The County of Bigorre was a small feudatory of the Duchy of Aquitaine in the ninth through fifteenth centuries. Its capital was Tarbes.
The county was constituted out of the dowry of a Faquilène, an Aquitainian princess, for her husband Donatus Lupus I, the son of Lupus III of Gascony. The original Bigorre was considerable in size, but successive generations, following on Gascon traditions, gave out portions as appanages to younger sons. The county lost Lavedan, Aster, Aure, and Montaner in the first two generations.
The original Gascon dynasty, probably descended from Lupus II of Gascony, died out in Bigorre in the eleventh century, the county passing to the House of Foix and then that of Béarn. In the twelfth century, it went to the house of Marsan and then of Comminges and in the thirteenth to that of Montfort . It was briefly in the hands of the Armagnacs and passed between English and French suzerainty during the Hundred Years' War before finally being recovered by the French. In the fifteenth century, it fell to the House of Foix again and thence to the crown in an exchange of properties.
After this point the succession become disputed and whether the county owes allegiance to England or France is also fought over. In 1360, the Treaty of Brétigny made it decisively French. In 1407, it belonged to Bernard VII of Armagnac, who sold it that year to John I of Foix. From then on it is a subsidiary title of the counts of Foix.