Ramiro Fróilaz

The castle of Ulver, ruled by Ramiro for over forty years.

Ramiro Fróilaz (floruit 1120–1169) was a Leonese magnate, statesman, and military leader. He was a dominant figure in the kingdom during the reigns of Alfonso VII and Ferdinand II. He was primarily a territorial governor, but also a court figure, connected to royalty both by blood and by marriage. The military exploits of his sovereigns involved him against both the neighbouring kingdoms of Navarre and Portugal and in the Reconquista of the lands of al-Andalus.

Family

Ramiro was the eldest son of Fruela Díaz and Estefanía Sánchez of the Navarrese royal house, daughter of Sancho Garcés, Lord of Uncastillo. Ramiro's first wife was Inés (Agnès), perhaps a member of the French royal house or the family of the Counts of Armagnac. She was buried in the church of San Isidoro de León, where her epitaph names her husband and describes her as "descended from the kings of France".[1] She was the mother of his eldest two sons, Alfonso and Fruela. On 22 September 1150 Ramiro gave these two the bridewealth (arras) which he had neglected to give their mother before her death.[2]

Ramiro's second wife was Sancha, an obscure woman whose origins are unknown. She gave him a son and a daughter: García[3] and Estefanía, who married Ponce de Minerva. On the occasion of her marriage, the king and Ramiro gave Ponce their respective halves of the village of Carrizo de la Ribera, where Estefanía later erected a monastery (1176).[4] Estefanía and Ponce's only son was named Ramiro after his grandfather.

Ramiro's third wife was Elo (Eilo) Álvarez, daughter of Álvar Fáñez and Mayor Pérez and widow of Rodrigo Fernández de Castro. She was named after her maternal grandmother, Elo Alfonso, wife of Pedro Ansúrez.[5] This last marriage extended Ramiro's influence into the Tierra de Campos.[6] Ramiro also controlled the marriages of his close kin. When his niece Estefanía Díaz married without his consent sometime before September 1150 he confiscated her lands.[7] The deed disinheriting her is the only surviving reference to Ramiro's second wife and also the earliest to his third wife.[8]

On 1 June 1153 Ramiro and his wife Elo terminated a dispute with his sister, María Fróilaz, and her husband, Pedro Alfonso, over the water source at a certain Villanueva.[5] Also that year Ramiro granted an estate at Villaseca to García Pérez and his wife, Teresa Pérez, as a reward for their loyal service.[9] García, a son of Pedro Martínez and grandson of Martín Flaínez, served as a knight in Ramiro's household. García was also a loyal servant of the king, who granted him largesse on three occasions.[10] Teresa later (1177) founded the Cistercian monastery of Gradefes, and it is in the records of this establishment that Ramiro's gift can be read.[11]

Early public career

The earliest reference to Ramiro is in a now lost charter recording the foundation of the monastery of Santa María de Arbas del Puerto. A résumé of the charter was kept in the Archivo Histórico Nacional during the directorship of Juan Menéndez Pidal, whose brother, the historian Ramón Menéndez Pidal, concluded from it that "the same count and countess Fruela Díaz and Estefanía, with their children Ramiro, Diego, Constanza and María, founded the monastery of Arbas, in the gate of Pajares [now Payares], on 15 March 1116."[12]

In November 1123 Ramiro was the alcalde (justiciar) of Toledo, a post he probably held into 1124. He is described in two charters as urbis alcaldus (justiciar of the city) and toletanus alcaidus (Toledan justiciar).[13] The Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris, a contemporary account of the reign of Alfonso VII, records that Ramiro Fróilaz (Radimirus Froile) was one of those who came to the city of León only after it had been captured by the king's allies, Alfonso Jordan and Suero Vermúdez, in 1126 to do him homage on his succession. He was one of those qui postea facti sunt comites ("who was later made count").[14]

Between 29 May 1132 and 18 September 1133 Ramiro served as alférez of the royal armies, a post commonly reserved for the scions of noble houses.[5] Except during the period when he was alférez, when he was constantly at court, Ramiro was a semi-regular courtier. In the year 1146, for example, he accompanied Alfonso VII for only about half the court's itinerary.[15]

Ruins of the castle of Ulver.

