Petronilla, Countess of Bigorre

Petronilla
Countess of Bigorre
Spouse(s) Gaston VI, Viscount of Béarn
Nuño Sánchez
Guy de Montfort
Aymor de Racon
Boson of Mastas, Seigneur de Cognac

Issue

Alice, Countess of Bigorre
Petronilla de la Roche-Tesson
Martha of Mastas
Father Bernhard IV, Count of Comminges
Mother Stephanie-Beatrice IV, Countess of Bigorre
Born c.1184
Died 1251

Petronilla of Bigorre or Petronilla of Comminges (c. 1184 – 1251) was the only child of Bernhard IV, Count of Comminges and his wife Stephanie-Beatrice IV, Countess of Bigorre. Petronilla succeeded her mother in 1194 as Countess of Bigorre, she was also Viscountess of Marsan and Nébouzan through further successions. She reigned as countess for fifty-seven years, in which time she was married five times.

Biography

Early life

Petronilla was born around 1184 as the only child of her parents, therefore she was their heir. As a child Petronilla was at the centre of political plans; first conducted by her father who acted as regent after the death of Stephanie-Beatrice. However, Petronilla's guardianship was soon handed over to Alfonso II of Aragon; who had Petronilla betrothed and married to one of his allies Gaston VI, Viscount of Béarn in early 1196.[1] Gaston ruled jointly with Petronilla over Bigorre. The couple remained childless, Gaston participated in the forty-five year Albigensian Crusade, a time in which he lost favour; he was excommunicated by the Council of Vabres and his territories declared forfeit by the pope.[2]

Adulthood

Petronilla's husband Gaston died in 1214 leaving her a childless widow around aged thirty. The following year, Petronilla was married to Nuño Sánchez, a grandson of Petronilla of Aragon however, the marriage was annulled by Pope Honorius III the very next year in 1216. The leader of the on-going crusade, Simon IV de Montfort, who was at that time at the height of his power, he had Petronilla in 1216 married with his own son Guy.[3] The power of the Monfort family began to decline during the Albigensian Crusade, there was opposition by the local nobility in 1218, Simon de Montfort was killed at Toulouse and Guy himself was killed in 1220 when taking Castelnaudary. Petronilla was left with two daughters by this marriage.[4]

Although her husband and father-in-law had died, Petronilla remained at their property in the camp of the northern French crusaders as her brother-in-law succeeded as Amaury VI of Montfort and he had his sister-in-law remarried to Aymor de Racon. This was followed by the failure of the papal crusade in 1224 and the death of Aymor, the couple having no children.

In 1228 Petronilla married a fifth and final time to Boson of Mastas, Seigneur de Cognac. Petronilla spent the next few years on her husband's estates in Aquitaine as they had made themselves unpopular by their marriages with the Crusaders and their own people. In 1230, Petronilla returned to Bigorre with her husbad where public order had fallen, this was due to her many years of absence, therefore public order was re-manufactured. In 1232 they attacked even Petronilla's half-brother Bernard V in order to inherit the Comminges as their father had died in 1225. Although the claim on Comminges could not be enforced, Petronilla did inherit large parts of the Nébouzan from her father. In 1242 to Petronilla reconciled with the nobility of Languedoc, who had turned against her because of her hostile northern French husband, Boson; caused after she and her husband were in the revolt of Count Raymond VII of Toulouse. The rebellion had failed and Boson lost favour with Louis IX of France and eventually died in 1251.

Children

In total Petronilla had three children, two from her third marriage and one by her fifth marriage:

With Guy de Monfort she had two daughters:

With Boson of Mastas she had one daughter:

Death and Legacy

Near the end of her life the Countess Petronilla relinguished the government of Bigorre to her brother-in-law, Simon de Montfort Earl of Leicester and governor of Guyenne. Petronilla retired to an abbey and died in 1251.

Simon had interpreted Petronilla's act of relinquishing Bigorre to him as a gift and he was fought by Alix (Petronilla's daughter and heiress) assisted by Martha. To prevent Guyenne and Gascony from rebelling, Henry III of England recalled Simon de Montfort and appointed John Grailly in his place.

Petronilla's grandson was Eskivat de Chabanais who had succeeded his mother Alix without protest, but made the mistake of keeping land that Martha had in Bigorre. Martha's husband Gaston VII of Béarn then invaded the county, forcing Eschivat to defend it, seeking the assistance of Prince Edward of England and the alliance of Count Roger IV of Foix.

In 1258, war resumed in the region and Eschivat agreed to temporarily surrender the County of Bigorre to Simon de Montfort, this time to end the conflict. In doing so, he committed the same mistake as his grandmother, Petronilla, because Simon refused to return the county. Soon after, Simon de Montfort rebelled against King Henry III, and Eschivat helped Gaston VII regain Bigorre.

After his death, Petronilla's daughter Martha and her granddaughter by Alix, Laura competed for the County of Bigorre. After this point the succession become disputed and whether the county owed allegiance to England or France was 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, Count of Foix (a descendant of Petronilla through Martha). From then on it is a subsidiary title of the counts of Foix.

References

  1. Jaurgain (1902), p. 389, quoting Marca (Béarn), p. 495.
  2. Luchaire, Achille and Edward Benjamin Krehbiel, Social France at the time of Philip Augustus, (Henry Holt and Company, 1912), 296.
  3. Chronique de Guillaume de Puylaurens, Chap. XXVI, p. 129.
  4. GASCONY, Medieval Lands