
Ponce de Minerva (1114/1115 – 27 July 1175) was a nobleman, courtier, governor, and general serving, at different times, the kingdoms of
León and
Castile. Originally from
Occitania
Occitania ( oc, Occitània , , or ) is the historical region in Western Europe, Western and Southern Europe where the Occitan language, Occitan language was historically spoken and where it is sometimes still used as a second language. This ...
, he came as a young man to León (1127), where he was raised probably in close connexion to the royal family. His public career, first as a courtier and knight in the military retinue of
Alfonso VII of León and Castile
Alfonso VII (1 March 110521 August 1157), called the Emperor (''el Emperador''), became the King of Galicia in 1111 and King of León and Castile in 1126. Alfonso, born Alfonso Raimúndez, first used the title Emperor of All Spain, alongside hi ...
, began in 1140. By later historians he was implicated in the strife between Alfonso's successors,
Sancho III of Castile and
Ferdinand II of León, but he was generally loyal to the latter, although from 1168 to 1173 he was in voluntary exile serving
Alfonso VIII of Castile
Alfonso VIII (11 November 11555 October 1214), called the Noble (''El Noble'') or the one of Las Navas (''el de las Navas''), was King of Castile from 1158 to his death and King of Toledo. After having suffered a great defeat with his own army at ...
.
Ponce had a long and distinguished military career. He participated in at least twelve campaigns, more than half of them campaigns of ''
Reconquista'' fought against the
Moors, but also campaigns against
Navarre
Navarre (; es, Navarra ; eu, Nafarroa ), officially the Chartered Community of Navarre ( es, Comunidad Foral de Navarra, links=no ; eu, Nafarroako Foru Komunitatea, links=no ), is a foral autonomous community and province in northern Spain, ...
(1140),
Portugal (1141), and Castile (1162 and 1163), as well as one famous campaign against some Castilian rebels, in which he was captured. He acquired landed wealth largely through royal preferment—even in the major cities of the realm, such as
León and
Toledo
Toledo most commonly refers to:
* Toledo, Spain, a city in Spain
* Province of Toledo, Spain
* Toledo, Ohio, a city in the United States
Toledo may also refer to:
Places Belize
* Toledo District
* Toledo Settlement
Bolivia
* Toledo, Orur ...
—and an advantageous marriage—his wife was a descendant of
García Sánchez III of Navarre—and he rose to hold the highest rank in the kingdom,
count, and the highest civil post,
majordomo
A majordomo is a person who speaks, makes arrangements, or takes charge for another. Typically, this is the highest (''major'') person of a household (''domūs'' or ''domicile'') staff, a head servant who acts on behalf of the owner of a large ...
, in both Castile and León. In 1167 he founded a monastery,
Santa María de Sandoval
Santa Claus, also known as Father Christmas, Saint Nicholas, Saint Nick, Kris Kringle, or simply Santa, is a legendary figure originating in Western Christian culture who is said to bring children gifts during the late evening and overnight ...
, and he was also a donor to the
Order of Calatrava. In 1173 he re-populated half of the village of
Azaña and granted it a ''
fuero'' (charter of privileges).
Move from Occitania to León

As his
toponymic surname indicates, Ponce was from the
Minervois
Minervois is an AOC in the Languedoc-Roussillon wine region, in the departments of the Aude and of the Herault. Historically, the region's capital has been the village of Minerve.
AOC regulations require the wine to be blended (at least 2 variet ...
("de Minerva" is
Latin for "from
Minerve") in southern France, then a part of the
County of Carcassonne, one of the possessions of
Raymond Berengar III,
Count of Barcelona
The Count of Barcelona ( ca, Comte de Barcelona, es, Conde de Barcelona, french: Comte de Barcelone, ) was the ruler of the County of Barcelona and also, by extension and according with the Usages of Barcelona, usages and Catalan constitutions, of ...
.
[Barton, "Two Catalan Magnates", 248–54.][Montenegro Valentín, "Merinos y tenentes", 164–65.] He may have been related to the
Counts of Toulouse, but his genealogy has been disputed since the seventeenth century. The name of either of his parents is unknown.
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 286–87, contains a ''curriculum vitae'' listing Ponce's relations, titles, offices, tenancies, religious and economic transactions, with dates and primary sources.] He arrived in León in November 1127 in the entourage of
Berenguela of Barcelona, daughter of Raymond Berengar III, who wed
Alfonso VII that month at
Saldaña. He was probably a young man of about twelve years at the time. He may have been related to
Raymond II,
Bishop of Palencia (1148–83), who also hailed from Minerve and was also a protégé and perhaps a relative of Berenguela. It is likely that he was raised and educated for a time at the court of Alfonso VII's sister, the ''
infanta''
Sancha Raimúndez
Sancha Raimúndez of León (c. 1095/110228 February 1159) was a Leonese infanta, the daughter of Queen Urraca and Raymond of Burgundy and the older sister of Alfonso VII of León.
Biography
She must have been born between the years 1095 - year ...
.
[Serrano, ''Cartulario del Monasterio de Vega'', 94 n. 2.]
Ponce does not appear in contemporary records until 1140, but his presence in the following of the Catalan princess is established by a charter in the archives of the convent of
Santa María de Carrizo. This document, dated 13 March 1207, records a ''pesquisa'' (inquest) carried out by orders of
Alfonso IX to determine what was owed by the village of
Quintanilla to the convent in light of a donation made by Ponce.
