Rodrigo Velázquez

Rodrigo Velázquez (died 977/8), the son of a certain Velasco and his wife Trudilde, was an important magnate of Galicia during the reigns of Ramiro II, Ordoño III, Sancho I, and Ramiro III. He used the title dux (duke), the highest in Galicia at the time, and he even treated diplomatically with the Caliphate of Córdoba. He has been implicated in factional fighting over the succession to the Leonese throne, but the major battle of his career was part of a private aristocratic feud.

Politics of León and Galicia

The chapel of San Miguel at Celanova dates from 942. The monastery was heavily patronised by Rodrigo and his clan.

On 13 June 950 Rodrigo[1] confirmed an accord between Rosendo, Bishop of Iria, and the inhabitants of Villaza, defining the boundary between the bishopric and the village. In the list of witnesses appears as third of four in a list that includes three infantes (royal princes): Hordonius prolis regis (Ordoño III), Sancius prolis regis (Sancho I), and Hordonius prolis domni Adefonsi regis (Ordoño IV).[2] On 28 March 959, Rodrigo confirmed a donation of Sancho I to the monastery of Celanova.[2]

Rodrigo is usually credited as one of the leaders of the party that supported Sancho I and his son Ramiro III in the wars over the Leonese succession that began in the late 950s and continued into the 980s.[3] The chief rival clan was led by Gonzalo Menéndez, who supported first Ordoño III and later his son Vermudo II. This thesis, however, is disputed. Rodrigo appears three times in the diplomas of Ordoño III: on 27 January and 16 September 954 and 10 May 955. There is no record of Rodrigo between 956 and 958. He figures in four of the diplomas of Sancho I: those of 28 March and 1 of December 959 and 26 April and December 960. During the reign of Ramiro III Rodrigo witnessed the royal restoration of the Diocese of Simancas in 974 and the testament of Rosendo in 977, which the king also witnessed. The absence of Rodrigo from court for a total of six years during the reigns of Sancho I and Ramiro III, and his comparatively frequent recurrence in the diplomas of Ordoño III, does not support the hypothesis that he was a creature of the former.

The rivalry between the two families had more to do with a dispute between Gonzalo's mother, Mummadomna, abbess of Guimarães, and a relative of Rodrigo's, Guntroda, abbess of Pazóo.[4] It may have been in 966 or 967, during the regency of Elvira Ramírez, that Rodrigo was defeated by Gonzalo at the Battle of Aguiuncias. By September 968 the two were reconciled.[5] Justo Pérez de Urbel argued that the absence of Rodrigo and Gonzalo from court during the regency of Elvira was evidence that during this period they were de facto independent, but they were in León on 20 September 968 for the confirmation of a noble gift to the abbey of Sobrado.[6] On the other hand, the battle may have taken place between 970 and 974, after Gonzalo had fallen out with Ramiro III. The resulting bad blood between the families is alluded to as late as 1 October 982.[7]

On 23 September 973 al-Ḥakam II, Caliph of Córdoba, received ambassadors from the Kingdom of Navarre, Ferdinand Ansúrez, the Beni Gómez, and Rodrigo Velázquez. The Caliph bestowed on them gifts in exchange for reports from the ones who sent them.[8] Besides his vast holdings in Galicia, Rodrigo held property in Castile, where, on 20 March 974, he exchanged property with abbot Peter of San Paio de Antealtares in the village of Sandulces.[9]

Legend and death

In 977 Rodrigo's only son, Pelayo Rodríguez, was elected Bishop of Iria, probably under the influence of the secular nobility. He was expelled from the see in 985 by Vermudo II. According to the Historia Compostelana:

Entretanto Rodrigo Velázquez, padre del obipso expulsado, unido a otros condes de esta región introdujo acá a los sarracenos acaudillados por Almanzor; los cuales entrando en Compostela, destruyeron hasta los cimientos la mayor parte de las paredes de la Iglesia del Santo Apóstol, excepto su santísimo altar.
Meanwhile, Rodrigo Velázquez, father of the expelled bishop, united with other counts of this region [Galicia] introduced there the Saracens led by al-Manṣūr; who, entering in Compostela, destroyed to the foundations the greater part of the walls of the Church of the Holy Apostle, save his most holy altar.[10]

