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Count Ramon Berenguer I of Barcelona
(1023-1076)
Almodis de la Marche
(Cir 1020-1071)
Duke Robert Guiscard of Apulia and Calabria
(Cir 1015-1085)
Sikelgaita
(1040-1090)
Count Ramon Berenguer II of Barcelona
(Cir 1054-1082)
Mahalta of Apulia
(Cir 1059-Cir 1111)

Count Ramon Berenguer III of Barcelona, the Great
(1082-1131)

 

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Spouses/Children:
1. Countess Douce of Gévaudan I of Provence

Count Ramon Berenguer III of Barcelona, the Great

  • Born: 1082
  • Marriage (1): Countess Douce of Gévaudan I of Provence in 1112
  • Died: 1131 aged 49
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bullet  General Notes:

the count of Barcelona, Girona, and Ausona from 1082 (jointly with Berenguer Ramon II and solely from 1097), Besalú from 1111, Cerdanya from 1117, and Provence, in the Holy Roman Empire, from 1112, all until his death in Barcelona in 1131. As Ramon Berenguer I, he was Count of Provence from 1112 in right of his wife.

Born in 1082 in Rodez, he was the son of Ramon Berenguer II. He succeeded his father to co-rule with his uncle Berenguer Ramon II. He became the sole ruler in 1097, when Berenguer Ramon II was forced into exile.

Statue of Ramon Berenguer III by Josep Llimona

During his rule Catalan interests were extended on both sides of the Pyrenees. By marriage or vassalage he incorporated into his realm almost all of the Catalan counties (except those of Urgell and Peralada). He inherited the counties of Besalú (1111) and Cerdanya (1117) and in between married Douce, heiress of Provence (1112). His dominions then stretched as far east as Nice.

In alliance with the Count of Urgell, Ramon Berenguer conquered Barbastro and Balaguer. In 1118 he captured and rebuilt Tarragona, which became the metropolitan seat of the church in Catalonia (before that, Catalans had depended ecclesiastically on the archbishopric of Narbonne). He also established relations with the Italian maritime republics of Pisa and Genoa and in 1114 and 1115 attacked with Pisa the then-Muslim islands of Majorca and Ibiza. They became his tributaries and many Christian slaves there were recovered and set free. Ramon Berenguer also raided mainland Muslim dependencies with Pisa's help, such as Valencia, Lleida and Tortosa.

Toward the end of his life Ramon Berenguer became a Templar. He gave his five Catalonian counties to his eldest son Ramon Berenguer IV and Provence to the younger son Berenguer Ramon.


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Ramon married Countess Douce of Gévaudan I of Provence, daughter of Count Gilbert of Gévaudan I and Countess Gerberga of Provence, in 1112. (Countess Douce of Gévaudan I of Provence was born circa 1090 and died in 1127.)


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