[Luengo, "Monasterio de Santa María de Carrizo", 171.] It mentions how Ponce had come to León with Berenguela:
When the lord emperor lfonso VIIbrought o Leónhis wife the empress, he also brought along the count Ponce de Minerva and married him to the countess Doña Estefanía, daughter of Count Ramiro, and gave him half of Carrizo, which was royal fiscal land (''realengo''), and he once
Once means a one-time occurrence.
Once may refer to:
Music
* ''Once'' (Pearl Jam song), a 1991 song from the album ''Ten''
* ''Once'' (Roy Harper album), a 1990 album by Roy Harper
* ''Once'' (The Tyde album), a 2001 debut album by The Tyd ...
gave it to her as bridewealth. . . And the other half of Carrizo belonged to Count Ramiro, and he gave it to him once
Once means a one-time occurrence.
Once may refer to:
Music
* ''Once'' (Pearl Jam song), a 1991 song from the album ''Ten''
* ''Once'' (Roy Harper album), a 1990 album by Roy Harper
* ''Once'' (The Tyde album), a 2001 debut album by The Tyd ...
with his daughter in marriage. . .
Because he hailed from an
Occitan-speaking region ruled by the counts of Barcelona, he is often considered a
Catalan. His name, in contemporary Latin, was ''Pontius'' or ''Poncius'', transformed in Castilian to ''Ponce'', the form used here, or ''Poncio'', and also transformed into ''Ponç'' (Catalan) or ''Pons'' (Occitan).
Marriage to Estefanía Ramírez
The record of the royal ''pesquisa'' of 1207 also notes how Ponce was subsequently betrothed to
Estefanía Ramírez
Estefanía Ramírez (died 1183), daughter of Count Ramiro Fróilaz, was the wife of Count Ponce de Minerva. Both founded the Monastery of Santa María de Sandoval in Mansilla Mayor and, as a widow, she founded, firstly, the Royal Monastery of Sa ...
, daughter of
Ramiro Fróilaz,
and endowed by Alfonso VII with
fisc
Under the Merovingians and Carolingians, the fisc (from Latin ''fiscus,'' whence we derive "fiscal") applied to the royal demesne which paid taxes, entirely in kind, from which the royal household was meant to be supported, though it rarely was. ...
al lands: half of the village of
Carrizo de la Ribera and an estate at a place called ''Quiro'', between Carrizo and Quintanilla. To this his future father-in-law added the other half of Carrizo, which had been a part of his
patrimony
Patrimony may refer to:
Law
* Patrimony, or property, the total of all personal and real entitlements, including movable and immovable property, belonging to a real person or a juristic person
* Patrimony, or inheritance, a right or estate inh ...
.
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 54.] Carrizo included a palace (''palacio''), which was later given to the monastery there, and stood to the right of the "old gate" (''portería vieja'').
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 65.]
The charter provides no date for Ponce's betrothal or marriage, but a document dated 30 May 1140 records a grant given by the king's sister, Sancha Raimúndez, to Ponce on the occasion of his marriage: the village of ''Argavallones'' "at your marriage, because I nourished
.e., raisedyou". This document survives only in a copy from 1716 that has clearly been altered.
For instance, it anachronistically cites
Martin as
Archbishop of Santiago de Compostela even though he was not consecrated until 1156. Of Ponce de Minerva it says:
The Count exchanged this mortal life in order to enjoy the prize of his heroic works, as was said, in the year 1212 of the Era, leaving finished the monastery of Sandoval and the greater chapel of the church, with the rest being finished after his days by Don Diego Martínez de Villamayor Diego Martínez de Villamayor (died 5 November 1176) was a noble of the Kingdom of Castile from the house of the counts of Bureba, who was very influential at court.
He was the advisor of Alfonso VII of León and Castile, Alfonso VII and Sancho III ...
, his son-in-law and a benefactor of that house, where he was buried.
The charter is accepted as genuine by some,
and as having some basis in fact by others.
Ponce was very young at the time of his arrival in León is probable in light of the contours of his subsequent career. His first appearance in a court document dates to 9 September 1140, when he witnessed an act of Alfonso VII's as ''
alférez'', that is, armiger and standard-bearer of the royal ''mesnada'' (military retinue). This office was usually reserved for the scions of noble houses and other young and aspiring aristocrats.
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 142–44.] At the time of his advent in León in 1127 he would therefore have been placed in an aristocratic household capable of raising him, and the king's sister is known to have raised at least one other young nobleperson in her court: Urraca Rodríguez, daughter of
Rodrigo González de Lara, whom she remembered in her (undated) will as "Urraca, daughter of Count Rodrigo, whom I raised". Likewise, the village of ''Argavallones'' must have been acquired by Ponce sometime before his marriage, since he gave it to his bride as her ''arras'' (
bridewealth), along with all his lands at Carrizo, San Pedro del Páramo (modern
San Pedro de las Dueñas), and
Grulleros (''Grulerius''). According to a document in the ''Tumbo Antiguo''
cartulary of Carrizo, ''Argavallones'' was located near Grulleros, just west of
Villaverde de Sandoval
Mansilla Mayor () is a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2010 census (INE
INE, Ine or ine may refer to:
Institutions
* Institut für Nukleare Entsorgung, a German nuclear research center
* ...
