Agnes of Aquitaine, wife of Ramiro II of Aragon facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Agnes |
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Queen consort of Aragon | |
Tenure | 1135– 1137 |
Died | c. 1159 |
Spouse |
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Issue |
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House | Poitiers |
Father | William IX, Duke of Aquitaine |
Mother | Philippa, Countess of Toulouse |
Agnes of Aquitaine (French: Agnès, Spanish: Inés; c. 1105– c. 1159) was Queen of Aragon during her brief marriage to King Ramiro II, a former monk. The couple separated after the birth of their only child, Queen Petronilla, and retired to monasteries. Agnes chose the Abbey of Fontevraud, from where she continued to take part in the affairs of her sons from her first marriage to Viscount Aimery V of Thouars.
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First marriage
Agnes was the daughter of Duke William IX of Aquitaine and Countess Philippa of Toulouse. She was the namesake of her aunt Agnes, wife of King Peter I of Aragon and Navarre. Her first marriage, to Viscount Aimery V of Thouars, was celebrated some time prior to 9 January 1117, when the couple confirmed the possessions of the abbey of Saint-Laon de Thouars. Before Aimery's death in 1127, the couple had three sons:
- William I (died 1151), succeeded his father
- Guy, lord of Oiron (died c. 1149)
- Geoffrey IV (died 1173), succeeded William. Father of Guy of Thouars who married Constance, Duchess of Brittany. Grandfather of Alix of Thouars.
Second marriage
On 13 November 1135 in the cathedral of Jaca, the ancient capital of the Kingdom of Aragon, Agnes married King Ramiro II, a monk who had resigned the bishopric of Roda in order to succeed his childless brother Alfonso the Battler. Agnes' age (approximately thirty) and proven fertility in her prior marriage were probably the main reasons the Aragonese sought her out. Agnes' brother, Duke William X, was also one of the few regional supporters of Antipope Anacletus II, who, as the weaker claimant to the papacy, might be persuaded to support Ramiro's irregular (and uncanonical) accession. Agnes' dowry was a church at Loscertales.
..... Later medieval and early modern historians, embarrassed by the disregard for canon law, invented explanations to reconcile the marriage of a bishop with what was current in their own day. The fourteenth-century Chronicle of San Juan de la Peña records that messengers were sent to the pope to obtain the proper dispensation. The Aragonese translation of the same chronicle places Ramiro's religious status in doubt ("some chronicles say that he was not in holy orders", algunas cronónicas dizen que no era en sacres órdenes). At the Second Lateran Council in 1139, the church, perhaps influenced by the case of Ramiro and Agnes, declared the marriages of clerics to be null and void. Prior to this, they were legitimate, but illegal, marriages.
Queenship
The first known royal diploma in which Agnes appears as queen is an original dated 29 January 1136. By August Agnes had borne Ramiro a daughter, Petronilla. Agnes' last appearance in an Aragonese document is from October 1136: a joint donation with her husband of a mill and a horse at Loscertales to the monastery of San Pedro de Antefruenzo. She and Ramiro may have separated shortly after this. Her brother died on a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela on 3 April 1137. It was probably during his passage through Iberia that his consent to the proposed marriage of the infant Petronilla was obtained; there is no evidence that Agnes took any part in arranging the future of her daughter.
In a series of acts between 11 August and 13 November 1137, Ramiro betrothed his daughter to the powerful Count Raymond Berengar IV of Barcelona, made his subjects swear an oath of allegiance to the count and then handed over the royal power to him. The transfer of power done, Ramiro returned to religious life and Agnes retired to the Abbey of Fontevraud, where her mother had lived. She is recorded there between 1141 and 1147, and there she died around 1159.
See also
In Spanish: Inés de Poitou (1105-1159) para niños
- Dukes of Aquitaine family tree
Agnes of Aquitaine, wife of Ramiro II of Aragon
House of Poitiers
Born: circa 1105 Died: circa 1159 |
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Royal titles | ||
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Preceded by Urraca of Léon |
Queen consort of Aragon 1135– 1137 |
Succeeded by Sancha of Castile |