria Gutterriz...cum iermanas meas domna Fronilli et Donellu et domna Tegridia" donated “villa...Petrafitta super ripam fluminis Ceia...in territorio Castro Froila et Siero...fuit...de patre nostro comite Guttier Afonso et matre nostra comitissa domna Goto” to “Uelasco Ueilaz et uxori tue Helisabet vel filii tui Ueila Uelasquiz”[294]. He supported Abd Allah Emir of Granada when he invaded the emirate of Seville, but was defeated by Rodrigo Díaz at Cabra[295]. Señor de Nájera y Grañón. Conde. "Ruderigo Didaz" accepted as his wife "Scemena filia Didago ducis de terra Asturiense" and granted property "in territorio Kastelle…in Cavia" to her, with "comes Petro Assuriz et comes Garsea Ordonniz" as guarantors, by charter dated 19 Jul 1074[296]. "Aldefonsus totus Ispanie rex" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla by charter dated 1077, witnessed by "Garsias comes de Nazara…"[297]. "...Garcia Ordoniz commes..." confirmed the charter dated 8 May 1080 under which King Alfonso VI decreed that no representative of the king could enter Sahagún[298]. “Comite Garcia Ordoniz, uxor eius comitissa domna Urraka, Ermesindis soror eius…” subscribed the charter dated 18 Apr 1081 under which “Ranimirus filius Garsie regis et Stefanie regina” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[299]. A charter dated 6 Dec 1081, under which "Blasko Milian et uxor mea Monoca" sold property, names "… et in Nagera comite Garcia Hordonioz…" in the dating clause directly following the name of the king[300]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1081, under which "Vita Gomiz…" donated property to the monastery of San Lorenzo de Masoa, names "regnante rege Aldefonso in Legione et in Castella, comite Garsia in Naiara…"[301]. “Garsea Ordoniz comite, Roderico frater eius...” subscribed the charter dated 1 May 1082 under which “Didacus...presbiter” donated the monastery “in rigo de Pisorga in villa...Olmos quem abeo de meos abos” to San Pedro de Cardeña[302]. The dating clause of a charter dated 27 Apr 1084, under which “Obeco Flayniz” sold “erreditatem...que abemus de abibus et parentibus nostris in Kampo Tauro villas...Ualle et Quintanella...meas rationes” to “Guter Nebozaniz et uxoris uestra Scemena Obequiz et filiis vestris”, records “...in Nazara Gartia Ordoniz, armiger regis Rodrigo Ordoniz...”[303]. "Senior Didaco Orioliz" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla by charter dated 11 Nov 1084, confirmed by "…comite Garcia Ordonio in Naiera…"[304]. "Domna Iuliana" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla by charter dated 1085, confirmed by "…comite Garsia Ordonio in Naiera…"[305]. “Garseanus comes, Urraka soror illius…” confirmed the charter dated 27 May [1085] by which “Renemirus infans, prolis Garseani principis” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[306]. The dating clause of a charter dated 20 Nov 1085, which records the consecration of the church of San Pedro de Llodio, names "…comite Garcia obtinente Nagera et Calahorra…"[307]. "Comite domno Garsea in Naiara" is named in charters concerning donations to the monastery of Valbanera dated between 1085 and 1101[308]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1089, under which "Eximina Didaz" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla, names "…comite domno Garsea dominator Naiera et Grannione…"[309]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1092, under which "Monnio Sempron et Dominico Ferrero" bought property at Madriz, names "…dompno Garsia dominante in Naiera et Matrice…"[310]. “...Garsea Ordoniz comes...” witnessed the charter dated 1 May 1092 under which Alfonso VI King of Castile confirmed the prohibition of the entry of women into Valvanera[311]. He was a powerful supporter of Alfonso VI King of Castile and participated in numerous campaigns against the Muslims. "Adefonsus…Ispanie imperator" permitted the abbey of Silos to establish outposts near the abbey, with the consent of "uxoris mee Berte regine", by charter dated 20 Jan [1096/98], confirmed by "Garcia Ordoniz…"[312]. A charter dated 1106 records "eodem anno in die sancti Michaelis" that "comes Garsia" baptised "suum filium in Sancti Emiliani ecclesiam", the dating clause naming "…Garsia comite dominante Calagurra et Naiera…"[313]. "…Garcia Ordonici comes…" subscribed the charter dated 14 May 1107 under which "Adefonsus…Toletani imperii rex…cum…uxore mea Helisabet regina" approved the mint of Santiago de Compostela[314]. The Anales Toledanos record that “Infant D. Sancho è al Conde D. Garcia” were killed “cerca de Uclés III Kal Jun” in 1108[315].
