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Fernando Pérez de Traba

Fernando (or Fernán) Pérez de Traba (Spanish: [feɾˈnando ˈpeɾeθ ðe ˈtɾaβa, feɾˈnam -]; c. 1090 – 1 November 1155), or Fernão Peres de Trava (Portuguese: [fɨɾˈnɐ̃w ˈpeɾɨʒ ðɨ ˈtɾavɐ]), was a nobleman and count of the Kingdom of León who for a time held power over all Galicia. He became the lover of Countess Teresa of Portugal, through whom he attained great influence in that domain, and was the de facto ruler of the County of Portugal between 1121 and 1128.[2][3] The Poema de Almería, a Latin poem celebrating one of Alfonso VII's major victories of the Reconquista, records that "if one were to see him [Fernán], one would judge him already a king."[4]

Signo rodado [es] used by Fernando Pérez de Traba[1]

Family edit

Fernán was the second son of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba, founder of the House of Traba, and his first wife, Urraca Fróilaz.[5] His family was the most powerful in Galicia at the time, and he himself held properties in the most important Galician cities: Lugo and Santiago de Compostela.[6][7] Fernán's first appearance in the surviving documentation dates from September 1107, just after the death of Raymond of Galicia, when his father confirmed a privilege of Alfonso VI for the monastery of Caaveiro, along with his sons.[a]

Early in the twelfth century (before 1125), Pedro gave his son a Moorish cook, probably a slave, with the Christian name Martin.[10] Sometime early in the century Fernán took a wife, but they were separated when he became the lover of Theresa Alfónsez, Countess of Portugal. With Teresa he had two daughters: Sancha (born c. 1121), who married Álvaro Rodríguez, and Teresa, who first married Nuño Pérez de Lara and, when widowed, became the second wife of King Ferdinand II of León. Fernán's only attested wife, Sancha González, daughter of Gonzalo Ansúrez and Urraca Vermúdez, was therefore possibly his second wife. The earliest record of their marriage is from 1134.[2] With her the count had three children: Gonzalo, María (married Ponce de Cabrera), and Urraca, the wife of Juan Arias. Sancha was still living on 24 July 1161, when she signed a document, noting that she was a widow.[11][12] Probably in that same year she drew up her will. It is preserved, albeit with an incorrect date, in the cartulary Tumbo C of Santiago de Compostela, since the archbishop-elect of Santiago, Fernando Curialis, was a beneficiary.[13]

Relationship with the Archdiocese and the Crown edit

 
In the 1120s Fernán's power extended over almost all of Galicia and Portugal. His influence helped effect the division (1157) between Galicia and León on one side and Castile and Toledo on the other. Fernán's activities extended as far east as Navarre, where he made war alongside Alfonso VII, and far to the south of the border, where he engaged in the Reconquista.

In Galicia, Fernán rivalled for influence the archbishop Diego Gelmirez, with whom he kept an uneasy truce. Originally, the archbishop and Fernán had been on good terms. At the time of the Galician revolt (1116) he was acting as Diego's constable (municeps).[3] In 1121, however, he had constructed a fortress at Raneta south of Santiago, a position threatening to the apostolic see. The archbishop promptly had it destroyed.[b]He may have been incited by the queen, who was trying to separate Diego from the Trabas to prevent an alliance of regional powers in Galicia from defying the crown.[15] Fernán also mediated between his elder brother Bermudo and the archbishop in 1121, resulting in Diego bestowing gifts on the Vermudo in return for the fortress of Faro, which he claimed belonged to the diocese.[16] In 1134 the dispute with Diego flared up once more after Fernán imprisoned one of his knights and the archdeacon of Nendos, Pedro Crescónez, whose jurisdiction covered large parts of the Traba patrimony.[17][18]

During the reign of Queen Urraca, Fernán's family was generally allied with her son, the young Alfonso Raimúndez, who had been raised for a time alongside Fernán in the household of Pedro Fróilaz. The Trabas, allied with Diego, tried to make Alfonso king in Galicia in opposition to his mother. With the death of queen Urraca in 1126 and the accession of Alfonso, Fernán became the leading figure in Galicia and used the opportunity to increase his power throughout the kingdom. Together with Teresa he signed a truce with the new king (shortly after March 1126) at Ricobayo near Zamora.[19] In 1149 Alfonso entrusted to him the mentoring of his second son, the future Ferdinand II.[c] Long after Fernán's own death, in 1178, his daughter Teresa married Ferdinand II as his second wife and her second husband. According to the Chronica latina regum Castellae and the De rebus Hispaniae, Fernán's influence was so decisive during the reign of Alfonso VII, that by the king's testament Galicia and León were separated from the kingdoms of Castile and Toledo. The anonymous Chronica claims that Fernán and Manrique Pérez de Lara "aimed to sow the seed of discord" when they proposed the division of Alfonso VII's "empire".[21]

De facto ruler of Portugal (1121–1128) edit

In 1116 Fernán participated in a Galician revolt against Queen Urraca. The revolt was led by his father on behalf of Teresa, the widow of Henry of Burgundy, Count of Portugal. The victories in battle at Vilasobroso and Lanhoso sealed the alliance between the Traba family and Teresa. Fernán became her governor in Porto and Coimbra (bearing the title "lord of Coimbra and Portugal").[d] By 1 February 1121 he was using the title comes (Latin for "count"), the highest in the kingdom, even though his father was still alive and his brother Vermudo had not yet received it, a sure indication of the influence of Teresa.[22] In 1122 Fernán received a further two castles from her and had probably already become her lover. It has been suggested that they may have married, but Fernán was publicly rebuked by the future saint Theotonius for this affair.[e] In that same year (1122) Fernán was able to arrange the advantageous marriage of Vermudo to Urraca Enríquez, daughter of Teresa and Henry.[2]

