Fernando Ansúrez I (died in or shortly after 929) was the
Count of Castile in 929 and the earliest known member of the Beni Ansúrez family; his father, Ansur, is known only through his
patronymic. He was also count of the
Tierra de Campos, which was later formed into the
County of Monzón The County of Monzón was a Marches, marcher county of the Kingdom of León in the tenth and eleventh centuries, during a period of renewed external threat (the Caliphate of Córdoba) and disintegration of royal authority. The county was created by ...
for his son.
A certain Fernando is first mentioned in a
charter
A charter is the grant of authority or rights, stating that the granter formally recognizes the prerogative of the recipient to exercise the rights specified. It is implicit that the granter retains superiority (or sovereignty), and that the rec ...
to the monastery of
San Pedro de Cardeña dated 13 November 917 as "count of Castile", possibly Fernando Ansúrez. According to
Sampiro
Sampiro (''c''. 956 – 1041) was a Leonese cleric, politician, and intellectual, one of the earliest chroniclers of post-conquest Spain known by name. He was also the Bishop of Astorga from 1034 or 1035 until his death.
According to some sourc ...
, Fernando ("''Fredenandi Ansuri filius''") was one of the counts of the region of
Burgos, the chief city of Castile—the others being
Nuño Fernández,
Abolmondar Albo, and Diego Rodríguez—who were captured by
Ordoño II on the river
Carrión in the place called ''Tebulare'' or ''Tegulare'' ("Tejar" or "Tejares" in Spanish, as yet unidentified) and imprisoned them in
León. This event is known as the ''Episodio de Tebular'' (Episode of Tebular) and it took place probably no earlier than the autumn of 921. The later chronicler
Pelagius of Oviedo interpolated into Sampiro's account the words ''et erant ei rebelles'' ("and they were rebels") in order to explain Ordoño's action, but this is conjecture, as is the modern suggestion that it is related to the defeat at the
Battle of Valdejunquera. Two charters from Cardeña preserve the latest record of Fernando and the only (certain) record of him under the title Count of Castile; they date to 1 October and 24 November 929.
In the spring of 932 the head of the Banu Ansúrez allied with the
Banu Gómez
The Banu Gómez (Beni Gómez) were a powerful but fractious noble family living on the Castilian marches of the Kingdom of León from the 10th to the 12th centuries. They rose to prominence in the 10th century as counts in Saldaña, Carrión and ...
in rebellion against
Ramiro II Ramiro II may refer to:
* Ramiro II of León (died 951)
* Ramiro II of Aragon (died 1157)
{{hndis ...
and in favour of his abdicated brother
Alfonso IV, who had come out of retirement to challenge for the throne. The title count is given to the leader of this rebellion by
Ibn Hayyan a century later, and it may have been either Fernando or his son Ansur. Alfonso IV and his allies were defeated in the ensuing civil war, and Ramiro bestowed Castile on his partisan,
Fernán González. As Fernando Ansúrez does not appear in the record thereafter, he was perhaps killed in combat.
[Martínez Díez 1986, 344–46.]
Fernando married a certain Muniadomna sometime after January 914. She is last mentioned in a document of 919 and was certainly deceased by 929. She was perhaps the widow of
García I of León and thus a daughter of the Castilian count
Nuño Muñoz. She gave Fernando one known child, a son,
Ansur. The earliest reference to Ansur is found in a document dated 4 March 921, wherein he is named with his parents in a donation to Cardeña in the vicinity of Burgos.
Notes
References
*Martínez Díez, Gonzalo (1986). "El obispado de Palencia en el siglo X," ''Liber amicorum: profesor don Ignacio de la Concha''. Oviedo: University of Oviedo.
*Martínez Díez, Gonzalo (2005). ''El condado de Castilla, 711–1038: La historia frente a la leyenda''. Marcial Pons Historia.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fernando Ansurez 01
Counts of Castile
10th-century deaths
Year of birth unknown