(''Sot noval''). It may be supposed that the forged eighteenth-century charter was designed to replace an authentic lost charter. This document aside, the earliest reference to Ponce's marriage to Estefanía is from 13 February 1146, when Alfonso VII rewarded them with a grant of land at
Villamoros de Mansilla "for the service to me which you
luralhave done and are doing".
''Alférez'' of Alfonso VII
From the time of his appointment as ''alférez'' sometime between 26 June and 9 September 1140 until his replacement sometime after 19 December 1144 and before March 1145, Ponce de Minerva was a constant presence at the royal court and on all of Alfonso VII's military campaigns.
He took part in the expedition against
García Ramírez of Navarre in 1140 and that against
Portugal in 1141. He definitely participated in the
Siege of Coria in 1142, as recorded in the ''Tumbo Negro'', cartulary of the
Cathedral of Zamora
The Cathedral of Zamora is a Catholic cathedral in Zamora, in Castile and León, Spain, located above the right bank of the Duero It remains surrounded by its old walls and gates.
Built between 1151 and 1174, it is one of the finest exampl ...
, and he probably also accompanied the royal forces on a ''
razzia'' of the environs of
Córdoba and
Granada
Granada (,, DIN 31635, DIN: ; grc, Ἐλιβύργη, Elibýrgē; la, Illiberis or . ) is the capital city of the province of Granada, in the autonomous communities of Spain, autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain. Granada is located at the fo ...
in 1144. This last (obscure) campaign is mentioned in a charter issued at
Toledo
Toledo most commonly refers to:
* Toledo, Spain, a city in Spain
* Province of Toledo, Spain
* Toledo, Ohio, a city in the United States
Toledo may also refer to:
Places Belize
* Toledo District
* Toledo Settlement
Bolivia
* Toledo, Orur ...
in November 1144 "as the emperor arrived from the fortification that he had made against Córdoba and Granada".
Ponce's rewards for these various services were extensive. There are two false documents dated to 25 January and 14 June 1141 which purport to record royal donations to Ponce. The first is the donation of ''Quiro'', which occurred on the occasion of his betrothal according to the account of the ''pesquisa'' of 1207.
The second is the donation of San Pedro del Páramo, which it is known that Ponce gave to his wife as part of her bridewealth. The above charters are classified as spurious because they name Alfonso VII as ruling in
Baeza
Baeza may refer to:
* Baeza, Ecuador
* Baeza, Spain
** University of Baeza
** Baeza Cathedral
* '' Brusqeulia baeza'', a species of moth
People
* Baeza (rapper) (born 1993), American rapper, singer, actor, hip hop producer, and songwriter
* Acar ...
and
Almería, places he did not conquer until 1147, and they list Martin, Archbishop of Santiago, as confirming. They nevertheless contain a kernel of truth.
More securely datable is Alfonso's grant to Ponce the village of Villaverde de Sandoval, on the bank of the
Porma near the possessions which he had given his wife at their marriage, in 1142.
Acquisition of governorships

A change in Ponce's career began with his long absences from court in 1145, after he had left the post of ''alférez''. He only attended the court on a few occasions in 1144, and by that year he had received the tenancy (''tenencia'') of
Mayorga to govern. There is no reference in any surviving royal charter to Ponce's rule in Mayorga, rather it is cited in no less than fifteen private charters dated between 23 January 1144 and 3 May 1157.
[Reilly, ''King Alfonso VII'', 185.] By 1148 he had also received the government of the royal city (''urbs regia'') of
León.
Specifically this tenancy, called the "towers of León" (''turres Legionis''), consisted in the fortified royal citadel ("fotress-palace") that guarded the northern gate of the city.
There are ten royal documents from the reign of Alfonso VII that show Ponce holding this "most sensitive post".
Both of these tenancies had previously been held by
Osorio Martínez, who had been disgraced sometime in the first half of 1142. Despite his greater responsibility in the kingdom that kept him away from court, Ponce continued to take part in all of Alfonso VII's major military actions.
In 1147, which has been described as an ''
annus mirabilis'' for the Iberian Christians because of Alfonso VII's summer campaign, Ponce was with the royal army at
Calatrava the week of 4–9 June. He was still with the royal forces at
Andújar, witnessing a royal charter issued on 17 July, but it is not clear if he participated in the successful sieges of
Baeza
Baeza may refer to:
* Baeza, Ecuador
* Baeza, Spain
** University of Baeza
** Baeza Cathedral
* '' Brusqeulia baeza'', a species of moth
People
* Baeza (rapper) (born 1993), American rapper, singer, actor, hip hop producer, and songwriter
* Acar ...
and
Almería later that summer. There is no contemporary record of his presence with the royal army after Andújar,
On 18 November 1153, Alfonso VII granted "to my faithful vassal
once,for the good and faithful service which you did me in Almería and in many other places in both the Christian and Muslim regions", the castle of Albuher near
Villamanrique de Tajo.
[Recuero Astray, "Donaciones de Alfonso VII", 904–05: ''meo fideli vasallo ... pro bono et fideli servicio quod mihi fecistis in Almaria et in aliis locis multis in partibus scilicet christanorum atque sarracenorum''.] According to Manuel Recuero Astray, the recipient was Ponce de Minerva, but more likely it was his namesake Count
Ponce de Cabrera
Ponce Giraldo de Cabrera (''floruit'' 1105–1162), called Ponç Guerau (or Grau) in Catalan or Pons in Occitan, was a Catalan nobleman, courtier and military leader in the kingdoms of León and Castile.