Thus, according to the Historia, the expulsion of Pelayo incited Rodrigo to call in his Saracen allies to wreak havoc on Galicia, even sacking Santiago de Compostela itself. On the other hand, the Chronicon Iriense makes the cause of Pelayo's expulsion the hatred of the Galician nobles for Rodrigo Velázquez, as a result of his destructive alliance with al-Manṣūr.[10] Neither can be correct, however, since Pelayo's election occurred shortly before his father's death five years before Vermudo's election and some seven or eight years before Pelayo's expulsion. Al-Manṣūr's sack of Santiago in fact took place in 997.

On 17 January 977, Rodrigo confirmed a charter by which Rosendo, then Bishop of Iria, conceded the monastery of Celanova to Pelayo and recognised him as his successor.[2] Rodrigo died between 16 June 977, the last date he is known to have been living, when he witnessed a donation of Ramiro III to the monastery of Sahagún, and 23 October 978, the first date he is known to be dead, when his widow and his children donated the village of Paredes to the monastery of Celanova, as Rodrigo had intended.[11]

Marriages and children

Rodrigo's first wife was Adosinda Gunterícez, daughter of Gunterico Arias and Gontrodo (Gunterota) González. She was the mother of all his (known) children: their daughters Oneca, Trudilde, Velasquita,[12] Muniadomna, and Ildonza, and their only son, Pelayo.[2] His second wife was Onega Lucídez (Honega prolis Lucidi), daughter of Lucidio Aloítez and Jimena. They were married by 974, when she is referred to in a charter as coniux Ruderici ducis (wife of duke Rodrigo). In 985 she made a donation to the monastery of Lorvão. Her last known act (9 June 999) was a donation to the monastery of Celanova on behalf of the soul of bone memorie vir meus ... Rudericus Uelasquiz comite ("my man of good memory ... count Rodrigo Velázquez").[2]

Notes

  1. Among the ways his name appears in primary sources are Rudericus Uelasquiz, Rudericus Uelasconius, and Rudericus prolis Uelasconi.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Early Medieval Spanish Nobility, Chapter 1: Nobility in Galicia. Section E: Family of Rodrigo Velásquez, Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands Project.
  3. José-Luis Martín (1965), "Pelayo Rodríguez, obispo de Santiago (977–985)", Anuario de los estudios medievales, 472 n37. Rubén García Álvarez refers to Rodrigo as an hechura de Sancho el Craso y de su hijo Ramiro ("creature of Sancho the Fat and his son Ramiro").
  4. Guntroda was a sister-in-law of Rodrigo's brother, Ordoño Velázquez.
  5. Martín, 473.
  6. Lucky K. Pick, "Dominissima, prudentissima: Elvira, First Queen-Regent of León", 48.
  7. Martín, 472 n38.
  8. Pick, 59.
  9. The words of the charter: Rudericus dux condam proliz Uelasconi ... cum meos fratres ... la vila de Sandulces ... en tierra de Castella ("Rodrigo duke and son of Velasco ... with my brothers ... the village of Sandulces ... in the land of Castile").
  10. 10.0 10.1 Martín,, 2, 468 n8.
  11. Martín, 471 and n34. The donors are listed as Pelagius ... Yriensis et apostolice sedis episcopus, Onega comitissa ad supradicto duce derelicta, item proles illius Onega, Trudilli, Uelasquida, Mumadomna, Ildonzia ("Pelayo ... of Iria and the apostolic see bishop, Onega countess of the aforementioned late duke, and her children Onega, Trudille, Velasquita, Muniadona, Ildonza") and Rodrigo is called pater noster diue memoria dux Rudericus ("our father of good memory duke Rodrigo").
  12. Married Munio Godestéiz and left a son, Teobaldo.