See also

Family of Aimery V and Agnes + of AQUITAINE

Husband: Aimery V (c. 1067-1127)
Wife: Agnes + of AQUITAINE (1100-1159)
Children: William (c. 1130-1151)
Guy (c. 1132- )
Geoffery (c. 1134-1173)
Marriage 1117

Husband: Aimery V

Name: Aimery V
Sex: Male
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1067 (est)
Occupation Viscounte of Thours
Death 1127 (age 59-60)
Cause: killed in battle

Wife: Agnes + of AQUITAINE

Name: Agnes + of AQUITAINE
Sex: Female
Father: William IX + (1071-1126)
Mother: Philippa + (1073-1117)
Birth 1100 Aquitaine, France
Occupation Queen Consort of Aquitane
Title frm 1135 to 1137 (age 34-37) Queen of Aquitane
Death 1159 (age 58-59) Abbey of Fontevraud

Child 1: William

Name: William
Sex: Male
Birth 1130 (est)
Occupation Viscounte of Thours
Death 1151 (age 20-21)

Child 2: Guy

Name: Guy
Sex: Male
Birth 1132 (est)

Child 3: Geoffery

Name: Geoffery
Sex: Male
Birth 1134 (est)
Death 1173 (age 38-39)

Note on Wife: Agnes + of AQUITAINE

Agnes of Aquitaine was a daughter of Duke William IX of Aquitaine and his wife Philippa, Countess of Toulouse. She was an aunt of Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen consort of France and England.

Agnes was first married in 1117 to Aimery V, Viscomte of Thouars, the marriage produced three sons:

 

William (d.1151), succeeded his father as Viscomte of Thouars

Guy, did not succeed as Viscomte, died before William

Geoffery (d.1173), succeeded William

 

Through Geoffery, Agnes was great-grandmother to Alix, Duchess of Brittany.

 

Aimery was killed in battle in 1127 and Agnes remained a widow for eight years.

Agnes was secondly married to Ramiro II of Aragon[1], the couple probably wed on November 13 of 1135 in the cathedral of Jaca. The exact reason for the marriage was that Agnes had already borne children; if she could have four surviving children, then she would probably be able to give Ramiro a surviving heir. The couple did have children - they had one daughter, Petronila of Aragon, who later succeeded her father as Queen of Aragon. Ramiro died in 1157.

 

Petronila was betrothed to Ramon Berenguer IV at the age of two. The marriage contract, signed at Barbastro on 11 August 1137, made Petronila the heiress to the crown of Aragon, which in event of her childless death would pass to Ramon Berenguer and any children he might have by another wife

 

It is very likely that Agnes went back to Aquitaine after the birth of her daughter, since her name doesn't appear on any Aragonese documents during her daughter's reign. Agnes retired to the Abbey of Fontevraud, where her mother had lived, and died there around 1159.1

Sources

1Charles Cawley, "Medieval Lands".