Ponce came to León in the entourage of ...
. Another twentieth-century historian mistakenly believed that the "Count Ponce" of the ''
Prefatio de Almaria'', a poetic retelling of the conquest of Almería in 1147, was Ponce de Minerva.
[Pascua Echegaray, "Hacia la formación política", 424.][Barton, "Two Catalan Magnates", 245–46.]
In 1150, Ponce probably took part in the failed siege of Córdoba, since he was with the king at
Jaén immediately after the siege was lifted. By that year he had received the tenancy of
Villalís. The following year, on 30 January 1151, at
Calahorra, Alfonso awarded Ponce, called "our faithful vassal", with the village of Grulleros, which he later gave to his wife. Later that year, according to documents in the cathedral archives of
Santa María de León, he was at the siege of Jaén and the second siege of Baeza, which had been lost again. In 1152, he took part in the assault on
Guadix.
On 18 December that year he was one of the select magnates whom Alfonso took counsel with before modifying the ''
fueros'' of Sahagún.
During this time he was rewarded further, first with a
castle
A castle is a type of fortified structure built during the Middle Ages predominantly by the nobility or royalty and by military orders. Scholars debate the scope of the word ''castle'', but usually consider it to be the private fortified r ...
on the
Tagus. The original document recording this grant, issued at
Soria on 18 November 1153, has survived, and is one of possibly ten charters of Alfonso VII to have been authenticated with a
seal. At the same time, Ponce was rewarded with further governorships:
Cea by 1152,
Castrotierra
Castrotierra de Valmadrigal (), is a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León
Castile and León ( es, Castilla y León ; ast-leo, Castiella y Llión ; gl, Castela e León ) is an autonomous community in northwestern ...
by 1153, and
Gatón de Campos
Gatón de Campos is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE
INE, Ine or ine may refer to:
Institutions
* Institut für Nukleare Entsorgung, a German nuclear research cent ...
by 1155.
[Reilly, ''King Alfonso VII'', 185–86. He is cited in three private charters as ruling Villalba on 8 January 1150 and Gatón 20 November 1155 and 1 February 1156.] His territorial lordships, however, were generally scattered, although they were all in the
province of León and relatively near to the city itself, whose government he continued to hold throughout the period.
The lordship of Cea was shared with
Ermengol VI of Urgell, according to a private charter of 23 June 1152. Another charter of 27 March 1150 shows Ermengol sharing it with
Lope López
Lope is an old given name of Basque, Gascon and Spanish origin, derived from Latin ''lupus'', meaning "wolf". Lope may refer to:
*Lope de Isásaga (1493–1515), Basque Spanish ''conquistador''
* Lope de Aguirre (1510s – 1561), Basque Spanish ' ...
, suggesting that Ponce was Lope's replacement. In 1155, Ponce was with Alfonso for the capture of Andújar.
The last reference to Ponce holding Cea, site of a royal castle, dates from 28 June 1156.
Controversies of 1157–58
Under Alfonso VII Ponce was "a curial personage of stature" who "enjoyed the fullest confidence of the crown", yet despite his residence at court "he was of secondary rank" and generally his confirmation of royal acts was not sought.
Of the six hundred royal charters surviving from Alfonso's reign after 1140, Ponce confirmed only 141 of them. After the death of Alfonso VII on 21 August 1157, the kingdoms of León and Castile were separated. The former, where Ponce's tenancies were located, went to Alfonso's second son,
Ferdinand II. The latter, where Ponce possessed some lands on the river Tagus in the
''regnum'' of Toledo, passed to his eldest son,
Sancho III. Ponce initially gravitated to the court of Ferdinand II, where he was present from at least 9 October 1157. On this date, Ferdinand issued the earliest of his surviving charters, by which he granted some estates to
Rodrigo Pérez de Traba, who in turn donated the village of
Gomariz to the monastery of
Toxosoutos in
Galicia
Galicia may refer to:
Geographic regions
* Galicia (Spain), a region and autonomous community of northwestern Spain
** Gallaecia, a Roman province
** The post-Roman Kingdom of the Suebi, also called the Kingdom of Gallaecia
** The medieval King ...
. This charter shows that Ferdinand had brought together most of the leading magnates of León in the first months of his reign; even the
King of Portugal
This is a list of Portuguese monarchs who ruled from the establishment of the Kingdom of Portugal, in 1139, to the deposition of the Portuguese monarchy and creation of the Portuguese Republic with the 5 October 1910 revolution.
Through the n ...
,
Afonso I Henriques, was present. On 13 October the court had moved to
Villalpando, where the king rewarded his follower Velasco Menéndez. Ponce was still in attendance.
[Barton, "Two Catalan Magnates", 255–58.] Villalpando was at one time governed by Ponce.
According to the thirteenth-century Toledan historian
Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada, in his ''
De rebus Hispaniae'', Ferdinand came to believe certain false rumours about Ponce de Minerva spread by his enemies at court.
