Généalogie Wylie » Berenguer Ramon I Count of Barcelona (1005-1035)

Données personnelles Berenguer Ramon I Count of Barcelona 

Les sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9

Famille de Berenguer Ramon I Count of Barcelona

(1) Il est marié avec Sancha Sanchez de Castile.

Ils se sont mariés en l'an 1021, il avait 16 ans.


Enfant(s):



(2) Il est marié avec Guisle d' Ampurias.

Ils se sont mariés apres 1026 à 3rd wife.


Enfant(s):

  1. Sibylle of Barcelona  1035-> 1074 


Notes par Berenguer Ramon I Count of Barcelona

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berenguer_Ramon_I,_Count_of_Barcelona

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Berenguer Ramon I, Count of Barcelona

Born1005
Died26 May 1035
Barcelona
BuriedSanta Maria de Ripoll
Noble familyHouse of Barcelona
Spouse(s)Sancha Sánchez
Guisla de Lluçà
IssueRamon Berenguer I, Count of Barcelona
Sancho Berenguer
Guillem [William] Berenguer
Bernat [Bernard] Berenguer
FatherRamon Borrell, Count of Barcelona
MotherErmesinde of Carcassonne
Berenguer Ramon I [Berengar Raymond I] (1005 – 26 May 1035), called the Crooked or the Hunchback (in Latin curvus; in Catalan el Corbat; in Spanish el Corvado or el Curvo),[1] was the count of Barcelona, Girona, and Ausona from 1018 to his death.

He was the son of Ramon Borrell, Count of Barcelona, Girona, and Ausona and his wife Ermesinde of Carcassonne.[2] He accepted the suzerainty of Sancho the Great of Navarre.

Berenguer Ramon as a historical figure is enigmatic, shrouded in incomprehensible contradictions and ambiguities. First, he was a man of peace, and peace ruled throughout his reign. He pacified his neighbours as well, bringing to heel the count of Urgell, Ermengol II.[3] He reestablished amicable relations with Count Hugh I of Empúries, and maintained them with Counts William I of Besalú [es] and Wilfred II of Cerdanya. He was a son of the church who maintained relations with the papacy and went on a pilgrimage to Rome in 1032. On many occasions he travelled to Zaragoza and Navarre to discuss with Sancho III the Great, King of Navarre their mutual stance against the counts of Toulouse. His confidantes and councillors were the Abbot Oliva, the judge Ponç Bofill [ca], Gombau de Besora [ca], and Pere de Carcassona [ca] and Deudado of Barcelona. In 1025, he decreed that the proprietors of entails (men holding land in fee tail) were free from taxation.

On the other hand, the government of Berenguer Ramon I marks the beginning of the decline of the comital power. At the death of his father in 1018, Berenguer Ramon was a minor and his mother Ermesinde served as regent until 1023. But even when he attained his majority, his mother would not relinquish her power and ruled with him. According to some chroniclers, Berenguer's character left some things to be desired. He is described as weak and indecisive. Moreover, his policy of peace with the Moors was a bone of contention with the noblesse, who saw war with the Muslims as a way of obtaining glory, wealth, and possibly even salvation. This led some nobles to act independently of the count's wishes. Ermesinde, on the other hand, was energetic and decisive, intent on imposing the authority of Barcelona on the baronage. But, as a woman, her capability to exercise control of the military was greatly impeded and organizing a raid or expedition to satisfy the wants of the aristocracy was virtually impossible.

The weakening of comital authority became evident shortly before his death in 1035, when Ermesinde successfully partitioned his patrimony among his sons. Berenguer Ramon died on 26 May 1035 and was buried in Santa Maria de Ripoll.

Marriages and children
In 1021, Berenguer married the king of Navarre's sister-in-law, Sancha Sánchez [es], daughter of Sancho Garcés, Count of Castile.[4] By her he had two sons:

Ramon Berenguer (born 1023), who received the county of Girona (with his mother) and the county of Barcelona as far as the river Llobregat.
Sanç (Sancho) Berenguer [ca] (birth date unknown), who received the frontier march from the Llobregat to the al-Andalus, which constituted the new county of Penedès with its capital in Olèrdola.[5] Sometime between 1041 and 1049, Sanç swore fealty to his elder brother. Then, on 9 June 1050, he ceded his inheritance to Ramon, who in return granted him some lands and men as a fief.[6] Sanç then entered the church, first as a monk at Saint-Pons-de-Thomières and then as the prior of Sant Benet de Bages, before it became an abbey.[7]
In 1027, Berenguer married as his second wife Guisla de Lluçà [es],[8] with whom he had two more sons;

Guillem (William) Berenguer [es] (born 1028), who received the county of Osona (comitatum Ausonensem), with his mother, and the county of Manresa. He renounced his county on 4 December 1054, allowing his brother Ramon to restore their patrimony.[7]
Bernat [Bernard] Berenguer (born 1029)
Two daughters have also been speculatively assigned to this couple: Clemencia, who married Ermengol III of Urgell, and the wife, name unknown, of Henry of Burgundy.[citation needed]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Berenguer Ramon I, Count of Barcelona.
The Latin is contemporary, cf. John E. Morby, "The Sobriquets of Medieval European Princes", Canadian Journal of History, 13:1 (1978), p. 9.
Mark Gregory Pegg, A Most Holy War : The Albigensian Crusade and the Battle for Christendom, (Oxford University Press, 2008), 4.
Adam J. Kosto, Making Agreements in Medieval Catalonia: Power, Order, and the Written Word, (Cambridge University Press, 2004), 31-32.
Brian A. Catlos, The Victors and the Vanquished: Christians and Muslims of Catalonia and Aragon, 1050-1300, (Cambridge University Press, 2004), 74.
Per Cingolani, p. 95, Berenguer's will reads: "I concede to my son Sancho the same county of Barcelona with the city of Olèrdola from the river Llobregat as far as the land of the pagans" (concedo ad filium meum Sancium ipsum comitatum Barchinonensem cum ipsa civitate de Olerdula de flumine Lubricato usque ad paganorum terram).
Kosto (2004), p. 79.
Stefano Maria Cingolani (ed.), Gestes dels comtes de Barcelona i reis d'Aragó (Universitat de València, 2008), pp. 94–95.
Theresa M. Vann, Queens, Regents and Potentates, (Academia Press, 1993), 28.
Berenguer Ramon I, Count of Barcelona
House of Barcelona
Born: 1005 Died: 26 May 1035
Preceded by
Raymond Borrel
Count of Barcelona
1018–1035Succeeded by
Ramon Berenguer I
Authority control Edit this at Wikidata
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FASTVIAF
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N: 16674
Of, , Barcelona, Spain
Buried At Ripoli.

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Les sources

  1. #2739, Wm Davies
  2. #3125
  3. #2780
  4. #3471
  5. Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on, Ramon Berenguer I, the son
  6. #3467
  7. #2775, Gregory Strong
  8. #3056
  9. large-G675.FTW
    d aft 1140
    / Not Given
  10. Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily De Neville A Royal Study and Chartin g to the Begining, Kraentzler, Ernst-Friedrich, chart 1203
    b abt 1005
    / Not Given
  11. Brøderbund WFT Vol. 15, Ed. 1, Tree #1365, Date of Import: Jan 27, 1999
  12. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 108-23
    1035

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