Teresa of Portugal had assumed the regency of the county of Portugal during the minority of her son Afonso Henriques. In 1122, after turning fourteen, Afonso knighted himself in the Cathedral of Zamora, raised an army, and proceeded to take control of his lands. Gathering the Portuguese knights to his cause against his mother and Fernán, he defeated them both at the Battle of São Mamede in 1128.[3] From this year—which was also that of his father's death—Fernán concentrated his influence in Galicia, signing himself comes Fernandus de Gallecie ("Count Ferdinand of Galicia"), a title his father had used. He does soon reappear in Portuguese documents, indicating a normalising of relations between him and Afonso.[3][5]

Role in the defence of the realm under Alfonso VII edit

      But now no more in tented fields oppos'd,
   By Tagus' stream his honour'd age lie clos'd;
   Yet still his dauntless worth, his virtue lived,
   And all the father in the son survived.
   And soon his worth was prov'd, the parent dame
   Avow'd a second hymeneal flame.
   The low-born spouse assumes the monarch's place,
   And from the throne expels the orphan race.
   But young Alphonso, like his sires of yore
   (His grandsire's virtues, as his name, he bore),
   Arms for the fight, his ravish'd throne to win;
   And the lac'd helmet grasps his beardless chin.

         —Camoens, The Lusiads
            (Canto III, part of 28–31)[f]

The first tenencia Fernán received from the king was the Limia in 1131.[2] He soon received Trastámara (ruled 1132–45), which was long to be associated with the patrimonies of the Traba. In 1137 he was given the rule of Trasancos and in 1140 that of Monterroso, which he held as late as 1153.[2] In 1140 Fernán signed Alfonso VII's charter ordering that he and his queen be buried in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. Fernán signed as "count Don Fernando of Traba" (comes dominus Fernandus de Traua), the only time he is ever referred to in contemporary a document with the toponym "de Traba" by which he is now universally known.[5]

In June 1137 Fernán probably participated in the recapture of Túy, although the Historia compostellana alleges that the Galician magnates responsible for the defence of the frontier with Portugal were too slow in answering the royal summons and had to be bribed by Diego Gelmírez to join the royal army.[23] Fernán appears to have been the only Galician to follow the king to the Navarrese frontier later that year. He was with the royal army at Logroño on 3 October, though by 20 October Rodrigo Vélaz had also joined the army on the Ebro.[23]

Fernán defended with difficulty the valley of the Minho against the onslaughts of Afonso Henriques, as recorded by the Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris:

Prior to [1140], the Portuguese monarch had come to Galicia several times, but always he had been driven back by Fernando Pérez and Rodrigo Vélaz and other Galician leaders. Often he was forced to return to Portugal dishonored.[g]

In 1139 or 1140, at Cerneja (Cernesa) in Galicia, he and Rodrigo Vélaz were defeated by Teresa's son Afonso Henriques, who by that time had proclaimed himself king of Portugal. The Battle of Cerneja is recorded in the Chronica Adefonsi:

Once more Alfonso, King of Portugal, gathered his army and went to Limia. When this news reached Galicia, Fernando Pérez and Rodrigo Vélaz and other of the Emperor's Galician nobles were summoned immediately. They marched out with their troops against the Portuguese King and met him at Cernesa. After the battle lines were drawn up, they began to fight. Because of their sins the Counts fled and were defeated.[24]

The record of Fernán's rule in Deza consists of an original royal charter of July 1144. In 1146 he held the tenencias Monforte de Lemos and Sarria.[2] Between 1144 and 1155 Fernán was frequently at court, and he participated in almost all of Alfonso VII's major campaigns of the Reconquista, commanding the Galician contingents on numerous occasions against the Almohads.[19] The major exception was the conquest of Calatrava in January 1147.[19] The chronicles do record his valour in the conquest of Córdoba in 1146,[3] and in the conquest of Almería in 1147. At Almería he led the Galician contingent, and his presence can be traced with Alfonso's army on 19 August during its departure from Baeza and again on 25 November during its triumphant return.[25][26] The Poema de Almería describes Fernán's role:

The valiant (strenuus)[h] Count Fernando Pérez follows this armed troop [of Galicians] administering the Galician laws with royal care. His position had been strengthened by his tutoring of the Emperor's son. If one were to see him, one would judge him already a king. He is famed for his royal nobility, and because he bears a count's lineage.[i]

 
Sobrado dos Monxes, an abandoned royal monastery, was granted to Fernán and his brother Vermudo in 1118. In 1142 they established a Cistercian community there.