"m firstly ([1076]) URRACA de Navarra, daughter of GARCÍA V Sánchez King of Navarre & his wife Stephanie de Foix (-after 1 Feb 1095). “Comite Garcia Ordoniz, uxor eius comitissa domna Urraka, Ermesindis soror eius…” subscribed the charter dated 18 Apr 1081 under which “Ranimirus filius Garsie regis et Stefanie regina” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[316]. "Gassea…comes…cum…coniuge Urracha comitissa" donated property to the monastery of San Adrián de las Palmas by charter dated 13 Aug 1084, subscribed by "Senior Eneco Acenariz"[317]. “Garseanus comes, Urraka soror illius…” confirmed the charter dated 27 May [1085] by which “Renemirus infans, prolis Garseani principis” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[318]. The charter dated 1089, in which "domno comite Garsia et nobilissima et nobilior orta nata dompna Urraca comitissa, dominantibus Naiera" are named, hints at an illustrious ancestry[319]. Her parentage is specified clearly in the charter dated 1 Mar 1145 under which her daughter “Domna Maior filia comitis Garsie et comitisse domne Urrache, filie regis Garsie, filii regis Sanctii maioris” donated “una viña en Calahorra” to Santa María Real de Nájera, for the souls of “filiorum meorum”[320].
"m secondly (before 1105) as her first husband, EVA, daughter of ---. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified. Salazar y Castro states[321] that she was Eva Pérez de Traba, daughter of Pedro Froílaz de Traba & his first wife Urraca Fróilaz. This tradition goes back further, as Argote Molina stated in 1588 that "doña Eva Perez de Trava…hija de el Conde don Pedro de Trava Señor de Trastamara" was the wife of "el Conde don Garcia que murio en la batalla de Ucles"[322]. Barton says that there is no documentary proof to substantiate this claim[323]. Menéndez Pidal de Navascués[324] suggests that she was a countess of French origin, Szabolcs de Vajay and Salazar[325] hypothesising more specifically that she was the daughter of Aimery [II] Vicomte de Rochechouart whose mother was named Eva, and whose name in the form "Almanricus" may have been the origin of the name "Manrique" given to Eva's son by her second marriage. It is all the more improbable that Eva was the daughter of Pedro Froílaz as her son by her first husband married one of Pedro's younger daughters, who would have been his aunt if the relationship was correct. Doña Eva married secondly ([late 1108/1109]) Pedro González de Lara, who later became the lover of Urraca Queen of Castile.
"Conde García & his first wife had [four] children:
"Conde García & his second wife had one child:
Med Lands cites:
; Per Genealogy.EU (Iberia 3): “F1. García Ordonez, Cde de Najera y Granon, +k.a.30.5.1108; 1m: Urraca, dau.of King García V of Navarre 2m: Eva, dau.of Pedro Froilaz, Cde de Trava, by Mayor de Urgel. He left issue the family of Aza”.9
;
His 2nd wife; her 1st husband.3,1,4,2 Eva de Traba married Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara, son of Gonzalo Muñoz de Lara Count de Lara and Goda Nunez (?), before November 1127
;
Her 2nd husband.5,6,7,2,8
; Per Med Lands:
"[EVA . Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba according to Salazar y Castro[2708]. This tradition goes back further. The Nobiliario of Pedro Conde de Barcelos names "D. Eva, D. Estevaina Perez, D. Elvira Perez" as the daughters of "Conde D. Pedro Fernandez de Trava que pobló el castillo de Trava"[2709]. Argote Molina also stated in 1588 that "doña Eva Perez de Trava…hija de el Conde don Pedro de Trava Señor de Trastamara" was the wife of "el Conde don Garcia que murio en la batalla de Ucles"[2710]. Barton says that there is no documentary proof to substantiate this claim[2711]. Menéndez Pidal de Navascués[2712] suggests that she was a countess of French origin, Szabolcs de Vajay and Salazar[2713] hypothesising more specifically that she was the daughter of Aimery II Vicomte de Rochechouart whose mother was named Eva, and whose name in the form "Almanricus" may have been the origin of the name "Manrique" given to her son by her second marriage. It is all the more improbable that Eva was the daughter of Pedro Fróilaz as her son by her first husband married one of Pedro's younger daughters who would have been his aunt if the relationship was correct.