In response he confiscated Ponce's fiefs, and those of some other noblemen, and sent them into exile. They went to the court of Sancho III seeking redress, whereupon Sancho marched an army into León. The two kings met at
Sahagún
Sahagún () is a town and municipality of Spain, part of the autonomous community of Castile and León and the province of León. It is the main populated place in the Leonese part of the Tierra de Campos natural region.
Sahagún contains som ...
, where, according to Rodrigo, Sancho said to his brother:
Since our father divided the kingdom between us, both you and I are held to share the land and its produce with our magnates, with whose help our forefathers possessed the lost land and repulsed the Arabs. Therefore, as the other magnates, whom you deprived, have returned their fiefs to count Ponce de Minerva, and you would not believe the rumours against them, I am returning behind my borders.
This account, however, is based on a confusion between Ponce de Minerva and Ponce de Cabrera.
There is some confusion even among modern historians between these two Ponces.
Derek Lomax notes that "the personalities, relationships and activities of these minor Catalan nobles are difficult to disentangle, but it is clear that they were extremely active in the politics of central Spain throughout the twelfth century, and that they built up their lordships primarily in the region of Salamanca and Valladolid." The first modern historian to differentiate the two Ponces was the
Marqués de Mondéjar (died 1708), who believed them to be closely related.
There is abundant contemporary documentary evidence of Ponce de Cabrera's exile to Castile, while Ponce de Minerva clearly remained on good terms with Ferdinand II throughout 1158. He was with the court at
Faro in Galicia on 15 February.
In March, the court was at
Malgrado, where Ferdinand II rewarded Ponce with some lands between
Siero and
Carande.
On 23 May Ponce was present for the ratification of the
Treaty of Sahagún, for which he stood as a surety for Ferdinand II, along with his father-in-law, a certain Abril, and
Pedro Alfonso.
The Treaty stipulated that certain lands conquered by Sancho from his brother in the recent conflict were to be returned and held in
fealty
An oath of fealty, from the Latin ''fidelitas'' (faithfulness), is a pledge of allegiance of one person to another.
Definition
In medieval Europe, the swearing of fealty took the form of an oath made by a vassal, or subordinate, to his lord. "Fea ...
(''in fidelitate'') from Ferdinand. The treaty named three vassals among whom these lands could be distributed: Ponce de Minerva, Ponce de Cabrera, and Osorio Martínez. To the end of the surviving record of the treaty is appended a list of those who "swore on the side of King Ferdinand", and Ponce is listed among them. Contrary to the Toledan historian's confused account, Ponce de Minerva was unswervingly loyal to Ferdinand II during the lifetime of Sancho III, although the presence of his name alongside the grieved Ponce de Cabrera and Osorio has raised suspicions. On 1 July he and the newly reconciled Ponce de Cabrera confirmed Ferdinand's grant to Rodrigo Sebastiánez, a monk of
Oviedo
Oviedo (; ast, Uviéu ) is the capital city of the Principality of Asturias in northern Spain and the administrative and commercial centre of the region. It is also the name of the municipality that contains the city. Oviedo is located ap ...
.
Counsellor of Ferdinand II
Ponce de Minerva was throughout this period one of Ferdinand's most trusted advisors and a major recipient of his largesse.
[Barton, "Two Catalan Magnates", 260–65.] In 1159, he was among those who accompanied Ferdinand II into Galicia when he made peace with the Portuguese. On 14 June, while the court was staying at Sahagún, he and his wife were rewarded "for good service" (''pro bono servitio'') with a grant of land at
Santa María del Páramo
Santa María del Páramo is a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León
Castile and León ( es, Castilla y León ; ast-leo, Castiella y Llión ; gl, Castela e León ) is an autonomous community in northwestern Spain.
...
in the vicinity of León.
By this month he had also been trusted with the lordship of
Valderas
Valderas is a town and a municipality located in the province of León, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality had a population of 2,049 inhabitants.
Image:Valderas consistorio2 lou.jpg, Town Hall
Image:V ...
, and by 1161 he was governing
Melgar de Arriba
Melgar de Arriba is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE
INE, Ine or ine may refer to:
Institutions
* Institut für Nukleare Entsorgung, a German nuclear research cente ...
(or de Suso) as well. On 15 March 1161, while the court was at Malgrado, Ferdinand again rewarded Ponce with an estate at
Ferreras near León, but this time also with lands at
Salio in the
Picos de Europa.
On 28 March, Ponce de Cabrera was ruling "under his ''imperium''
.e. Ferdinand's regalian rightsin Melgar
.e. Melgar de Abajo (or de Yuso)">Melgar_de_Abajo.html" ;"title=".e. Melgar de Abajo">.e. Melgar de Abajo (or de Yuso)and Ponce de Minerva in the other Melgar". In 1162, Ponce de Minerva took part in Ferdinand's expedition into Castile, where he captured Toledo. In 1163, he was again with the royal Leonese army that invaded Castile.
Ponce's frequent presence at court necessitated the devolution of government in his tenancies to subordinates. Thus, in 1162, one "Juan Martínez, under the hand of the lord Ponce de Minerva, [was] holding the towers of León". By 1164 Juan was holding León without any indication of Ponce's superiority. In 1164, Ponce was granted an estate at Villamañán, according to the ''Tumbo Antiguo'' (old cartulary) of Santa María de Carrizo. In September of the latter year, during the court's sojourn at
Villaquejida, Ferdinand also awarded him property at
Villamandos in the valley of the
Esla, where he possessed other estates.
