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In the 1120s Fernán's power extended over almost all of Galicia and Portgual. 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. Fernando or Fernán Pérez de Traba (c.1090–c.1155), also Fernão Peres de Trava in Portuguese, 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 realm and was de facto ruler of Portugal between 1121 and 1128.[1][2]
[edit] Establishing a power-base in GaliciaFernán was the second son of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba, founder of the House of Traba, and his first wife, Urraca Fróilaz.[3] 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.[4] 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 Caabeiro, along with his sons.[5] Early in the twelfth century (before 1125) Pedro gave his son a Moorish cook, probably a slave, named Martin,[6] and later Fernán took a wife, but when he became the lover of Teresa of Portugal he repudiated her. With Teresa he had two daughters: Sancha (born c. 1121), who married Álvaro Rodríguez, and Teresa, who married Nuño Pérez de Lara. Fernán's first attested wife, Sancha González, daughter of Gonzalo Ansúrez and Urraca Vermúdez, was possibly his second wife. They were married by 1134, and she was still living in 1154.[1] With her the count had several children, including Gonzalo, María (married Ponce de Cabrera), and Urraca. 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).[2] In 1121, however, he had constructed a fortress at Raneta south of Santiago, which the archbishop had promptly destroyed.[7] He may have been incited by the queen, who was trying to separate Diego and the Trabas to prevent alliance of regional powers in Galicia.[8] Fernán also mediated between the archbishop and his elder brother Vermudo in 1121, resulting in Diego bestowing gifts on the latter in return for the fortress of Faro, which he had claimed was his.[9] In 1134 the dispute with Diego flared up once more after Fernán imprisoned one of his knights and Pedro Crescónez, the archdeacon of Nendos, whose jurisidiction covered large parts of the Traba patrimony.[10] [edit] De facto ruler of Portugal (1121–1128)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)[11] In 1116 Fernán participated in the Galician–Portuguese 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").[12] 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.[13] Further, Fernán received two castles from her in 1122 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.[14] In that same year (1122) he was able to arrange the advantageous marriage of Vermudo to Urraca Enríquez, daughter of Teresa and Henry.[1] During Urraca's reign, 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 Froilaz and whom they tried to make king in Galicia when he was not on good terms with 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.[15] In 1149 Alfonso entrusted to him the mentoring of his second son, the future Ferdinand II.[16] Long after Fernán's own death, in 1178, his daughter Teresa married Ferdinand II as his second wife. 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 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".[17] While Teresa of Portugal had assumed the regency of the county of Portugal during the minority of her son Afonso Henriques, in 1122, when Afonso turned fourteen, he 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.[2] 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 cooling of relations between him and Afonso.[2][3] [edit] Role in the defence of the realm under Alfonso VIIThe first tenencia Fernán received from the king was the Limia in 1131.[1] He soon received Trastámara (ruled 1132–45), which was long to be associated with the patrimonial inheritance of Traba. In 1137 he was given the rule of Trasancos and in 1140 that of Monterroso, which he held as late as 1153.[1] In 1140 Fernán signed Alfonso VII's orders for his and his wife's burials in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela as "count Don Fernando of Traba" (comes dominus Fernandus de Traua), the only time he is ever referred to in contemporary a document by the name "Traba" by which he is now known.[3] 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.[1] 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 imperatoris:
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.[15] The major exception was the conquest of Calatrava in January 1147.[15] The chronicles do record his valour in the conquest of Almería later that year,[19] and in the conquest of Córdoba the year prior (1146).[2] He defended with difficulty the valley of the Minho against the onslaughts of Afonso Henriques, as recorded by the Chronica Adefonsi:
In June 1137 he probably participated in the recapture of Túy, although the Historia compostellana alleges that the Galician magnates whose responsibility the defence of the frontier with Portugal was were too slow in answering the royal summons and had to be bribed by Diego Gelmírez to join the royal army.[21] 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 arrived with the army on the Ebro.[21] [edit] Pilgrimage, patronage and deathFernán 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.[22] 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.[23] 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".[24] It was one of the earliest Cistercian foundations in Spain and a daughter house of Clairvaux.[25] Fernán and Vermudo may have desired that the monks contribute to settling the surrounding zone.[26] Fernán also made a donation to the Cistercian foundation of Monfero Abbey in 1145.[27] There are three donations by Fernán to the canons regular of Caabeiro dated 1 April 1104, 26 February 1135, and 4 December 1154, all forgeries. The cartulary of Caabeiro 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 it had really been granted.[28] There is the possibility, therefore, that Fernán or his family was a regular donor to Caabeiro. Fernán twice visited Jerusalem after the Second Crusade, the second time in 1153.[1] He gave lands to the Templars on the coast near Corunha, introducing this military order into the Galicia as early as 1128, before they had received official ecclesiastical approbation.[1] In 1152 he made a donation to the Benedictine monastery of Jubia.[1] It is from this late period of his life that the first evidence of his education appears. A document recording a donation of his to favoured Sobrado on 1 May 1153 is written in a francesa script, while Fernán's signature is in a completely different script that resembles Visigothic. It may have been written by Fernán himself.[29] In 1151 Fernán was holding the tenencia of Bubal in Galicia and in 1152 that of Solís in western Asturias.[30] The date of Fernán's death is very uncertain. He was last at court in Toledo on 8 November 1154[31] and he never reappears in court records.[1] By 4 February 1155, at Valladolid, his son Gonzalo was signing royal charters as comes Gundisaluus (Count Gonzalo), implying a succession. There is a forged donation by Fernán to the monastery of Caabeiro 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.[32] There are also two charters of donation dated 1 July 1155 by Fernán and his brother Vermudo to the monastery Fernán had founded at Sobrado dos Monxes. If authentic, these charters would push his date of death back a half-year. Finally, there are two documents in the archives of Sobrado dated to June 1160 and 1151, 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.[3] Whatever his date of death, Fernán was buried in the cloister of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela.[33] The count Froila Ramírez was raised at Fernán's court and in 1170, whether before their marriage or after is not know, 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".[34] [edit] Notes
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