Carcassonne county

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The county of Carcassonne (Carcassès) was located in the southern French region of Languedoc and surrounded the city ​​of the same name in what is now the Aude department . It was surrounded by the following counties: Narbonne in the east, Rasès in the south, Foix in the west, Toulouse in the north-west and Béziers in the north-east .

Charlemagne established the county in the course of the conquest of Septimania and gave it to a certain Bello . He was to become the progenitor of a widespread aristocratic clan, which played a particularly important role in the Catalan counties . The lords of Cabaret, Minerve and Termes were among the feudal men of the Counts of Carcassonne .

In the middle of the 10th century, the Counts of Comminges came into the possession of the County of Carcassonne, which was then ruled by a branch of this family. Count Roger I divided his possessions again among his sons. Raimund I. Roger received Carcassonne while his younger brother Bernard-Roger received the county of Couserans-Foix . The two lines thus created committed each other to mutual succession in their possessions in the event of the extinction of a line. This case occurred in 1067 with the death of Count Rogers III. from Carcassonne. Its main heir, Ermesende, ceded her rights and those of the Counts of Foix to the Counts of Barcelona, contrary to the agreement . These in turn enfeoffed Ermengarde and their son, Bernard Aton IV. Trencavel , as hereditary vice counts in Carcassonne. Count Roger II von Foix renounced his inheritance rights on April 21, 1095.

Count of Carcassonne

House Barcelona or Bellonids

Wilhelmiden (Gellones)

House of Toulouse

House Barcelona

House of Toulouse

  • 872 Bernhard (Count of Toulouse) son of Raimund

House Barcelona

House Comminges

Vice Count of Carcassonne

Under the vice counts from the House of Trencavel, Carcassonne once again achieved the greatest possible independence, even if they formally recognized the sovereignty of the Counts of Barcelona (or the kings of Aragon ).

House Comminges

House Trencavel

House Montfort-l'Amaury

House Trencavel

In 1226 Raimund II Trencavel was declared forfeit of his possessions and went into exile in Aragon. In the Treaty of Meaux-Paris , Carcassonne was united with the French crown (see Seneschallat Carcassonne ). In 1240, Raimund's attempt to retake Carcassonne failed and withdrew again to Aragon and in 1247 renounced his claims.

Count of Carcassonne