Also in 1164, Ponce's governorship was extended over
Riaño and two places called ''Ceón'' and ''Buraun''. By 23 October he had been promoted to the rank of
count (''comes'' or ''consul'' in Latin), the highest title in the kingdom after the king's.
This promotion constituted a recognition that Ponce was one of the leading magnates of the kingdom, and one of the most powerful.
This promotion did not take place until after the death of Count Ponce de Cabrera (1162/63). By 27 October 1164 Ponce de Minerva had been deprived of the government of the city of León. He was still without it on 6 May 1166, but by 11 November he had regained control of it.
In 1165, for a second time Ponce was with Ferdinand in Galicia to make peace with Portugal, and he was given the tenancy of Coyanza, modern
Valencia de Don Juan. In 1167, he was rewarded with the tenancy of
Castroverde de Campos, as recorded in the archives of the hospital of
San Marcos de León. On 16 February he and his family founded the monastery of
Santa María de Sandoval
Santa Claus, also known as Father Christmas, Saint Nicholas, Saint Nick, Kris Kringle, or simply Santa, is a legendary figure originating in Western Christian culture who is said to bring children gifts during the late evening and overnight ...
at Villaverde, which had been granted him by Alfonso VII in 1142. Sometime before 15 July 1167, Ferdinand II appointed him
majordomo
A majordomo is a person who speaks, makes arrangements, or takes charge for another. Typically, this is the highest (''major'') person of a household (''domūs'' or ''domicile'') staff, a head servant who acts on behalf of the owner of a large ...
(''maiordomus''), the highest office associated with the royal court and the pre-eminent position in the realm: he had reached "the zenith of his power in León" and was "one of the most powerful lay figures of the realm". His eldest son,
Ramiro Ponce, also served Ferdinand II as ''alférez'' in the 1160s.
Fall from favour and exile
At some point in 1168, for reasons unknown, Ponce went into exile in Castile. In the summer of 1167, Count
Ermengol VII of Urgell and his ''mesnada'' (knightly retinue) had arrived in the service of Ferdinand II, whom he had assisted in the capture of the fortress of
Alcántara
Alcántara is a municipality in the province of Cáceres, Extremadura, Spain, on the Tagus, near Portugal. The toponym is from the Arabic word ''al-Qanṭarah'' (القنطرة) meaning "the bridge".
History
Archaeological findings have atteste ...
from the
Almohads, which fortress Ferdinand granted to him as a fief on 21 November, as recorded in the archives of the
Order of Santiago that Ferdinand had founded. By that date, Ferdinand had already removed Ponce from his post as majordomo and replaced him with Ermengol. The arrival of Ermengol thus appears to have marked a shift in the king's favour from the one Catalan to the other.
Ponce continued with the Leonese court from sometime after his dismissal as majordomo: he was present at León, still his tenancy, on 11 December, and in 1168 he was present at
Castro Mazamud on 10 January and at
Lugo
Lugo (, ; la, Lucus Augusti) is a city in northwestern Spain in the autonomous communities of Spain, autonomous community of Galicia (Spain), Galicia. It is the capital of the Lugo (province), province of Lugo. The municipality had a population ...
on 4 March.
Ponce's last appearance in any surviving document from León for this period is dated 9 April 1168, which is also the last royal document confirmed by his son Ramiro, who appears to have entered an exile from court at the same time as his father.
By 20 September the tenancies of León and Mayorga had passed to
Fernando Rodríguez de Castro, an exile from Castile.
Owing to ignorance of the exact chronology of Ponce's defection, it is unclear whether his replacement as majordomo by Ermengol and his replacement in the fiefs of León and Mayorga by Fernando were a consequence or an incitement.
[Sánchez de Mora, ''El linaje de Lara'', 171.]
Service to the Crown in Castile
Ponce, following his fall from favour, went to the court of
Alfonso VIII of Castile
Alfonso VIII (11 November 11555 October 1214), called the Noble (''El Noble'') or the one of Las Navas (''el de las Navas''), was King of Castile from 1158 to his death and King of Toledo. After having suffered a great defeat with his own army at ...
, son of Sancho III, which had moved to the fortress of Abia possibly to receive the defecting count.
The court was at Sahagún on 29 August when Ponce first makes an appearance there in the surviving records.
In April 1169 he played a leading role in the siege of the town of
Zorita de los Canes, which was being held by the relatives and supporters of Fernando Rodríguez de Castro against Alfonso VIII. He joined with
Nuño Pérez de Lara in the initial attack, which was a failure. Later, Ponce and Nuño went to negotiate with the castellan, Lope de Arenas, but were betrayed and arrested. There is a private document from 25 April by which these events are dated, for it was redacted "at the time when Count Nuño and Count Ponce were defeated at Zorita". Alfonso VIII continued to besiege the town in which his two generals were being held until at least 14 May, when a royal charter of donation was drawn up "about (i.e., around) Zorita, at that time when Count Nuño and Count Ponce were being held captive there by the most evil Lope de Arenas". The donation was made to the military
Order of Calatrava founded by his father. By 19 May, Zorita had surrendered and the two captives been freed. A royal charter issued that day "was made in Zorita, at the time when Count Nuño and Count Ponce were liberated from captivity there". These last two charters indicate the part likely played by the knights of Calatrava in the capture of Zorita and the liberation of Ponce de Minerva, and it is probably therefore in gratefulness that Ponce soon after gaining his freedom made over to the Order some
mills he owned in Toledo.
