Counts of Toulouse

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The first comites (counts) of Toulouse were the administrators of the city and its environs under the Merovingians. No succession of such royal appointees is known, though a few names survive to the present. With the Carolingians, the appointments (of both counts and duces, dukes) become more regular and more well-known, though the office soon fell out of the orbit of the royal court and became hereditary.

The hereditary Counts of Toulouse ruled the city of Toulouse and its surrounding county from the late 9th century until 1270. The counts and other family members were also at various times counts of Quercy, Rouergue, Albi, and Nîmes, and margraves of Gothia and Provence. Also, Raymond IV founded the Crusader state of Tripoli, and his descendants were counts there.

Contents

[edit] Royal appointments

[edit] House of Rouergue

Recent research suggests adding at least one and probably three previously overlooked counts, this would necessitate renumbering the succeeding Raymonds, though this is not done here.

At that point Toulouse passed to the Crown of France, by the terms of the Treaty of Languedoc.

[edit] House of Bourbon

In 1681, Toulouse was resurrected as a royal appanage.

[edit] Further reading

  • Genty, Roger. Les Comtes de Toulouse: Histoire et Traditions. Editions de Poliphile, 1987.

[edit] External links

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