Gutier's world (on a map of modern Spain) The red dots represent the six Galician counties (conmissos) entrusted to Gutier by Alfonso IV in 929. The blue dots represent the location of Gutier's known residences, also the locations of the monasteries of Loyo (restored by him) and Celanova (founded by his son).
Gutier Menéndez[a] (c. 865 – 934) was the most powerful
Galicianmagnate of his time in the
Kingdom of León.[1] Related to the royal family through marriages, he acted as a powerbroker in the civil wars that followed the disputed succession of 925.
Family
Gutier could not have been born much later than 870, since he had an adult son in 911.[2] He was a son of Count
Hermenegildo Gutiérrez and Hermesinda Gatóñez. His paternal grandparents were Gutier and Elvira, while his maternal grandparents were Count
Gatón and Egilo.[3] Gatón's sister, Nuña, was the wife of King
Ordoño I,[4] while Gutier's sister
Elvira was the wife of
Ordoño II.[5]
Gutier married Ilduara Ériz, daughter of Count
Ero Fernández and Adosinda.[6] They were probably married no later than 890, judging by the ages of their children.[7] They had three sons and two daughters:[8]
Munio (fl. 911–55), count, married his cousin Elvira Arias, daughter of count
Arias Menéndez, Gutier's brother.[9] One of their daughters, Goto Muñoz, was the wife of King
Sancho Ordóñez.[10]
Fruela (fl. 935–42), count, married Sarracina, grandparents of Tota, wife of count
Menendo González. They were apparently also ancestors of the
House of Traba, though the precise connection is disputed.[11][12][13]
Adosinda (fl. 934–64),[14][11] her first husband was count Jimeno Díaz, son of count
Diego Fernández. After his death, she married his nephew, Ramiro Menéndez,[15] with whom she had several children. They were probably the parents of Queen
Velasquita Ramírez, wife of
Bermudo II of León.[16]
Hermesinda[11] (fl. 929–34) the wife of Count Pelayo González, son of Count Gonzalo Betótez and brother of Count
Hermenegildo González.[17] One of their daughters, Ilduara Peláez, was the wife of Count
Gonzalo Menéndez.[11]
In their testament, dated 934, Gutier and Ilduara, with the support of their relatives, divided their property roughly equally between their five children in a so-called colmellum divisionis, a division of property within a branch of a family. In the will, Gutier says that during his career he obtained wealth through "royal grants, booty in war and other means" (de munificentia regis, de preda vel de ex aliquo ganato) on top of the wealth that he had inherited.[18][19]
Gutier's immense wealth is indicated by the aforementioned testament and a gift of land to his wife made on 16 August 916.[20] He gave her lands not only in Galicia, the family's power base, but also in
Portugal to the south and
Asturias to the east.[21]
Career
During the reign of his brother-in-law, Ordoño II, king of Galicia from 910 and then of León from 914 until his death in 924, Gutier was a regular presence at the royal court. He is attested as a signatory and intervenor in numerous royal acts, and during this period his activity was not restricted to Galicia.[5]
Ordoño II was succeeded without incident by his younger brother,
Fruela II. On Fruela's death the following year (925), however, a civil war broke out between the sons of Ordoño, who were Gutier's nephews. The eldest son,
Sancho Ordóñez, briefly established himself at León, but by 926 he was restricted to Galicia, while his younger brother,
Alfonso IV, ruled in León. In December 927, the two kings, apparently reconciled, met to confirm the restoration of the monastery of
Santa María de Loyo in the suburbs of
Lugo by Gutier and Ilduara. In the royal presence, Gutier presided over the council. The situation suggests that Gutier's intervention may have reconciled the two kings,[5][21] or even that he was acting as regent of the kingdom.[22]
In 927, Sancho granted Gutier the villa of Villare, which neighboured Gutier's house in
Vilanova dos Infantes. Gutier's son Rosendo later built the abbey of Celanova on the land at Villare. Besides his house or palace (domus) at Vilanova, Gutier owned another at
Portomarín.[23]
Upon Sancho's death in 929, Alfonso IV took over direct rule in Galicia. On 16 August, he rewarded Gutier for his continued support with rule over six counties[b] in Galicia:
Quiroga,
Santiago de Castillón,
Lor,
Saviñao,
Louseiro and
Ortigueira. The first five were all located within the Terra de Lemos not far from Lugo, while Ortigueira is on the northern coast. All are in Galicia.[21] A document of 942, written after the death of Gutier and his brother Arias, show that they had once governed even more counties (commissa) and
deaneries (decanías).[c] The document mentions Lor and Quiroga, but also lists Bubal,
Ladra,
Limia, Paramo,
Salnés, Sorga and Triós in Galicia, as well as Refojos de Leza further south in the
county of Portugal.[24]
Gutier witnessed many other royal acts of Alfonso IV until his overthrow by his younger brother,
Ramiro II in 931. Gutier may have had a large role in Alfonso's overthrow, since he witnessed many acts of Ramiro from 931 until his death. By contrast most of the magnates who backed Alfonso against his brother were marginalized following Ramiro's victory.[5]
Notes
^Also spelled "Gutierre Menéndez" (or "Guterre Mendes" in Portuguese), from
medieval LatinGuttiher Menendiz. The surname is a patronymic meaning "son of Hermenegildo".
^The word for a county in contemporary Galician documents is conmisso or commissum (plural commissa). On the institution, see Julio Puyol, Orígenes del Reino de León y de sus instituciones políticas (Madrid: 1926), p. 176.
^These were rural properties belonging to monasteries.
References
^Alfonso 2004, p. 58: "the most powerful member of the Galician nobility".
Alfonso, Isabel (2004). "Judicial Rhetoric and Political Legitimation in Medieval León-Castile". In Isabel Alfonso; Hugh Kennedy; Julio Escalona (eds.). Building Legitimacy: Political Discourses and Forms of Legitimacy in Medieval Societies. Brill. pp. 51–88.
Isla Frez, Amancio (1992). La sociedad gallega en la alta Edad Media. Madrid: CSIC.
Isla Frez, Amancio (2015). "The Aristocracy and the Monarchy in Northwest Iberia between the Eighth and the Eleventh Century". In James D'Emilio (ed.). Culture and Society in Medieval Galicia: A Cultural Crossroads at the Edge of Europe. Leiden: Brill. pp. 251–80.
López Sangil, José Luis (2002). La nobleza altomedieval gallega, la familia Froílaz-Traba. La Coruña: Toxosoutos, S.L.
ISBN84-95622-68-8.
Portass, Robert (2013). "All Quiet on the Western Front? Royal Politics in Galicia from c.800 to c.950". Early Medieval Europe. 21 (3): 283–306.
doi:
10.1111/emed.12019.
Sáez Sánchez, Emilio (1946). "Notas al episcopologio minduniense del Siglo X". Hispania: Revista española de Historia (XXII). Madrid: CSIC, Instituto Jerónimo Zurita: 3–79.
Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León, Margarita Cecilia (1999). Linajes nobiliarios de León y Castilla: Siglos IX-XIII. Salamanca: Junta de Castilla y León, Consejería de educación y cultura.
ISBN84-7846-781-5.