Ponce's service to the Crown in the Castile lasted five years. At the time of his arrival, and even during the siege of Zorita, Alfonso VIII was a minor whose regency was held by Nuño Pérez. By the fall, however, he had come of age and begun to rule in his own right. Shortly after, on 11 November, Ponce was with his court at
Burgos.
In September 1170, Ponce attended the wedding festivities of Alfonso VIII and
Eleanor, daughter of
Henry II of England and
Eleanor of Aquitaine.
According to a document in the church archives, on 23 June 1171 Ponce divided the village of Azaña (modern
Numancia de la Sagra) between himself and the
canons of the cathedral of
Santa María de Toledo.
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 102–3.]
Ponce's support for the young king was rewarded with several lordships in western Castile, along the border with León.
From 1170 he was ruling Saldaña, the town to which he had first come for the marriage of Berenguela and Alfonso VII some forty-three years prior. From 1171 he ruled
Carrión, a town associated with his allies of the
Lara family, also mutual rivals of the
Castros. By 1172 he was governing the tenancy of
Boadilla de Rioseco, and by 10 May that year he had been raised to the post of majordomo of the royal household. This was probably in an effort by the king to relieve himself of some of the influence of the overbearing former regent Nuño. The last record of Ponce in that office dates to 28 June 1173, and shortly thereafter he was reconciled to Ferdinand II.
''Fuero'' of Azaña
In September 1173 Ponce was still in Castile when he granted some land at Azaña to some settlers: "In the name of God and his grace, I, Count Ponce, give to the settlers that half of Azaña that fell to me".
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 59. The ''fuero'' is edited in Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', Appendix 3, no. XV, 325–27. The translated excerpt in Latin is (p. 325): ''In Dei nomine et eius gratia. Ego Poncius Comes dono populatoribus illam medietatem de Façania que me contigit''.] The "charter of rights and obligations" (called a ''fuero'') that he gave to the settlers exists as a thirteenth-century copy in a cartulary of the cathedral of Toledo.
Ponce kept a few fields—two ''sernas'' and two ''prados''—for himself (
demesne
A demesne ( ) or domain was all the land retained and managed by a lord of the manor under the feudal system for his own use, occupation, or support. This distinguished it from land sub-enfeoffed by him to others as sub-tenants. The concept or ...
), but the rest of the land he rented out to twenty-five settlers.
Each received a field (''yugada''), some additional land for planting vines and orchards, and eight ''cahices'' of seed for wheat. The ''fuero'' requires that any settler who wished to sell his property and leave the area had to give Ponce the first option to buy, even if he was away on campaign in the south, in which case the would-be seller had to await his return. Another clause gives an indication of his reconciliation with the King of León, for it states that if Ponce was away in the north, either "in the kingdom of Alfonso or in the kingdom of Ferdinand", then the would-be seller had to notify Ponce's majordomo of his intention to sell and wait forty days for Ponce to exercise his option to buy, after which the settler could sell the land to anyone.
The majordomo referred to in the surviving ''fuero'' may have been "a local estate manager rather than the count's household official".
This person was also in charge of organising the annual
boon work of the settlers and was responsible for supplying them with food and drink during that period.
This boon work consisted in three ''operationes'', as they are called in the surviving charter: two for sowing and one for either threshing or ploughing in Ponce's fields.
[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 98–99.] The tenants also owed Ponce tribute or rent in the form of one ''cahiz'' each of wheat and barley per field and portions of the produce of their vineyards and orchards. They also owed ''yantar'' (hospitality). The ''fuero'' of Azaña contains one of the best surviving descriptions of this practice from the twelfth century, and it also indicates Ponce's expectation of continued itinerancy between his various properties and tenancies.
The settlers were required each year to prepare a feast for him or his wife and their retinues, although their sons, daughters, or grandchildren could be sent in their place. The amount of produce to be used for these feasts is specified: three rams, one pig, twelve hens, 160 loaves of bread, and large quantities of barley and wine. If none of Ponce's kin attended in a given year, the settlers were exempted from the tribute, which is what the meal was taken to be.
Ponce has been described as an "absentee landlord with a vengeance", although no different from his fellow twelfth-century European aristocrats.
Itinerancy in Castile and León
Sometime in the first half of 1173, Ermengol VII left the service of Ferdinand II, for reasons unknown. His absence may have opened up the possibility of reconciliation to Ponce de Minerva, who had returned to the city of León by October, when he rejoined the court after five years of voluntary exile.
The remainder of his life was characterised by intinerancy between the courts of León and Castile and between his possessions and governorships in the two kingdoms.
In February 1174, Ponce was with the court of Alfonso VIII at Toledo for a major gathering the kingdom's leading men. In June, he and Estefanía visited the
Benedictine monastery at Sahagún, in Castile near the border with León, where they donated an estate at
Villalba de la Loma
Villalba de la Loma is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León
Castile and León ( es, Castilla y León ; ast-leo, Castiella y Llión ; gl, Castela e León ) is an autonomous community in northwestern Spain.
...
(part of the tenancy of Mayorga) in exchange for the
Hospital de Don García.