"m firstly (before 1105) as his second wife, conde GARCÍA Ordóñez de Nájera y Grañon, son of ORDOÑO Ordóñez & his wife Anderquina --- (-killed in battle Uclés 30 May 1108).
"m secondly PEDRO González de Lara, son of GONZALO Núñez de Lara & his wife Godo González ([1085]-Bayonne 16 Oct 1130).]"
Med Lands cites:
[2708] Salazar y Castro, L. de (1696-7) Historia genealogica de la Casa de Lara, 3 vols. (Madrid), Vol 1, p. 99.
[2709] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. VII, Pereiras, 30 p. 63, 2 p. 65, and 9 p. 76.
[2710] Argote Molina (1588), p. 49.
[2711] Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2712] Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, E. 'Los sellos', p. 102, cited in Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2713] Salazar Acha, J. 'El linaje castellano de Castro en el siglo XII: consideraciones e hipótesis sobre su origen' Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía I (1991), pp. 33-68, 54 footnote 106, cited in Torres (1999), p. 223.2
[2709] Pedro Barcelos, Tit. VII, Pereiras, 30 p. 63, 2 p. 65, and 9 p. 76.
[2710] Argote Molina (1588), p. 49.
[2711] Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2712] Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, E. 'Los sellos', p. 102, cited in Barton (2002), p. 229.
[2713] Salazar Acha, J. 'El linaje castellano de Castro en el siglo XII: consideraciones e hipótesis sobre su origen' Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía I (1991), pp. 33-68, 54 footnote 106, cited in Torres (1999), p. 223.2
; Per Med Lands:
"GARCÍA Ordóñez, son of ORDOÑO Ordóñez & his wife Anderquina --- (-killed in battle Uclés 30 May 1108). Alférez of Alfonso VI King of Castile: “...Sanctio Ordoniz...Garsia Ordoniz armiger regis...” confirmed the charter dated 20 Feb 1074 under which "Maria Gutterriz...cum iermanas meas domna Fronilli et Donellu et domna Tegridia" donated “villa...Petrafitta super ripam fluminis Ceia...in territorio Castro Froila et Siero...fuit...de patre nostro comite Guttier Afonso et matre nostra comitissa domna Goto” to “Uelasco Ueilaz et uxori tue Helisabet vel filii tui Ueila Uelasquiz”[294]. He supported Abd Allah Emir of Granada when he invaded the emirate of Seville, but was defeated by Rodrigo Díaz at Cabra[295]. Señor de Nájera y Grañón. Conde. "Ruderigo Didaz" accepted as his wife "Scemena filia Didago ducis de terra Asturiense" and granted property "in territorio Kastelle…in Cavia" to her, with "comes Petro Assuriz et comes Garsea Ordonniz" as guarantors, by charter dated 19 Jul 1074[296]. "Aldefonsus totus Ispanie rex" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla by charter dated 1077, witnessed by "Garsias comes de Nazara…"[297]. "...Garcia Ordoniz commes..." confirmed the charter dated 8 May 1080 under which King Alfonso VI decreed that no representative of the king could enter Sahagún[298]. “Comite Garcia Ordoniz, uxor eius comitissa domna Urraka, Ermesindis soror eius…” subscribed the charter dated 18 Apr 1081 under which “Ranimirus filius Garsie regis et Stefanie regina” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[299]. A charter dated 6 Dec 1081, under which "Blasko Milian et uxor mea Monoca" sold property, names "… et in Nagera comite Garcia Hordonioz…" in the dating clause directly following the name of the king[300]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1081, under which "Vita Gomiz…" donated property to the monastery of San Lorenzo de Masoa, names "regnante rege Aldefonso in Legione et in Castella, comite Garsia in Naiara…"[301]. “Garsea Ordoniz comite, Roderico frater eius...” subscribed the charter dated 1 May 1082 under which “Didacus...presbiter” donated the monastery “in rigo de Pisorga in villa...Olmos quem abeo de meos abos” to San Pedro de Cardeña[302]. The dating clause of a charter dated 27 Apr 1084, under which “Obeco Flayniz” sold “erreditatem...que abemus de abibus et parentibus nostris in Kampo Tauro villas...Ualle et Quintanella...meas rationes” to “Guter Nebozaniz et uxoris uestra Scemena Obequiz et filiis vestris”, records “...in Nazara Gartia Ordoniz, armiger regis Rodrigo Ordoniz...”