Tenancies

Ramiro held twenty-seven recorded fiefs from the crown (tenencias) in his long career. A scribe writing in 1145 referred to Ramiro as Comes Ramirus hic et ubique: "Count Ramiro, here and everywhere."[16] Not long after the death of his father (1119), who had guarded the mountainous passes between the regions of León and Galicia, Queen Urraca appointed Ramiro castellan of Ulver in the Bierzo.[17] At the same time Ramiro received from the crown the tenencia of La Cabrera, sometime before 6 March 1122/6, when he is first recorded as tenente there, although he had appointed one Menendeo Peláez as his merino.[17] He held it at least until 5 March 1129. The next lord of the place, Ponce de Cabrera, is not mentioned until 13 May 1138.[18] At Ulver Ramiro remained until at least 27 October 1128, when Ponce appears as holding it and entrusting it to a merino, Pelayo Peláez.[19] By July 1133 Ramiro had regained Ulver and held it until 26 February 1169 and probably until his death. Between 1133 and 1155 he entrusted it to his vassal Fernando Peláez.[20]

Sometime before 15 January 1128 (perhaps as early as 1123) Ramiro received the rule of the entire Bierzo.[19] By 25 August 1131 Ramiro was the military governor of nearby Astorga in charge of its castle and walls. In 1137 he was entrusted with the fief of Aguilar, which had recently been confiscated from the mysteriously disgraced Osorio Martínez.[21] Nuño Pérez, the castellan of the castle at Aguilar, for reasons unknown, rebelled against Ramiro, but was defeated by 2 December.[22] Later Alfonso VII raised Ramiro to the rank of count, a title he first carried in a charter for the Diocese of Sigüenza dated 14 September 1138.[5] By May 1139 Osorio had regained Aguilar, where he continued down to at least December 1140. Thereafter it returned to Ramiro to govern until at least December 1166.[21]

From at least 18 May 1126 until as late as 22 June 1165 Ramiro was governing Valdeorras. There, on 13 September 1139, he heard a property dispute, an account of which has been preserved in the tumbo of San Pedro de Montes.[5] The dispute occurred between the monastery of San Pedro and Mayor Sánchez and her sons concerning an estate at a place called Villa. While Mayor claimed to have purchased the land from its previous holder, Pedro Peláez, the monastery claimed that it was a pious donation. Ramiro, with some leading men of Valdeorras, both clergy and laity, arbitrating the dispute until the monks agreed to pay 160 solidi to Mayor in return for her renunciation of any rights to the estate.[23]

Ramiro was ruling the city of León, where he owned houses and a palace (palacio),[24] between 11 April 1141 and 4 July 1144. On 31 December 1156 Ramiro and Elo donated some houses they owned in León to the monastery of Vega, a daughter house of Fontevraud.[25] In 1154/5 Ramiro's authority over the city of Astorga was shared with Ponce de Cabrera.[26] There is no record of Ramiro holding Astorga after 20 September 1168.[5] He was an old man when he died.[27] Sometime before 1162 Ramiro was also co-tenant with Ponce at Villafranca del Bierzo.[28]

Probably for nearly his entire adult life Ramiro governed Villabuena; there are records of his tenancy there between 1128 and 1166.[29] He also governed Cifuentes for more than twenty years[30] and Riba de Esla for more than a decade.[31] Among the tenencias Ramiro governed only briefly—such that no more than one record of his lordship there survives—are Alba de Gordón,[32] Avedillo de Sanabria,[33] Ferreras,[34] Molinaseca,[35] Monteagudo,[36] Oteros,[37] Peñamián,[38] Robledo,[39] Tibres,[40] and Trigueros.[41] Among the tenencias which Ramiro governed later in his career (the last decade of the reign of Alfonso VII and the first of Ferdinand II) are found Argüello,[42] Boñar,[43] Caldelas,[44] Casayo,[45] Gordón,[46] Villafranca,[47] and Villarmildo.[48]

Military campaigns

The river Vez and its medieval bridge, alongside which the battle of Valdevez was fought and Ramiro captured.

Jerónimo Zurita places Ramiro at the side of Alfonso VII in Zaragoza in 1134 during the campaign of harassment against García Ramírez of Navarre.[49] In the summer of 1139 Ramiro was present at the long Siege of Oreja.[50] In 1140 Ramiro went to war with Afonso Henriques, king of neighbouring Portugal, but was defeated and captured.[51] There is no documentary evidence that he had gone with Alfonso into Portugal in 1137,[52] but the Chronica Adefonsi (I, §82) narrates an episode involving him that occurred on the 1137 campaign:

The King of Portugal likewise mobilized his army and marched out to fight the few men who had foolishly been separated from the Emperor's main force. The Portuguese confronted Count Ramiro who was attempting to conquer their land. They joined in battle, and Ramiro was defeated and taken prisoner.