By October he had joined the court of Ferdinand II at Ciudad Rodrigo, where the king officially declared their reconciliation by granting "to you, my beloved Count Ponce, and your wife, the countess Doña Estefanía" a privilege exempting the couple from taxes on all their lands and exempting all their vassals from taxes also. On 18 November, Ponce met Alfonso VIII at Fuentedueña, perhaps remaining with the court until 9 May 1175, when he was definitely in attendance at Medina del Campo. The last records of Ponce alive date from June, when he was in León.
Death and legacy
Ponce died on 27 July, according to the ''tablas de aniversarios'' (a calendar of annual commemorations) of the nunnery of Carrizo. That the year was 1175 is obvious from his sudden disappearance from contemporary documentation after June of that year. He was buried in Sandoval.[Luengo, "Monasterio de Santa María de Carrizo", 173.] In the archives of the monastery of Benevívere
The Monastery of Benevívere (Spanish: ''Abadía de Santa María de Benevívere'') was an Abbey in Spain, famous in the 12th century, now ruined. It is about west of Carrión de los Condes in the Province of Palencia.
Origins
The Abbey of Santa ...
are two charters both dated 30 July, only a few days after Count Ponce's death, which record the donation received from his widow and children of lands at Quintanilla and Mayorga (in the first transaction) and lands at Santamarina Santamarina is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
*Ángel Santamarina, Argentine fencer
*Eduardo Santamarina (born 1968), Mexican actor
*Enrique Santamarina (1870–1937), Argentine politician
*José Santamarina (born 1963), Argent ...
and Lerones with the Hospital de Don García (in the second transaction) for the redemption of Ponce's soul.
On 17 February 1176, Countess Estefanía granted her land at Benavides to the monastery of Sobrado dos Monxes in Galicia "for the soul of the count Don Ponce" and that a monastery might be built there. On 10 September 1176, she founded a convent "for the soul of my husband, the lord count Ponce", at Carrizo, including in her donation the palace they had owned there. She dedicated it to the Virgin and placed it under the Cistercian Order. The archives of this convent, Santa María de Carrizo, are an important source for the lives and careers of Ponce and his wife. They contain the authentic charter of foundation of Estefanía, wherein she describes her gift to the monastery of the lands comprising her bridewealth from Ponce:
I give and concede the village that is called Carrizo, with all its environs and attached territories, integral; and the village of San Pedro del Páramo, whole and integral, and the village of Grulleros and ''Argavallones'', and its environs and attached territories that belong to me; which villages I have from my acquisitions and my bridewealth and my scattered estates, which my husband gave to me.
Estefanía died in 1183 or 1184 and was buried beside her husband.
Ponce acquired a vast wealth in lands after his migration to León. His principal estates all lay within fifty kilometres of the ''urbs regia'' of León, which he himself governed from 1148 to 1165 and again from 1167 to 1168. He had many estates in the valleys of the rivers Esla, Porma, Órbigo, and Bernesga. Besides properties he received from Alfonso VII and Ferdinand II, which was a total of ten donations between 1148 and 1174, Ponce and Estefanía acquired lands at Mayorga on the Esla, and at Quintanilla and Villalba de Loma on the Porma.
Children
Of Ponce's children, Ramiro was his primary heir, even claiming, without any apparent royal approval, his father's title of count, but he never returned to favour in León. Ponce's daughters, Sancha and María, usually surnamed Ponce as a patronymic (from the Latin ''Poncii'' or ''Pontii''), married Pedro Garcés de Lerma, a Castilian, and Rodrigo Álvarez, a Galician, respectively; both were wealthy and powerful men. Sancha, by Pedro, had a son, Gonzalo Pérez, who became the abbot of Husillos
Husillos is a municipality located in the province of Palencia, Castile and León, Spain.
According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality had a population of 208 inhabitants.
Geography and population
Husillos is a little municipality in N ...
in Castile.
Ponce's younger daughter, María, separated from her husband by mutual agreement since late 1173 or early 1174, when he founded the Order of Mountjoy
The Order of Mountjoy ( es, Orden de Monte Gaudio, also known as the Order of Trufac) was a military order during the crusades.
The order of Montjoie is mentioned in the 13th century as having been founded for the purpose of protecting Christia ...
, was installed as the first abbess of her mother's foundation at Carrizo in 1184, a position she held until her death in 1191. She inherited an estate at Astorga, and there is preserved a ''conuenientia'' (pact) between her and the tenants of her estate there in the archives of Carrizo. The pact stipulates that annually on Martinmas (11 November) the inhabitants should pay a rent of two '' solidi'' and a portion of produce for every parcel of land they owned. The document lists twenty-three peasant farmers and their land tenures, totalling eighty-eight ''solidi'' in cash ''per annum'' for the abbess.
On 26 February 1189, according to a document of Santa María de Sandoval, Ponce's daughters, Sancha and María, got together to divide their inheritance, which included properties in the city of León and at ''Oret'', Ferreras, Corbillos, Molina Seca, Villarroañe, Villanueva, Matadeón, Cifuentes, and Maraña, all in the region around the city. They had also received lands in Toledo and Azaña in Castile, and at Toro on the river Duero in León's far west. They accomplished the division by drawing lots to avoid sharp disagreements.[Barton, ''Aristocracy in León and Castile'', 42.]
Notes
Bibliography
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Minerva, Ponce De
1110s births
1175 deaths
People of the Reconquista
Occitan-speaking people