Patronage and pilgrimage edit

Fernán actively supported the Cistercians, and patronised their monastery at Sobrado dos Monxes, which he and his brother Vermudo had first received from Queen Urraca on 29 July 1118, although it was deserted at the time and required its recipients to re-found a religious community there.[j] On the occasion of this gift, the Traba brothers responded in kind by giving a hound named Ulgar and a hunting spear to the queen's son.[28] The gift of Sobrado was confirmed by Alfonso VII on 29 May 1135, but it was not until 14 February 1142 that the Trabas installed a Cistercian abbot, Peter, and some monks, referred to as "all the holy men of God and Saint Benedict, living according to the custom of the Cistercians".[k] It was one of the earliest Cistercian foundations in Spain and a daughter house of Clairvaux[27] Fernán and Vermudo may have desired that the monks contribute to settling and cultivating the surrounding zone.[30] Fernán also made a donation to the Cistercian foundation of Monfero Abbey in 1145.[l]

There are three donations by Fernán to the canons regular of Caaveiro dated 1 April 1104, 26 February 1135, and 4 December 1154, all forgeries. The cartulary of Caaveiro retains an unusually high number of forged documents and few authentic twelfth-century specimens. This may indicate that at some point in time the abbey's archives were lost or destroyed and the monks felt it necessary to forge deeds for properties that had really been granted.[32] There is the possibility, therefore, that Fernán or his family was a regular donor to Caaveiro.

Fernán twice visited Jerusalem after the Second Crusade, the second time in 1153.[2] He gave lands to the Templars on the coast near A Coruña, introducing this military order into the Galicia as early as 1128, before they had received official ecclesiastical approbation.[2] In 1152 he made a donation to the Benedictine monastery of Xuvia.[2] It is from this late period of his life that a certain document originates that records a donation of his to the favoured monastery of Sobrado, dated 1 May 1153. It is written in a francesa script, while Fernán's signature appears in a completely different script that resembles Visigothic. It may have been written by Fernán himself, in which case it represents the only evidence that he received any education besides the standard military one for young noblemen. He was brought up at a time when the francesa script had not yet crowded out the Visigothic, and the document of 1153 may indicate that he was taught in his youth how to write his name.[28]

Death and legacy edit

In 1151 Fernán was holding the tenencia of Búbal in Galicia and in 1152 that of Solís in western Asturias.[33] The date of Fernán's death is very uncertain. He was last at court in Toledo on 8 November 1154[m] and he never reappears in court records.[2] By 4 February 1155, at Valladolid, his son Gonzalo was signing royal charters as comes Gundisaluus (Count Gonzalo), implying a succession in the comital title. There is a forged donation by Fernán to the monastery of Caaveiro dated 4 December 1154, in which the count refers to himself as graui infirmitate detemptus, "detained by a grave illness". The charter may have a basis in fact.[34] There are also two charters of uncertain authenticity recording a donation dated 1 July 1155 by Fernán and his brother Vermudo to the monastery Fernán had founded at Sobrado dos Monxes.[5]

There are two documents in the archives of Sobrado dated to June 1160 and 1161, confirmed by a comes dompnus Fernandus senior in Monteroso et in Traua ("count Don Fernando, lord in Monterroso and in Traba") and a comes dompnus Fernandus in Traua et in Aranga et in Monteroso ("count Don Fernando in Traba and in Aranga and in Monterroso"), respectively. These are probably copyists' errors for Gundesaluus Fernandi, the name of his son.[5] Fernán died on 1 November 1155.[11][12] Fernán was buried in the cloister of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela.[n]

Fernán raised the scion of at least one other aristocratic family in his household. Count Froila Ramírez was raised at his court and in 1170, whether before their marriage or after is not known, he granted the monastery of Morás to his wife, Fernán's granddaughter, Urraca González, "out of love for your grandfather, Count Don Fernando, who raised me, and because of faithful service when I was accepted by your father, Count Don Gonzalo".[o]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Comes Petrus de Gallecia: Fernandus et Veremudus eius filii, where Fernán, the younger, signs before his elder brother.[8] Barton cites Fernán's earliest document as dated 1 May 1110.[9]
  2. ^ As his biographer relates in the Historia compostellana.[14]
  3. ^ He was Ferdinand's tutor from at least 1 March 1149 to 16 May 1150.[20]
  4. ^ His power in Coimbra lasted from at least 6 April 1121 to 31 March 1128, according to Barton, 242 n19. Both Bernard F. Reilly (1982), The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126 (Princeton: Princeton University Press), 153, and Fletcher, 148, dated it from a 24 January 1121 document in the archives of the monastery of Lorvão.
  5. ^ Fletcher, 39, citing the Vita Theotonii, in Portugaliae Monumenta Historica, Scriptores, ed. A. Herculano (Lisbon, 1856), 79-88. Reilly, 153, speculates about a marriage.
  6. ^ Translation from the 1887 edition of William Julius Mickle's (1776) translation, p. 69 and n1.
  7. ^ Glenn Edward Lipskey (1972), The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor (Northwestern University PhD dissertation) [hereafter CAI], I, §76.
  8. ^ Barton renders it "brave".[4]
  9. ^ Barton (2006), numbers these lines 74–78, while Glenn Edward Lipskey (1972), "The Poem of Almería", The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor (Northwestern University PhD dissertation), 165, numbers these lines 61–65.
  10. ^ The Trabas later claimed that Sobrado had once belonged to them and had been unjustly confiscated by Ferdinand I. This is a better indication of the reputation of Ferdinand I in Galicia than of anything else.[27]
  11. ^ Fernán gave subsequent grants to the monastery in 1142, 1145, 1153, 1154, and perhaps 1155.[29][27]
  12. ^ There is a forged donation to this monastery dated 1147, with many errors.[31]
  13. ^ This document has been misdated at times to 1152.
  14. ^ Barton cites the request of his daughter María in January 1169 that she be buried beside him there.[35]
  15. ^ The original Latin reads: propter amore auu uestri comitis domni Fernandi qui me creauit, et propter seruicium fidelem quem accepi a patre uestro comite domno Gundisaluo[36]

