The House of Toulouse (
Tolosa)
The family of Saint-Gilles was one of the most powerful in
Europe. As The
Counts of Toulouse they held a huge area of land in
the early Middle Ages. Before the Cathar Crusade
they enjoyed great prestige, even within the Roman Church.
They were much more than the title of Count might
suggest to modern ears. They were also Dukes of Narbonne,
Marquises of Provence and suzerain lords of other territories,
with some fifteen other, more conventional, counts as their
vassals. They were regarded as the equal of most kings and were related to the leading
families of Europe, notably the Kings of England,
France
and Aragon.
Their
Courts were indistinguishable from royal courts. The distinction between
names and titles was not well developed in the middle ages, so the family may
be called de St-Gilles or de Toulouse interchangeably. They
came originally from the town of Saint-Gilles, an important centre where two pilgrimage
routes to Compostella (the voie d'Arles and the voie Regordane) converged. In
medieval times, Saint-Gilles was a major commercial centre and in its own right and
the fourth most important pilgrimage site in Europe.  One
of the counts, Ramon
IV, had been the most prestigious leader of the First Crusade, founding the
County of Tripoli in the Holy Land and becoming Count
Raymond I of Tripoli, with territories at both ends of the Mediterranean
Sea. He declined the crown of the new Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. His
great grandson, Count
Raymond III of Tripoli, was present at the momentous battle at the Horns of
Hattin, where Saladin's victory signaled the beginning of the end of Catholic
states in the east.
At the time of the outbreak of the Crusade
against the Cathars of the Languedoc, the ruler was
Count
Raymond VI. One of his wives was Jeanne
of England, which made Raymond son-in-law of Henry
II and Eleanor
of Aquitaine, and brother-in-law to
King Richard I (the Lionheart) and King
John of England. He was also related to the King
of France, and to the King
of Aragon. Raymond VI died in 1222 at a period
when his lands looked safe. The wars continued into
another generation, Raymond
VII (son of Raimond VI) fighting against Amoury
de Montfort, son of his Raymond VI's enemy, Simon
de Montfort.
Many of the Counts were named Ramon, an Occitan
name which is the same in modern Spanish, more familiar as Raymond in English
and Raimond in French. Later members of the dynasty are often refered
to in French literature as the Raimondines. The Raimondines were arguably the
most enlightened rulers in Europe until the advent of modern secular states. Somthing
is known about the allies
and the nobles of the counts, and also their relationships with their
people, with the Jews
and with Religious
Dissidents. The price they paid at the hands of the Roman Church and the French
Crusaders was public flogging, dispossession and ultimately the extinction of
their noble House. Despite the best efforts of the Roman Church to demonise their
memory and of successive French governments to efface all vestiges of their rule,
there are still powerful links in the Languedoc to a clearly remembered golden
age, before the territories of the Counts of Toulouse were annexed to France.
Click on the following link for more on individual The
Counts of Toulouse Click
on the following link for more on The
Cross of Toulouse, the heraldic device of the Counts of Toulouse Click
on the following link for more on
Occitan the language spoken in the lands of the Counts of Toulouse Click
on the following link for more on the Troubadours,
who made Occitan the first literary language of modern Europe
Click on the following link for more on
Occitania, "the country that never was" Click
on the following link for more on the lineage
of the Counts of Toulouse
Click on the following link for more on the
genealogy of the Counts of Toulouse Or
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