[303]. "Senior Didaco Orioliz" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla by charter dated 11 Nov 1084, confirmed by "…comite Garcia Ordonio in Naiera…"[304]. "Domna Iuliana" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla by charter dated 1085, confirmed by "…comite Garsia Ordonio in Naiera…"[305]. “Garseanus comes, Urraka soror illius…” confirmed the charter dated 27 May [1085] by which “Renemirus infans, prolis Garseani principis” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[306]. The dating clause of a charter dated 20 Nov 1085, which records the consecration of the church of San Pedro de Llodio, names "…comite Garcia obtinente Nagera et Calahorra…"[307]. "Comite domno Garsea in Naiara" is named in charters concerning donations to the monastery of Valbanera dated between 1085 and 1101[308]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1089, under which "Eximina Didaz" donated property to the monastery of San Millán de la Cogolla, names "…comite domno Garsea dominator Naiera et Grannione…"[309]. The dating clause of a charter dated 1092, under which "Monnio Sempron et Dominico Ferrero" bought property at Madriz, names "…dompno Garsia dominante in Naiera et Matrice…"[310]. “...Garsea Ordoniz comes...” witnessed the charter dated 1 May 1092 under which Alfonso VI King of Castile confirmed the prohibition of the entry of women into Valvanera[311]. He was a powerful supporter of Alfonso VI King of Castile and participated in numerous campaigns against the Muslims. "Adefonsus…Ispanie imperator" permitted the abbey of Silos to establish outposts near the abbey, with the consent of "uxoris mee Berte regine", by charter dated 20 Jan [1096/98], confirmed by "Garcia Ordoniz…"[312]. A charter dated 1106 records "eodem anno in die sancti Michaelis" that "comes Garsia" baptised "suum filium in Sancti Emiliani ecclesiam", the dating clause naming "…Garsia comite dominante Calagurra et Naiera…"[313]. "…Garcia Ordonici comes…" subscribed the charter dated 14 May 1107 under which "Adefonsus…Toletani imperii rex…cum…uxore mea Helisabet regina" approved the mint of Santiago de Compostela[314]. The Anales Toledanos record that “Infant D. Sancho è al Conde D. Garcia” were killed “cerca de Uclés III Kal Jun” in 1108[315].
"m firstly ([1076]) URRACA de Navarra, daughter of GARCÍA V Sánchez King of Navarre & his wife Stephanie de Foix (-after 1 Feb 1095). “Comite Garcia Ordoniz, uxor eius comitissa domna Urraka, Ermesindis soror eius…” subscribed the charter dated 18 Apr 1081 under which “Ranimirus filius Garsie regis et Stefanie regina” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[316]. "Gassea…comes…cum…coniuge Urracha comitissa" donated property to the monastery of San Adrián de las Palmas by charter dated 13 Aug 1084, subscribed by "Senior Eneco Acenariz"[317]. “Garseanus comes, Urraka soror illius…” confirmed the charter dated 27 May [1085] by which “Renemirus infans, prolis Garseani principis” donated property to Santa María de Nájera[318]. The charter dated 1089, in which "domno comite Garsia et nobilissima et nobilior orta nata dompna Urraca comitissa, dominantibus Naiera" are named, hints at an illustrious ancestry[319]. Her parentage is specified clearly in the charter dated 1 Mar 1145 under which her daughter “Domna Maior filia comitis Garsie et comitisse domne Urrache, filie regis Garsie, filii regis Sanctii maioris” donated “una viña en Calahorra” to Santa María Real de Nájera, for the souls of “filiorum meorum”[320].