After the Battle of Valdevez the Portuguese and the Leonese came to terms, captured castles were surrendered and "Count Ramiro was released, and all the knights who had been captured on either side were given their freedom."[53] The capture of Ramiro is not mentioned in the Crónica de Dom Afonso Henriques.

Briefly in 1147 Ramiro was stripped of the Bierzo, which was given to Sancha Raimúndez, the king's sister, but he was soon restored to it and continue to rule it until at least June 1169, probably until his death some short time later.[5] This perhaps corresponded to Ramiro's absence on the campaign against Almería that year. Although the Poema de Almería records his presence at the siege of the city, royal documents do not record him with the army after 11 July, just before the siege of Andújar.[54] He had not joined the army until shortly before 23 May at Toledo and had missed the capitulation of Calatrava on 11 January.[55] The anonymous author of the Poema names Ramiro second of the great nobles in the following of Alfonso VII at Almería:

Hos Radimirus sequitur comes ordine mirus,
prudens et mitis Legionis cura salutis,
forma praeclarus, natus de semine regum.[56]
Count Ramiro Fróilaz appears. He is admirable in his rank,
prudent and kind, caring for the salvation of León,
a distinguished figure born of royal blood.[57]

Ramiro was an elder statesman during the reign of Alfonso's successor in León, Ferdinand II. On 23 May 1158 he was the first-named guarantor of Ferdinand II in the Treaty of Sahagún, which ended a state of war between Ferdinand and his brother, Sancho III of Castile.[58] Ramiro's death probably occurred in 1169.[59] His obituary is recorded in the records of the church of San Isidoro, where he is buried.[60] In the seventeenth century, historian José Pellicer de Ossau y Tovar said of "Ramiro Frolaz" that "he was one of the greatest grandees Spain had, and his name endures in the histories from the year 1120 down to 1168."[61]