References edit

  1. ^ Francisco Olmos 2009, p. 29.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Barton 1997, pp. 241–42.
  3. ^ a b c d e Fletcher 1984, pp. 38–40.
  4. ^ a b Barton 2002, p. 463.
  5. ^ a b c d e Pallares & Portela 1993, pp. 823–40.
  6. ^ Barton 1997, p. 80.
  7. ^ Fletcher 1984, p. 40 n31.
  8. ^ Pallares & Portela 1993, p. 833.
  9. ^ Barton 1997, p. 241 n1.
  10. ^ Barton 1997, pp. 59-60 and 82.
  11. ^ a b Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León 1999, p. 336.
  12. ^ a b López-Sangil 2002, p. 99.
  13. ^ González Vázquez 1998, p. 215 n8.
  14. ^ Barton 1997, p. 170.
  15. ^ Fletcher 1984, p. 147.
  16. ^ Barton 1997, pp. 213–14.
  17. ^ Barton 1997, pp. 217–18.
  18. ^ Fletcher 1984, p. 232.
  19. ^ a b c Barton 1997, pp. 127–31.
  20. ^ Barton 1997, p. 241.
  21. ^ Barton 1997, p. 19.
  22. ^ Barton 1997, p. 32.
  23. ^ a b Barton 1997, p. 179.
  24. ^ CAI, I, §78.
  25. ^ Barton 1997, p. 180.
  26. ^ Barton 2002, pp. 460–61.
  27. ^ a b c Fletcher 1984, p. 40.
  28. ^ a b Barton 1997, p. 64.
  29. ^ Barton 1997, p. 242 n16.
  30. ^ Barton 2002, pp. 197–99.
  31. ^ Barton 2002, p. 242 n15.
  32. ^ Barton 1997, p. 242 n13.
  33. ^ Reilly 1998, pp. 177–78.
  34. ^ Barton 1997, p. 31 and n15.
  35. ^ Barton 1997, p. 207.
  36. ^ Barton 1997, p. 247.

Bibliography edit

Secondary sources edit

  • Barón Faraldo, Andrés (2010). (PDF). Cátedra. Revista eumesa de estudios (in Spanish) (17): 163–186. ISSN 1133-9608. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  • Barton, Simon (1997). The Aristocracy in Twelfth-century León and Castile. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521497275.
  • Barton, Simon (2002). "The 'Discovery of Aristocracy' in Twelfth-Century Spain: Portraits of the Secular Élite in the Poem of Almería". Bulletin of Hispanic Studies. 83 (6). Liverpool: University of Santiago de Compostela: 453–469. doi:10.3828/bhs.83.6.1. ISSN 1475-3839.
  • Daviña Sáinz, Santiago (1998). "El monasterio de las Cascas (Betanzos) (I)" (PDF). Anuario Brigantino (in Spanish) (21). Braga: Consello de Betanzos, A Coruña Câmara Municipal de Braga: 77–102. OCLC 72890459.
  • Fletcher, Richard A. (1984). Saint James's Catapult: The Life and Times of Diego Gelmírez of Santiago de Compostela. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Francisco Olmos, José María de (2009). "El Signo Rodado Regio en España: Origen, Desarrollo y Consolidación (Siglos XII–XV)". Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía [es].
  • González Vázquez, Marta (1998). (PDF). In F. Bores; J. Fernández; S. Huerta; E. Rabasa (eds.). Actas del Segundo Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Construcción: A Coruña, 22–24 de octubre de 1998. Madrid: I. Juan de Herrera. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2016-03-12.
  • López Ferreiro, Antonio (1901). Historia de la Santa A.M. Iglesia de Santiago de Compostela (in Spanish). Vol. IV. Santiago de Compostela: Imp. y Enc. del Seminario Conciliar Central. OCLC 932806777.
  • López Morán, Enriqueta (2004). (PDF). Nalgures (in Spanish). I. A Coruña: Asociación Cultural de Estudios Históricos de Galicia: 119–174. ISSN 1885-6349. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-17.
  • López-Sangil, José Luis (2002). La nobleza altomedieval gallega, la familia Froílaz-Traba (in Spanish). La Coruña: Toxosoutos, S.L. ISBN 84-95622-68-8.
  • Mattoso, José (2014). D. Afonso Henriques (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Temas e Debates. ISBN 978-972-759-911-0.
  • Pallares, María del Carmen; Portela, Ermelindo (1993). "Aristocracias y sistema de parentesco en la Galicia de los siglos centrales de la Edad Media: el grupo de los Traba". Hispania. Revista Española de Historia (in Spanish). 53 (185). Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC): 823–840. ISSN 0018-2141.
  • Reilly, Bernard F. (1998). The Kingdom of León-Castilla Under King Alfonso VII, 1126–1157. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Sánchez de Mora, Antonio (2003). La nobleza castellana en la plena Edad Media: el linaje de Lara. Tesis doctoral. Universidad de Sevilla (in Spanish). Vol. I.
  • Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León, Margarita Cecilia (1998). "Relaciones Fronterizas entre Portugal y León en tiempos de Alfonso VII: El ejemplo de la Casa de Traba" (PDF). Revista da Faculdade de Letras: História. Universidade do Porto (in Spanish). 15 (2). Porto: 301–12. ISSN 0871-164X.
  • Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León, Margarita Cecilia (1999). Linajes nobiliarios de León y Castilla: Siglos IX-XIII. Salamanca: Junta de Castilla y León, Consejería de educación y cultura. ISBN 84-7846-781-5.