"m secondly (before 1105) as her first husband, EVA, daughter of ---. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified. Salazar y Castro states[321] that she was Eva Pérez de Traba, daughter of Pedro Froílaz de Traba & his first wife Urraca Fróilaz. This tradition goes back further, as Argote Molina stated in 1588 that "doña Eva Perez de Trava…hija de el Conde don Pedro de Trava Señor de Trastamara" was the wife of "el Conde don Garcia que murio en la batalla de Ucles"[322]. Barton says that there is no documentary proof to substantiate this claim[323]. Menéndez Pidal de Navascués[324] suggests that she was a countess of French origin, Szabolcs de Vajay and Salazar[325] hypothesising more specifically that she was the daughter of Aimery [II] Vicomte de Rochechouart whose mother was named Eva, and whose name in the form "Almanricus" may have been the origin of the name "Manrique" given to Eva's son by her second marriage. It is all the more improbable that Eva was the daughter of Pedro Froílaz as her son by her first husband married one of Pedro's younger daughters, who would have been his aunt if the relationship was correct. Doña Eva married secondly ([late 1108/1109]) Pedro González de Lara, who later became the lover of Urraca Queen of Castile.
"Conde García & his first wife had [four] children:
1. [ÁLVARO García (-after 1089). Salazar y Acha suggests that Álvaro García, alférez of Alfonso VI King of Castile 21 Jul 1087 to 30 Apr 1089, may have been the son of García Ordóñez[326]. However, assuming that the marriage of his supposed parents is correctly estimated to [1076] as shown above, he would have been young to have held office at court at that time.]
2. ELVIRA García .
3. FERNANDO García .
4. MAYOR García . m conde GÓMEZ Peláez, son of PELAYO Gómez & his wife Elvira Muñoz (-1118).
2. ELVIRA García .
3. FERNANDO García .
4. MAYOR García . m conde GÓMEZ Peláez, son of PELAYO Gómez & his wife Elvira Muñoz (-1118).
"Conde García & his second wife had one child:
5. GARCÍA García de Aza (1106, before 29 Sep-16 Dec 1160)."
Med Lands cites:
[294] Sahagún, Tomo III, 733, p. 9.
[295] Historia Roderici: Barton, S. and Fletcher, R. (trans. and eds.) (2000) The World of El Cid: Chronicles of the Spanish Reconquest (Manchester University Press), pp. 98-147, Chapters 7 and 8, pp. 102-3.
[296] Burgos Cathedral, 25, p. 60.
[297] San Millán de la Cogolla, Tome II, 5, p. 12.
[298] Sahagún, Tomo III, 781, p. 68.
[299] Nájera Santa María 23, p. 43.
[300] Lucas Álvarez, M. 'Libro Becerro del Monasterio de Valbanera', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. IV (Zaragoza, 1951) 156, p. 573.
[301] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 44, p. 41.
[302] San Pedro de Cardeña, 373, p. 424.
[303] Sahagún, Tomo III, 810, p. 105.
[304] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 76, p. 62.
[305] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 103, p. 77.
[306] Nájera Santa María 25, p. 45.
[307] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 94, p. 72.
[308] Lucas Álvarez 'Libro Becerro de Valbanera' (1951) 177, 179 bis, 180 and 185, pp. 588-595.
[309] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 191, p. 133.
[310] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 212, p. 146.
[311] Valvanera, 69, p. 70.
[312] Silos, 24, p. 30.
[313] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 315, p. 210.
[314] López Ferreiro (1900), Tomo III, Apéndice, XXIII, p. 70.
[315] Anales Toledanos I, España Sagrada XXIII, p. 386.
[316] Nájera Santa María 23, p. 43.
[317] Pamplona 34, p. 60.
[318] Nájera Santa María 25, p. 45.
[319] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 189, p. 132.
[320] Nájera Santa María 53, p. 79.
[321] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Vol I, p. 99.
[322] Argote Molina, G. (1588) Nobleza del Andaluzia (Sevilla), p. 49.
