Viscounts of Narbonne

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The Viscount of Narbonne was the secular ruler of Narbonne in the Middle Ages. Narbonne had been the capital of the Visigoth province of Septimania, until the eighth century, after which it became the Carolingian Viscounty of Narbonne. Narbonne was nominally subject to the Carolingian Counts of Toulouse but was usually governed autonomously. The city was a major port on the Mediterranean Sea. In the twelfth century, the court of Ermengarde of Narbonne (reigned 1134 to 1192) presided over one of the cultural centers where the spirit of courtly love was developed. In the fifteenth century Narbonne passed to the County of Foix and in 1507 to the royal domain of France.

Contents

[edit] Viscounts of Narbonne

[edit] Muslim emirs

  • Umar ibn Umar (747-?)
  • Abd ar-Rahman ibn Uqba (?-759)

[edit] Visigothic counts

[edit] Carolingian counts and viscounts

[edit] Carolingian vigerii

[edit] Independent viscounts

[edit] House of Lara

[edit] House of Tinières

  • Peter of Tinières (1424-1447, ruled as William III)

[edit] House of Foix

[edit] Sources

  • Jacqueline Caille, "Ermengarde, vicomtesse de Narbonne (1127/29-1196/97). Une grande figure féminine du midi aristocratique", in La femme dans l'histoire et la société méridionales (IXe-XIXe siècles), Actes du 66e congrès de la Fédération Historique du Languedoc Méditerranéen et du Roussillon (Narbonne, October 15-16, 1994), Montpellier, 1995, pages 9-50.
  • Thierry Stasser, "La maison vicomtale de Narbonne aux Xe et XIe siècles", Annales du Midi, v. 204, 1993, p. 489-507.
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