Primary sources edit

  • Fernández de Viana y Vieites, José Ignacio; González Balasch, Mª Teresa; de Pablos Ramírez, Juan Carlos (1996). "El Tumbo de Caaveiro" (PDF). Cátedra. Revista de Estudios Eumeses (in Spanish) (3): 267–437. ISSN 1133-9608.

fernando, pérez, traba, fernando, fernán, pérez, traba, spanish, feɾˈnando, ˈpeɾeθ, ˈtɾaβa, feɾˈnam, 1090, november, 1155, fernão, peres, trava, portuguese, fɨɾˈnɐ, ˈpeɾɨʒ, ðɨ, ˈtɾavɐ, nobleman, count, kingdom, león, time, held, power, over, galicia, became, l. Fernando or Fernan Perez de Traba Spanish feɾˈnando ˈpeɾe8 de ˈtɾaba feɾˈnam c 1090 1 November 1155 or Fernao Peres de Trava Portuguese fɨɾˈnɐ w ˈpeɾɨʒ dɨ ˈtɾavɐ was a nobleman and count of the Kingdom of Leon who for a time held power over all Galicia He became the lover of Countess Teresa of Portugal through whom he attained great influence in that domain and was the de facto ruler of the County of Portugal between 1121 and 1128 2 3 The Poema de Almeria a Latin poem celebrating one of Alfonso VII s major victories of the Reconquista records that if one were to see him Fernan one would judge him already a king 4 Signo rodado es used by Fernando Perez de Traba 1 Contents 1 Family 2 Relationship with the Archdiocese and the Crown 3 De facto ruler of Portugal 1121 1128 4 Role in the defence of the realm under Alfonso VII 5 Patronage and pilgrimage 6 Death and legacy 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Secondary sources 9 2 Primary sourcesFamily editFernan was the second son of Pedro Froilaz de Traba founder of the House of Traba and his first wife Urraca Froilaz 5 His family was the most powerful in Galicia at the time and he himself held properties in the most important Galician cities Lugo and Santiago de Compostela 6 7 Fernan s first appearance in the surviving documentation dates from September 1107 just after the death of Raymond of Galicia when his father confirmed a privilege of Alfonso VI for the monastery of Caaveiro along with his sons a Early in the twelfth century before 1125 Pedro gave his son a Moorish cook probably a slave with the Christian name Martin 10 Sometime early in the century Fernan took a wife but they were separated when he became the lover of Theresa Alfonsez Countess of Portugal With Teresa he had two daughters Sancha born c 1121 who married Alvaro Rodriguez and Teresa who first married Nuno Perez de Lara and when widowed became the second wife of King Ferdinand II of Leon Fernan s only attested wife Sancha Gonzalez daughter of Gonzalo Ansurez and Urraca Vermudez was therefore possibly his second wife The earliest record of their marriage is from 1134 2 With her the count had three children Gonzalo Maria married Ponce de Cabrera and Urraca the wife of Juan Arias Sancha was still living on 24 July 1161 when she signed a document noting that she was a widow 11 12 Probably in that same year she drew up her will It is preserved albeit with an incorrect date in the cartulary Tumbo C of Santiago de Compostela since the archbishop elect of Santiago Fernando Curialis was a beneficiary 13 Relationship with the Archdiocese and the Crown edit nbsp In the 1120s Fernan s power extended over almost all of Galicia and Portugal His influence helped effect the division 1157 between Galicia and Leon on one side and Castile and Toledo on the other Fernan s activities extended as far east as Navarre where he made war alongside Alfonso VII and far to the south of the border where he engaged in the Reconquista In Galicia Fernan rivalled for influence the archbishop Diego Gelmirez with whom he kept an uneasy truce Originally the archbishop and Fernan had been on good terms At the time of the Galician revolt 1116 he was acting as Diego s constable municeps 3 In 1121 however he had constructed a fortress at Raneta south of Santiago a position threatening to the apostolic see The archbishop promptly had it destroyed b He may have been incited by the queen who was trying to separate Diego from the Trabas to prevent an alliance of regional powers in Galicia from defying the crown 15 Fernan also mediated between his elder brother Bermudo and the archbishop in 1121 resulting in Diego bestowing gifts on the Vermudo in return for the fortress of Faro which he claimed belonged to the diocese 16 In 1134 the dispute with Diego flared up once more after Fernan imprisoned one of his knights and the archdeacon of Nendos Pedro Cresconez whose jurisdiction covered large parts of the Traba patrimony 17 18 During the reign of Queen Urraca Fernan s family was generally allied with her son the young Alfonso Raimundez who had been raised for a time alongside Fernan in the household of Pedro Froilaz The Trabas allied with Diego tried to make Alfonso king in Galicia in opposition to his mother With the death of queen Urraca in 1126 and the accession of Alfonso Fernan became the leading figure in Galicia and used the opportunity to increase his power throughout the kingdom Together with Teresa he signed a truce with the new king shortly after March 1126 at Ricobayo near Zamora 19 In 1149 Alfonso entrusted to him the mentoring of his second son the future Ferdinand II c Long after Fernan s own death in 1178 his daughter Teresa married Ferdinand II as his second wife and her second husband According to the Chronica latina regum Castellae and the De rebus Hispaniae Fernan s influence was so decisive during the reign of Alfonso VII that by the king s testament Galicia and Leon were separated from the kingdoms of Castile and Toledo The anonymous Chronica claims that Fernan and Manrique Perez de Lara aimed to sow the seed of