Notes

  1. Barton (1997), 228 n2, citing F. de Cadenas Allende, "Los Flagínez: una familia leonesa de hace mil años," Estudios genealógicos, heráldicos y nobiliarios en honor de Vicente de Cadenas y Vicente, 2 vols. (Madrid, 1978), I, 208 n113. Cf. Cawley, Charles, Don Ramiro Fróilaz, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, retrieved August 2012, in the Medieval Lands Project, also citing Cadenas.
  2. Barton (1997), 54, who includes an edition of the original charter in Appendix III, iv, p. 313.
  3. He served as the alférez of Ferdinand II from 1168 to 1170, and in 1171 he donated the villages of Valdoré, Corniero, Remolina, and Primajas to the abbey of Arbas. He was still alive in 1178. His death (undated) and burial at San Isidoro in León are recorded in that church's obituary, cf. Barton (1992), 248–49, and Canal Sánchez-Pagín (1986), 34.
  4. Barton (1992), 248–49, quotes the pertinent part of the charter in n83: Quod quando domino imperatore adduxit suam coniugem imperatricem, adduxit cum ea comite Poncio de Menerua et desponsauit eum cum comitissa domna Stephania, filia comite Ramiro, et dedit ei medietatem Karrizo que erat rengalengo ut dedisset sponsam suam pro arras. Et dedit illi aliam hereditatem que iacet inter Quintanella et Karrizo et dicitur earn Quiro. Et alia medietatem de Karrizo erat de comite Ramiro et dedit earn ad illum cum filia sua in casamento.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Barton (1997), 288–89.
  6. Barton (1997), 49.
  7. Barton (1997), 51.
  8. According to Cawley, Charles, Don Ramiro Fróilaz, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, retrieved August 2012,
  9. The original grant still survives, and is edited in Barton (1997), Appendix III, vi, pp. 314–15.
  10. Barton (1997), 38, 91.
  11. García and Teresa left a daughter, Gontrodo García, who married Tello Pérez de Meneses, another minor nobleman of the Tierra de Campos, cf. Barton (1997), 38.
  12. Canal Sánchez-Pagín (1986), 33, quoting, reads: Los mismos condes Froila Díaz y Estefanía, con sus hijos Ramiro, Diego, Constanza y María, fundaron el monasterio de Arbas, en el puerto de Pajares, el 15 de marzo de 1116. The first abbot was named Sancho.
  13. Reilly (1982), 293, 318.
  14. Barton (1997), 126.
  15. Barton (1997), 129, 131.
  16. Barton (1997), 86 and n93. For a map displaying Ramiro's ubiquity in the region of León around 1150, cf. Barton, 88.
  17. 1 2 Reilly (1982), 293, dates the pertinent charter to 6 March 1122, while Barton, 288, dates it 6 March 1126. The charter, according to Reilly (1982), 307 n130, reads: imperante castello de Ulver Ramiro Froilaz. In simul terra de Cabrezra cum suo castello et majorinus ejus in eadem terra Menendo Pelaez.
  18. Barton (1997), 109.
  19. 1 2 Barton (1997), 100. Reilly (1982), 307, cites two charters. One, dated 1123, refers to Ramiro as ten. Bierzo and another of 13 September 1124 as en urbia Ramiro Froilaz.
  20. Barton (1997), 171.
  21. 1 2 Barton (1997), 118.
  22. Barton (1997), 170.
  23. Barton, 100–1.
  24. Barton (1997), 65.
  25. Barton (1997), 209.
  26. Barton (1997), 108; Barton (1992), 247 n77, gives a date of 6 January 1154.
  27. Barton (1997), 56–57.
  28. Barton (1992), 247 n77, based on a redating of a text of 13 March 1165.
  29. 17 May 1128 to 8 January 1166: Barton (1997), 288.
  30. Between November 1140 and December 1166: Barton (1997), 288.
  31. Between 28 December 1144 and 10 August 1158: Barton (1997), 288.
  32. 1161: Barton (1997), 288.
  33. April 1148: Barton (1997), 288.
  34. 28 March 1146: Barton (1997), 288.
  35. 14 February 1134: Barton (1997), 288.
  36. 1160: Barton (1997), 288.
  37. 6 January 1129: Barton (1997), 288.
  38. 8 March 1164: Barton (1997), 288.
  39. 27 October 1154, in the records of the Order of Santiago: Barton (1997), 288.
  40. 26 August 1145: Barton (1997), 288.
  41. April 1150: Barton (1997), 288.
  42. Between 1 June 1153 and 1 July 1156: Barton (1997), 288.
  43. Between December 1153 and March 1164: Barton (1997), 288.
  44. Between 26 August 1145 and 1155: Barton (1997), 288.
  45. Between July 1161 and June 1165: Barton (1997), 288.
  46. Between 1161 and January 1167: Barton (1997), 288.
  47. Between 21 August 1160 and 13 May 1167: Barton (1997), 288.
  48. Between 6 June 1146 and 21 February 1154: Barton (1997), 288.
  49. Zurita (1562), Anales de la Corona de Aragón, I, 216.
  50. Barton (1997), 177, 180.
  51. Barton (1997), 174.
  52. Barton (1997), 176.
  53. Chronica Adefonsi, I, §86.
  54. Barton (1997), 180 n178.
  55. Barton (1997), 178.
  56. Canal Sánchez-Pagín (1986), 25.
  57. Translation from Lipskey (1972). The rest of Ramiro's passage in the Poema he translates in prose thus:
    He is loved by Christ and observes the law with vigilance. At all times he obeys the order of the Emperor with heedful attention. He serves him with affection. He was the finest of all, strong in the practice of goodness and, talented with weapons, full of gentleness. He is influential in the council, famed for his just governing and superior to all the bishops in respecting the laws. He surpasses his comrades in dealing death blows to kings. What more shall I say? In his justice he is superior. No one hesitates to serve such a count. With this daring leader León awaits fierce wars.
  58. Barton (1992), 257–58.
  59. Barton (1992), 238, but the Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands Project, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, retrieved August 2012, provides a date of 13 September 1172.
  60. Canal Sánchez-Pagín (1986), 34.
  61. Canal Sánchez-Pagín (1986), 29, quoting Pellicer, Informe del origen, antigüedad y calidad de la Casa Sarmiento de Villamayor (Madrid, 1663), 98ff: fue uno de los mayores señores que tuvo España, y su nombre dura en las historias desde el año 1120 al año 1168.

Bibliography

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