Gonzalo Fernández de Traba
Gonzalo Fernández de Traba(died 1160) was aGaliciannobleman and the head of theTraba family.He was the eldest son and successor ofFernando Pérez de Trababy his wife Sancha González.
By 1 August 1150 Gonzalo had married a certain Elvira Rodríguez, a woman of unknown origins, with whom, on that date, he donated his portion ofSan Julián de Ezebreiroto theCistercianmonastery of Monfero.[1]By 12 January 1156 he was re-married to Berenguela Rodríguez, daughter ofRodrigo Vélazand Urraca Álvarez and sister ofÁlvaro Rodríguez,thus relating himself by marriage to theVela family.[2]His sons, all by his first wife, wereFernando,Gómezand Rodrigo.[3]He also two daughters by his first wife: Urraca, who marriedFruela Ramírez,and Aldonza, who marriedLope Díaz I de Haro.[4]
Gonzalo held the title ofcount,pertaining to the highest rank in the kingdom, by 4 February 1155, when he signed a royal charter atValladolidascomes Gundisaluus.Since his father is never mentioned in royal documents after 8 November 1154, it is probable that he had died and his son had been named a count as his successor.[5]This scheme is complicated two charters of donation dated 1 July 1155 by Fernando and his brotherVermudoto the monastery they had founded atSobrado dos Monxes.If authentic, these charters would push his date of death back a half-year and demonstrate that Gonzalo held the comital rank within his father's lifetime. Two documents in the archives of Sobrado, dated 1151 and June 1160, are confirmed by acomes dompnus Fernandus in Traua et in Aranga et in Monteroso( "count Don Fernando in Traba and in Aranga and in Monterroso" ) and acomes dompnus Fernandus senior in Monteroso et in Traua( "count Don Fernando, lord in Monterroso and in Traba" ), respectively. These are probably copyists' errors forGundesaluus Fernandi(Gonzalo Fernández).
Although Gonzalo is first mentioned in a document of 1 August 1140, his public life began with the death of his father and the assumption of the comital title. By December 1155 the government of thetenencia(fief) ofTrastámarahad been confided in him. He is last recorded ruling there in January 1159. By February 1156 he had been invested with thetenenciasofArangaandTraba,which he kept until his death. Trastámara and Traba, though not patrimonial lands, were royal territories usually entrusted to members of the Traba family. In February 1160 the important fief ofMonterrosowas added to his domains, though there is some evidence that he held it from as early as 1157. A charter dated 1152 refers to himtenente( "holding" ) Monterroso, but goes on to nameFerdinand II of León(1157–88) as the reigning monarch.
Probably on 16 September 1159 Gonzalo came to an agreement with theArchbishop of Santiago,Martín Martínezand the canons of theCathedral of Santiagoconcerning jurisdiction inMontaos.On 27 October 1159 Gonzalo made a donation to the importantBenedictinemonastery atJubiain Galicia. He is last cited alive in a document of 9 September 1160 and another of 18 November explicitly refers to his death.
Notes
[edit]- ^The text of the donation readsEgo Gundisalvus Fernandiz et coniux mea Geloria Roderiquiz, facimus textum firmitatis ut habeamus partem in prima resurrectione( "I Gonzalo Fernández and my wife Elvira Rodríguez, make this enduring text that we may have a part in the first resurrection" ), quoted in José María Canal Sánchez-Pagín (1995), "La Casa de Haro en León y Castilla durante el siglo XII: nuevas conclusiones",Anuario de estudios medievales,25:1, 14, who dates it to 1145 (Spanish era1183) and on page 15 makes Elvira a daughter of Rodrigo Vélaz, same as Gonzalo's second wife.
- ^The couple confirmed thecarta de arras(charter granting abride price) of Fruela Peláez to María Martín on that date, signingComes Gundisalvus, filius comitis Fernandi, dominans Transtamar, [et] comitissa eius Berengariae( "Count Gonzalo, son of count Ferdinand, ruling Trastámara, [and] his countess Berengaria" ), quoted in Canal Sánchez-Pagín, 14 n31. Berenguela's parentage is found in Barton, 257.
- ^The youngest servedAlfonso IXasalférezbetween 3 January 1208 and 20 April 1209, and died after 1214.
- ^Barton, 257, mentions only Urraca. Canal Sánchez-Pagín, 12–16, argues that Aldonza was as well.
- ^Barton, 31 and n15.
References
[edit]- This article is based on Simon Barton (1997),The Aristocracy in Twelfth-century León and Castile(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), especially p. 257, which contains a briefcurriculum vitae.
- For an overview of Gonzalo's family, see María del Carmen Pallarés (1993), "Aristocracia y sistema de parentesco en la Galicia de los siglos centrales de la Edad Media: el grupo de los Traba",Hispania,53:185, 823–40.