discord when they proposed the division of Alfonso VII s empire 21 De facto ruler of Portugal 1121 1128 editIn 1116 Fernan participated in a Galician revolt against Queen Urraca The revolt was led by his father on behalf of Teresa the widow of Henry of Burgundy Count of Portugal The victories in battle at Vilasobroso and Lanhoso sealed the alliance between the Traba family and Teresa Fernan became her governor in Porto and Coimbra bearing the title lord of Coimbra and Portugal d By 1 February 1121 he was using the title comes Latin for count the highest in the kingdom even though his father was still alive and his brother Vermudo had not yet received it a sure indication of the influence of Teresa 22 In 1122 Fernan received a further two castles from her and had probably already become her lover It has been suggested that they may have married but Fernan was publicly rebuked by the future saint Theotonius for this affair e In that same year 1122 Fernan was able to arrange the advantageous marriage of Vermudo to Urraca Enriquez daughter of Teresa and Henry 2 Teresa of Portugal had assumed the regency of the county of Portugal during the minority of her son Afonso Henriques In 1122 after turning fourteen Afonso knighted himself in the Cathedral of Zamora raised an army and proceeded to take control of his lands Gathering the Portuguese knights to his cause against his mother and Fernan he defeated them both at the Battle of Sao Mamede in 1128 3 From this year which was also that of his father s death Fernan concentrated his influence in Galicia signing himself comes Fernandus de Gallecie Count Ferdinand of Galicia a title his father had used He does soon reappear in Portuguese documents indicating a normalising of relations between him and Afonso 3 5 Role in the defence of the realm under Alfonso VII edit nbsp But now no more in tented fields oppos d By Tagus stream his honour d age lie clos d Yet still his dauntless worth his virtue lived And all the father in the son survived And soon his worth was prov d the parent dame Avow d a second hymeneal flame The low born spouse assumes the monarch s place And from the throne expels the orphan race But young Alphonso like his sires of yore His grandsire s virtues as his name he bore Arms for the fight his ravish d throne to win And the lac d helmet grasps his beardless chin Camoens The Lusiads Canto III part of 28 31 f The first tenencia Fernan received from the king was the Limia in 1131 2 He soon received Trastamara ruled 1132 45 which was long to be associated with the patrimonies of the Traba In 1137 he was given the rule of Trasancos and in 1140 that of Monterroso which he held as late as 1153 2 In 1140 Fernan signed Alfonso VII s charter ordering that he and his queen be buried in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela Fernan signed as count Don Fernando of Traba comes dominus Fernandus de Traua the only time he is ever referred to in contemporary a document with the toponym de Traba by which he is now universally known 5 In June 1137 Fernan probably participated in the recapture of Tuy although the Historia compostellana alleges that the Galician magnates responsible for the defence of the frontier with Portugal were too slow in answering the royal summons and had to be bribed by Diego Gelmirez to join the royal army 23 Fernan appears to have been the only Galician to follow the king to the Navarrese frontier later that year He was with the royal army at Logrono on 3 October though by 20 October Rodrigo Velaz had also joined the army on the Ebro 23 Fernan defended with difficulty the valley of the Minho against the onslaughts of Afonso Henriques as recorded by the Chronica Adefonsi imperatoris Prior to 1140 the Portuguese monarch had come to Galicia several times but always he had been driven back by Fernando Perez and Rodrigo Velaz and other Galician leaders Often he was forced to return to Portugal dishonored g In 1139 or 1140 at Cerneja Cernesa in Galicia he and Rodrigo Velaz were defeated by Teresa s son Afonso Henriques who by that time had proclaimed himself king of Portugal The Battle of Cerneja is recorded in the Chronica Adefonsi Once more Alfonso King of Portugal gathered his army and went to Limia When this news reached Galicia Fernando Perez and Rodrigo Velaz and other of the Emperor s Galician nobles were summoned immediately They marched out with their troops against the Portuguese King and met him at Cernesa After the battle lines were drawn up they began to fight Because of their sins the Counts fled and were defeated 24 The record of Fernan s rule in Deza consists of an original royal charter of July 1144 In 1146 he held the tenencias Monforte de Lemos and Sarria 2 Between 1144 and 1155 Fernan was frequently at court and he participated in almost all of Alfonso VII s major campaigns of the Reconquista commanding the Galician contingents on numerous occasions against the Almohads 19 The major exception was the conquest of Calatrava in January 1147 19 The chronicles do record his valour in the conquest of Cordoba in 1146 3 and in the conquest of Almeria in 1147 At Almeria he led the Galician contingent and his presence can be traced with Alfonso s army on 19 August during its departure from Baeza and again on 25 November during its triumphant return 25 26 The Poema de Almeria describes Fernan s role The valiant strenuus h Count Fernando Perez follows this armed troop of Galicians administering the Galician laws with royal care His position had been strengthened by his tutoring of the Emperor s son If one were to see him one would judge