Ramiro II OF ARAGON
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Ramiro II OF ARAGON (1075?-1157)

Name: Ramiro II OF ARAGON 1
Sex: Male
Nickname: "The Monk"
Father: Sancho I (IV) RAMIREZ (1042?-1094)
Mother: Felicie DE ROUCY (ROUCI) (1060-1123)

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1075 (app)
Occupation frm 1137 to 1157 (age 61-82) King of Aragon
Death 16 Aug 1157 (age 81-82) Huesca
Group/Caste Membership House of Aragon

Marriage

      picture    
      Charter by which Petronilla abdicated in favour of her son Alfonso II of Aragon.    
 
Spouse Agnes OF POITOU & AQUITAINE ( -1157)
Children Petronilla OF ARAGON (1135-1174)
Marriage 1135 (age 59-60)

Individual Note

Ramiro II (c.1075–16 August 1157, Huesca), called the Monk, was King of Aragon from 1134 until withdrawing from public life in 1137 (although he used the royal title until his death). He was the youngest son of Sancho Ramírez, King of Aragon and Navarre and Felicia de Rouci.

 

He spent most of his early life as a monk in a French monastery and later as abbot of the monastery of San Pedro el Viejo at Huesca. In 1134, when his brother Alfonso the Battler died heirless, Ramiro was bishop of Barbastro-Roda. He temporarily gave up his monastic vows in order to secure the succession to the crown of Aragon, while losing Navarre, which had formed part of his late brother's dominions but in 1134 became independent under García Ramírez. He fought off two other claimants to the throne, one, Pedro de Atarés, descended from an illegitimate brother of king Sancho Ramírez, and the other, Alfonso VII, king of Castile.

 

The reign of Ramiro the Monk, as he is known, was tumultuous. At the beginning of his reign he had problems with his nobles, who thought he would be docile and easily steered to their wishes, but discovered him to be inflexible. In order to produce an heir, he married Agnes, daughter of Duke William IX, Duke of Aquitaine. Once wed, his wife bore a daughter, Petronilla, who was betrothed to Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Barcelona at the age of one. The marriage contract, signed at Barbastro on 11 August 1137, made Petronilla 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 other wives. Ramon accepted Ramiro as "King, Lord and Father", 'renounced his family name' in favor of the House of Aragon and united the County of Barcelona with the Kingdom. This union, which came to be called the Confederacion Catalanoaragonesa (Catalan-Aragonese Confederation),[1] created the Crown of Aragon,[2] returning the previously-landlocked kingdom of Aragon to the position of peninsular power it had held prior to the loss of Navarre, as well as giving it a window to the Western Mediterranean it would come to dominate.

 

In the time between his accession and the betrothal of his daughter, Ramiro II had already had to put down a rebellion of the nobles, and knowing himself not to be a war king, he passed royal authority to his son-in-law Ramon Berenguer on 13 November 1137. Ramon became the "Prince of the Aragonese people" (Princeps Aragonensis) and effective chief of the kingdom's armies. Ramiro never formally resigned his royal rights, continuing to use the royal title,[3] and keeping aware of the business of the kingdom, he withdrew from public life, returning to the Abbey of San Pedro in Huesca. He later became known for the famous and passionate legend of the Bell of Huesca. He died there[4] on 16 August 1157, the crown then formally passing to his daughter Petronilla.[5]

 

NOTES:

1 The name Confederacion Catalanoaragonesa first appeared in the 19th century, arising out of the Renaixença as "La confederación catalano-aragonesa". (e.g. Antonio Bofarull y Broca (1872). La Confederación Catalano-Aragonesa, realizada en el periodo más notable del gobierno soberano del conde de Barcelona, Ramón Berenguer IV: estudio histórico, crítico y documentado por D. Antonio de Bofarull y Broca, premiado por unanimidad en el Certamen abierto en 15 de diciembre de 1869 por el Ateneo Catalán. Barcelona: Casa Editorial de D. Luis Tasso.)

2 Lapeña Paúl (2008), pp. 193-194; "La Corona de Aragón comienza a existir en 1137, con los esponsales de la infantil infanta doña Petronilla, hija y heredera del rey Ramiro II de Aragón, con el conde de Barcelona, Ramón Berenguer IV [...]". Miquel Batllori (1999). La Universidad de Valencia en el ámbito cultural de la Corona de Aragón, Cinc Segles. Universitat de València, p. 8. ISBN 9788437041612.

3 "Continuó Ramiro utilizando el título de rey, e incluso así le mencionan las crónicas escritas en otros reinos [...]". Lapeña Paúl (2008), p. 200; "Ramiro II siguió ostentando el título de rey hasta su muerte". Javier Leralta. (2008), Apodos reales: historia y leyenda de los motes regios. Madrid: Sílex, p. 78. (Serie Historia) ISBN 9788477372110.

4 and is buried there

5 "ego Petronilla, Dei gratia aragonensis regina et barchinonensis comitissa". 1164, June 18. Barcelona, in Arxiu Virtual Universitat Jaume I. Documents d'època medieval relatius a la Corona d'Aragó. Cancelleria reial. Liber Feudorum Maior, ff. 10c-11a [Miguel Rosell, 1945, nº 17]. Transcripció efectuada en agost de 2006 a partir d'aquesta edició.

 

SOURCES:

Belenguer, Ernest (2006). «Aproximación a la historia de la Corona de Aragón». La Corona de Aragón. El poder y la imagen de la Edad Media a la Edad Moderna (siglos XII - XVIII). Sociedad Estatal para la Acción Cultural Exterior (SEACEX), Generalitat Valenciana y Ministerio de Cultura de España: Lunwerg, pp. 25–53. ISBN 84-9785-261-3

Bisson, Thomas N. (2000). The Medieval Crown of Aragon: A Short History. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Chaytor, Henry John. (1933). A History of Aragon and Catalonia. London: Methuan Publishing.

Lapeña Paúl, Ana Isabel. (2008). Ramiro II de Aragón: el rey monje (1134–1137). Gijón: Trea. ISBN 978-84-9704-392-22

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 112, 111-25.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramiro_II_of_Aragon.