[323] Barton (2002), p. 229.
[324] Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, 'Los sellos', p. 102, cited in Barton (2002), p. 229.
[325] Salazar, J. 'El Linaje castellano de los Castro', p. 54 footnote 106, cited in Torres (1999), p. 223.4
[295] Historia Roderici: Barton, S. and Fletcher, R. (trans. and eds.) (2000) The World of El Cid: Chronicles of the Spanish Reconquest (Manchester University Press), pp. 98-147, Chapters 7 and 8, pp. 102-3.
[296] Burgos Cathedral, 25, p. 60.
[297] San Millán de la Cogolla, Tome II, 5, p. 12.
[298] Sahagún, Tomo III, 781, p. 68.
[299] Nájera Santa María 23, p. 43.
[300] Lucas Álvarez, M. 'Libro Becerro del Monasterio de Valbanera', Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. IV (Zaragoza, 1951) 156, p. 573.
[301] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 44, p. 41.
[302] San Pedro de Cardeña, 373, p. 424.
[303] Sahagún, Tomo III, 810, p. 105.
[304] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 76, p. 62.
[305] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 103, p. 77.
[306] Nájera Santa María 25, p. 45.
[307] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 94, p. 72.
[308] Lucas Álvarez 'Libro Becerro de Valbanera' (1951) 177, 179 bis, 180 and 185, pp. 588-595.
[309] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 191, p. 133.
[310] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 212, p. 146.
[311] Valvanera, 69, p. 70.
[312] Silos, 24, p. 30.
[313] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 315, p. 210.
[314] López Ferreiro (1900), Tomo III, Apéndice, XXIII, p. 70.
[315] Anales Toledanos I, España Sagrada XXIII, p. 386.
[316] Nájera Santa María 23, p. 43.
[317] Pamplona 34, p. 60.
[318] Nájera Santa María 25, p. 45.
[319] San Millán de la Cogolla, Vol. II, 189, p. 132.
[320] Nájera Santa María 53, p. 79.
[321] Salazar y Castro (Lara), Vol I, p. 99.
[322] Argote Molina, G. (1588) Nobleza del Andaluzia (Sevilla), p. 49.
[323] Barton (2002), p. 229.
[324] Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, 'Los sellos', p. 102, cited in Barton (2002), p. 229.
[325] Salazar, J. 'El Linaje castellano de los Castro', p. 54 footnote 106, cited in Torres (1999), p. 223.4
; Per Genealogy.EU (Iberia 3): “F1. García Ordonez, Cde de Najera y Granon, +k.a.30.5.1108; 1m: Urraca, dau.of King García V of Navarre 2m: Eva, dau.of Pedro Froilaz, Cde de Trava, by Mayor de Urgel. He left issue the family of Aza”.9
Family 1 | Garcia Ordoñez de Aza Conde de Nájera y de Grañón b. c 1040, d. 29 May 1108 |
Child |
Family 2 | Pedro González de Lara Conde de Lara b. bt 1080 - 1085, d. 16 Oct 1130 |
Children |
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Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Iberia 3 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/iberia/iberia3.html
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#EvaM1GarciaOrdonez. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century Leon and Castile (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 249. Hereinafter cited as Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CastilNob.htm#GarciaOrdonezdied1108B
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, The Lara Family: Crown and Nobility in Medieval Spain (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), p. 189. Hereinafter cited as Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family.
- [S1432] Simon R. Doubleday, Doubleday [2001] The Lara Family, p. 141, footnote 56.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 280.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#PedroGonzalezdied1130B
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Iberia 3 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/iberia/iberia3.html
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 305.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 264.
- [S2151] Francisco Tavares de Almeida, "de Almeida email 7 Oct 2007: "Re: manrique de lara"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/83Ttp72p5m8/m/ex0K4muXITkJ) to e-mail address, 7 Oct 2007. Hereinafter cited as "de Almeida email 7 Oct 2007."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Manrique Perez de Lara: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00126919&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SPANISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER%20MEDIEVAL.htm#ManriquePerezdied1164
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, pp. 269, 305.
- [S1434] Simon Barton, Barton [1997] Aristocracy in 12th Cent Leon & Castile, p. 229.