him already a king He is famed for his royal nobility and because he bears a count s lineage i nbsp Sobrado dos Monxes an abandoned royal monastery was granted to Fernan and his brother Vermudo in 1118 In 1142 they established a Cistercian community there Patronage and pilgrimage editFernan actively supported the Cistercians and patronised their monastery at Sobrado dos Monxes which he and his brother Vermudo had first received from Queen Urraca on 29 July 1118 although it was deserted at the time and required its recipients to re found a religious community there j On the occasion of this gift the Traba brothers responded in kind by giving a hound named Ulgar and a hunting spear to the queen s son 28 The gift of Sobrado was confirmed by Alfonso VII on 29 May 1135 but it was not until 14 February 1142 that the Trabas installed a Cistercian abbot Peter and some monks referred to as all the holy men of God and Saint Benedict living according to the custom of the Cistercians k It was one of the earliest Cistercian foundations in Spain and a daughter house of Clairvaux 27 Fernan and Vermudo may have desired that the monks contribute to settling and cultivating the surrounding zone 30 Fernan also made a donation to the Cistercian foundation of Monfero Abbey in 1145 l There are three donations by Fernan to the canons regular of Caaveiro dated 1 April 1104 26 February 1135 and 4 December 1154 all forgeries The cartulary of Caaveiro retains an unusually high number of forged documents and few authentic twelfth century specimens This may indicate that at some point in time the abbey s archives were lost or destroyed and the monks felt it necessary to forge deeds for properties that had really been granted 32 There is the possibility therefore that Fernan or his family was a regular donor to Caaveiro Fernan twice visited Jerusalem after the Second Crusade the second time in 1153 2 He gave lands to the Templars on the coast near A Coruna introducing this military order into the Galicia as early as 1128 before they had received official ecclesiastical approbation 2 In 1152 he made a donation to the Benedictine monastery of Xuvia 2 It is from this late period of his life that a certain document originates that records a donation of his to the favoured monastery of Sobrado dated 1 May 1153 It is written in a francesa script while Fernan s signature appears in a completely different script that resembles Visigothic It may have been written by Fernan himself in which case it represents the only evidence that he received any education besides the standard military one for young noblemen He was brought up at a time when the francesa script had not yet crowded out the Visigothic and the document of 1153 may indicate that he was taught in his youth how to write his name 28 Death and legacy editIn 1151 Fernan was holding the tenencia of Bubal in Galicia and in 1152 that of Solis in western Asturias 33 The date of Fernan s death is very uncertain He was last at court in Toledo on 8 November 1154 m and he never reappears in court records 2 By 4 February 1155 at Valladolid his son Gonzalo was signing royal charters as comes Gundisaluus Count Gonzalo implying a succession in the comital title There is a forged donation by Fernan to the monastery of Caaveiro dated 4 December 1154 in which the count refers to himself as graui infirmitate detemptus detained by a grave illness The charter may have a basis in fact 34 There are also two charters of uncertain authenticity recording a donation dated 1 July 1155 by Fernan and his brother Vermudo to the monastery Fernan had founded at Sobrado dos Monxes 5 There are two documents in the archives of Sobrado dated to June 1160 and 1161 confirmed by a comes dompnus Fernandus senior in Monteroso et in Traua count Don Fernando lord in Monterroso and in Traba and a comes dompnus Fernandus in Traua et in Aranga et in Monteroso count Don Fernando in Traba and in Aranga and in Monterroso respectively These are probably copyists errors for Gundesaluus Fernandi the name of his son 5 Fernan died on 1 November 1155 11 12 Fernan was buried in the cloister of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela n Fernan raised the scion of at least one other aristocratic family in his household Count Froila Ramirez was raised at his court and in 1170 whether before their marriage or after is not known he granted the monastery of Moras to his wife Fernan s granddaughter Urraca Gonzalez out of love for your grandfather Count Don Fernando who raised me and because of faithful service when I was accepted by your father Count Don Gonzalo o Notes edit Comes Petrus de Gallecia Fernandus et Veremudus eius filii where Fernan the younger signs before his elder brother 8 Barton cites Fernan s earliest document as dated 1 May 1110 9 As his biographer relates in the Historia compostellana 14 He was Ferdinand s tutor from at least 1 March 1149 to 16 May 1150 20 His power in Coimbra lasted from at least 6 April 1121 to 31 March 1128 according to Barton 242 n19 Both Bernard F Reilly 1982 The Kingdom of Leon Castilla under Queen Urraca 1109 1126 Princeton Princeton University Press 153 and Fletcher 148 dated it from a 24 January 1121 document in the archives of the monastery of Lorvao Fletcher 39 citing the Vita Theotonii in Portugaliae Monumenta Historica Scriptores ed A Herculano Lisbon 1856 79 88 Reilly 153 speculates about a marriage Translation from the 1887 edition of William Julius Mickle s 1776 translation p 69 and n1 Glenn Edward Lipskey 1972 The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor Northwestern University