Ramon Berenguer I ‘el Vell’ of BarcelonaAge: 52 years1024–1076
- Name
- Ramon Berenguer I ‘el Vell’ of Barcelona
- Given names
- Ramon Berenguer I
- Surname
- of Barcelona
- Name prefix
- Count
- Nickname
- el Vell
Birth | 1024 19 |
Marriage | View this family yes |
Death of a father | Berenguer Ramon I ‘el Corbat’ of Barcelona 1035 (Age 11 years) |
Birth of a son #1 | Ramon Berenguer II of Barcelona about 1054 (Age 30 years) |
Record ID number | MH:I375 yes |
Record ID number | View this family MH:F215 yes |
Death | 1076 (Age 52 years) |
Family with parents |
father |
Berenguer Ramon I ‘el Corbat’ of Barcelona Birth: 1005 33 Death: 1035 |
mother | |
himself |
Ramon Berenguer I ‘el Vell’ of Barcelona Birth: 1024 19 Death: 1076 |
Ramon Berenguer I ‘el Vell’ of Barcelona + … … |
himself |
Ramon Berenguer I ‘el Vell’ of Barcelona Birth: 1024 19 Death: 1076 |
Marriage: — |
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son |
Ramon Berenguer II of Barcelona Birth: about 1054 30 Death: 5 December 1082 |
Shared note | Ramon Berenguer I the Old (née in French: Ramond Berenger LeVieux, in Catalan: el Vell) was Count of Barcelona in 1035–1076. He promulgated the earliest versions of a written code of Catalan law, the Usages of Barcelona.
Born in 1024, he succeeded his father, Berenguer Ramon the Crooked in 1035. It is during his reign that the dominant position of Barcelona among other Catalan counties became evident.
Ramon Berenguer campaigned against the Moors, extending his dominions as far west as Barbastro and imposing heavy tributes (parias) on other Moorish cities. Historians claim that those tributes helped create the first wave of prosperity in Catalan history. During his reign Catalan maritime power started to be felt in Western Mediterranean. Ramon Berenguer the Old was also the first count of Catalonia to acquire lands (counties of Carcassonne and Razés) and influence north of the Pyrenees.
Another major achievement of his was beginning of codification of Catalan law in the written Usatges or Usatici of Barcelona which was to become the first full compilation of feudal law in Western Europe. Legal codification was part of the count's efforts to forward and somehow control the process of feudalization which started during the reign of his weak father, Berenger Ramon. Another major contributor was the Church acting through the institution of the Peace and Truce of God. This established a general truce among warring factions and lords in a given region for a given time. The earliest extant date for introducing the Truce of God in Western Europe is 1027 in Catalonia, during the reign of Ramon Berenguer the Old.
Ramon Berenguer I together with his third wife Almodis also founded the Romanesque cathedral of Barcelona, to replace the older basilica presumably destroyed by Almanzor. Their velvet and brass bound wooden coffins are still shown in the Gothic cathedral which replaced Ramon Berenguer's building.
He was succeeded by his twin sons Ramon Berenguer II and Berenguer Ramon II. It has been speculated that the obscure wife of Henry of Burgundy, the grandmother of Alfonso Henriques, first king of Portugal, was his sister.
[edit] Ramon Berenguers's marriages and descendants
Sepulchers of Ramon Berenguer I and Almodis de la Marche.
Cathedral of Barcelona.
* First wife, Isabel/Elisabeth of Narbonne or of Béziers
o Berenguer (died young)
o Arnau (died young)
o Pere Ramon (1050-1073?), murdered his father's wife, Almodis, and was exiled
* Second wife, Blanca (origin unknown)
* Third wife, Almodis de La Marche, countess of Limoges
o Berenguer Ramon II, Count of Barcelona the Fratricide (1053/54-1097)
o Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Barcelona the Towhead (1053/54-1082)
o Inés, married Hugh d'Albo
o Sancha, married William Raymond, count of Cerdanya |
Shared note | Records not imported into INDI (individual) Gramps ID I0340:
Line ignored as not understood Line 33735: 2 _WT_USER Karsten
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