PhD dissertation hereafter CAI I 76 Barton renders it brave 4 Barton 2006 numbers these lines 74 78 while Glenn Edward Lipskey 1972 The Poem of Almeria The Chronicle of Alfonso the Emperor Northwestern University PhD dissertation 165 numbers these lines 61 65 The Trabas later claimed that Sobrado had once belonged to them and had been unjustly confiscated by Ferdinand I This is a better indication of the reputation of Ferdinand I in Galicia than of anything else 27 Fernan gave subsequent grants to the monastery in 1142 1145 1153 1154 and perhaps 1155 29 27 There is a forged donation to this monastery dated 1147 with many errors 31 This document has been misdated at times to 1152 Barton cites the request of his daughter Maria in January 1169 that she be buried beside him there 35 The original Latin reads propter amore auu uestri comitis domni Fernandi qui me creauit et propter seruicium fidelem quem accepi a patre uestro comite domno Gundisaluo 36 References edit Francisco Olmos 2009 p 29 a b c d e f g h i j Barton 1997 pp 241 42 a b c d e Fletcher 1984 pp 38 40 a b Barton 2002 p 463 a b c d e Pallares amp Portela 1993 pp 823 40 Barton 1997 p 80 Fletcher 1984 p 40 n31 Pallares amp Portela 1993 p 833 Barton 1997 p 241 n1 Barton 1997 pp 59 60 and 82 a b Torres Sevilla Quinones de Leon 1999 p 336 a b Lopez Sangil 2002 p 99 Gonzalez Vazquez 1998 p 215 n8 Barton 1997 p 170 Fletcher 1984 p 147 Barton 1997 pp 213 14 Barton 1997 pp 217 18 Fletcher 1984 p 232 a b c Barton 1997 pp 127 31 Barton 1997 p 241 Barton 1997 p 19 Barton 1997 p 32 a b Barton 1997 p 179 CAI I 78 Barton 1997 p 180 Barton 2002 pp 460 61 a b c Fletcher 1984 p 40 a b Barton 1997 p 64 Barton 1997 p 242 n16 Barton 2002 pp 197 99 Barton 2002 p 242 n15 Barton 1997 p 242 n13 Reilly 1998 pp 177 78 Barton 1997 p 31 and n15 Barton 1997 p 207 Barton 1997 p 247 Bibliography editSecondary sources edit Baron Faraldo Andres 2010 Estructuras de vasallaje en el area eumesa durante el siglo XII El circulo de Fideles del conde Fernando Perez de Traba PDF Catedra Revista eumesa de estudios in Spanish 17 163 186 ISSN 1133 9608 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 02 Retrieved 2016 03 10 Barton Simon 1997 The Aristocracy in Twelfth century Leon and Castile Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521497275 Barton Simon 2002 The Discovery of Aristocracy in Twelfth Century Spain Portraits of the Secular Elite in the Poem of Almeria Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 83 6 Liverpool University of Santiago de Compostela 453 469 doi 10 3828 bhs 83 6 1 ISSN 1475 3839 Davina Sainz Santiago 1998 El monasterio de las Cascas Betanzos I PDF Anuario Brigantino in Spanish 21 Braga Consello de Betanzos A Coruna Camara Municipal de Braga 77 102 OCLC 72890459 Fletcher Richard A 1984 Saint James s Catapult The Life and Times of Diego Gelmirez of Santiago de Compostela Oxford Oxford University Press Francisco Olmos Jose Maria de 2009 El Signo Rodado Regio en Espana Origen Desarrollo y Consolidacion Siglos XII XV Real Academia Matritense de Heraldica y Genealogia es Gonzalez Vazquez Marta 1998 El agua y sus sistemas de suministro en la Compostela medieval PDF In F Bores J Fernandez S Huerta E Rabasa eds Actas del Segundo Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Construccion A Coruna 22 24 de octubre de 1998 Madrid I Juan de Herrera Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 02 Retrieved 2016 03 12 Lopez Ferreiro Antonio 1901 Historia de la Santa A M Iglesia de Santiago de Compostela in Spanish Vol IV Santiago de Compostela Imp y Enc del Seminario Conciliar Central OCLC 932806777 Lopez Moran Enriqueta 2004 El Monacato Femenino Gallego en la Alta Edad Media La Coruna y Pontevedra PDF Nalgures in Spanish I A Coruna Asociacion Cultural de Estudios Historicos de Galicia 119 174 ISSN 1885 6349 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 17 Lopez Sangil Jose Luis 2002 La nobleza altomedieval gallega la familia Froilaz Traba in Spanish La Coruna Toxosoutos S L ISBN 84 95622 68 8 Mattoso Jose 2014 D Afonso Henriques in Portuguese Lisbon Temas e Debates ISBN 978 972 759 911 0 Pallares Maria del Carmen Portela Ermelindo 1993 Aristocracias y sistema de parentesco en la Galicia de los siglos centrales de la Edad Media el grupo de los Traba Hispania Revista Espanola de Historia in Spanish 53 185 Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas CSIC 823 840 ISSN 0018 2141 Reilly Bernard F 1998 The Kingdom of Leon Castilla Under King Alfonso VII 1126 1157 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press Sanchez de Mora Antonio 2003 La nobleza castellana en la plena Edad Media el linaje de Lara Tesis doctoral Universidad de Sevilla in Spanish Vol I Torres Sevilla Quinones de Leon Margarita Cecilia 1998 Relaciones Fronterizas entre Portugal y Leon en tiempos de Alfonso VII El ejemplo de la Casa de Traba PDF Revista da Faculdade de Letras Historia Universidade do Porto in Spanish 15 2 Porto 301 12 ISSN 0871 164X Torres Sevilla Quinones de Leon Margarita Cecilia 1999 Linajes nobiliarios de Leon y Castilla Siglos IX XIII Salamanca Junta de Castilla y Leon Consejeria de educacion y cultura ISBN 84 7846 781 5 Primary sources edit Fernandez de Viana y Vieites Jose Ignacio Gonzalez Balasch Mª Teresa de Pablos Ramirez Juan Carlos 1996 El Tumbo de Caaveiro PDF Catedra Revista de Estudios Eumeses in Spanish 3 267 437 ISSN 1133 9608 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fernando Perez de Traba amp oldid 1186559697, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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