Diego Gelmírez

Diego Gelmírez

Diego Gelmírez (or Xelmírez) (ca 1069 – ca 1149) was the second bishop (from 1100) and first archbishop (from 1120) of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, Spain. He is a prominent figure in the history of Galicia and an important historiographer of the Spain of his day. Diego involved himself in many quarrels, ecclesiastical and secular, which were recounted in the Historia Compostelana, which covered his episcopacy from 1100 to 1139 and serves as a sort of gesta of the bishop's life.[1]

He was probably born at Catoira, where his father, Gelmiro or Xelmirio, was the custodian of the castle. He received an education at the court of Alfonso VI of Castile. In 1092, Raymond, count of Galicia, named him his notary and secretary and in 1093 he was the administrator of the Compostelan church. In 1094, Dalmatius was appointed the first bishop of Compostela. Dalmatius died the next year (1095) and the people of the see requested the king nominate Diego administrator again during the vacancy. In 1099, the pope authorised a new episcopal election and Diego was chosen the next year. He was anointed the second bishop of Compostela in 1101. During his tenure, he was given secular rule of the city by Alfonso and he strove to make Compostela a major pilgrimage destination, which he did. He increased the prestige of his see and the volume of pilgrims on the road to Compostela.

In 1107 Pedro Fróilaz de Traba, the guardian of the heir, Alfonso Raimúndez, rebelled against Queen Urraca and her new husband, Alfonso the Battler. According to the Historia, he was opposed by a "brotherhood" (germanitas) led by the knight Arias Pérez and Diego Gelmírez, who had known each other since childhood.[2][3] Diego Gelmírez had accepted the leadership of the brotherhood late in 1109 or early in 1110. In 1110 a truce between Pedro and the brotherhood was broken when the former took over the south Galician fortress of Castrelo de Miño and installed a garrison there under his wife Urraca and the young Alfonso. Arias promptly besieged it, and Pedro came to defend it.[3] The besieged called on Diego to negotiate terms of surrender, which he did, but the brotherhood had grown suspicious of him and when a deal was struck Arias had Diego, Pedro, and Alfonso all arrested.[2] In exchange for the castles of Oeste and Lanzada, they were all soon released and Diego went over to the separatists.[2][4] In 1111, Diego crowned Alfonso Raimúndez King of Galicia in opposition to Urraca and her husband.

Late in 1113, when the royal court was in Galicia, Arias was inciting Urraca against Diego. Urraca deprived him of his secular authority at the request of the people, who agitated for communal rights, but she reinstated him in his temporal powers within a year and even exempted him from all military service to the crown and extended his charge over the whole diocese.

In 1120, Pope Callixtus II elevated Diego and his see to archiepiscopal rank and appointed him papal legate to Spain. That same year, according to the Historia, Urraca ordered the leading men (principes) of Galicia, including Arias Pérez, to do homage (hominium) to Diego Gelmírez as "their lord, their patron, their king and their prince, saving their fealty to the queen" and recognise his rule (dominio).[5] In 1121, however, after Diego had renewed his alliance with the Pedro Fróilaz de Traba, his power appeared to threaten that of the queen. In the summer of 1121 she had Diego arrested at Castrelo in collaboration with Arias Pérez. Diego was imprisoned for a while, but the support of the people, which he had been cultivating, compelled his release.[6] Sometime in 1121 Muño Peláez built an "adulterine" (i.e. illegal) castle on the river Iso near Compostela. The Historia Compostelana calls it a "den of robbers and bandits", and Diego managed to raze it to the ground soon after it was built.[7]

In the spring of 1126, shortly after Urraca's death and the accession of Alfonso, Arias led a rebellion in Galicia. Diego Gelmírez and Gómez Núñez of Toroño[8] or perhaps Gutierre Vermúdez[9] were charged per litteras ("by letter") with putting it down. Diego besieged Arias in Lobeiro and, with siege engines, in Tabeirós, forcing him to surrender.[8][10] Diego's opinion of Arias was such that he said to him: "I fear, therefore, that if such that you are you leave this world, you will lose eternal life and incur the perpetual condemnation of your soul."[11]

Notes

  1. ^ Reilly (1969).
  2. ^ a b c Richard A. Fletcher (1984), Saint James's Catapult: The Life and Times of Diego Gelmírez of Santiago de Compostela (Oxford: Oxford University Press), 131–35 and 157–60.
  3. ^ a b Simon Barton (1997), The Aristocracy in Twelfth-century León and Castile (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 50–51.
  4. ^ Barton, 179.
  5. ^ Fletcher, 147.
  6. ^ Fletcher, 149.
  7. ^ Barton, 213.
  8. ^ a b Fletcher, 248.
  9. ^ Barton, 160 n73, says that secular magnate is identified in the Historia only as "Count G".
  10. ^ Charles Julian Bishko (1965), "The Cluniac Priories of Galicia and Portugal: Their Acquisition and Administration, 1075–c. 1230", Studia Monastica, 7, 330–31.
  11. ^ Quoted in Ermelindo Portela Silva (1985), "Muerte y sociedad en la Galicia medieval (siglos XII–XIV)", Anuario de estudios medievales, 15, 194, in Spanish: Temo, por tanto, que, si tal cual eres, te vas de este mundo, perderás la vida eterna e incurrirás en la perpetua condenación de tu alma. Diego's words bear no indication that he believed in an intermediate state—purgatory—for Christians who died in their sins.

Sources

  • Biggs, Anselm Gordon. Diego Xelmírez. Xerais, 1983. ISBN 84-7507-100-7
  • Reilly, Bernard F. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca.
  • Reilly, Bernard F. "The Historia Compostelana: The Genesis and Composition of a Twelfth-Century Spanish Gesta," in Speculum 44 (1969): pp 78–85
  • Vones, Ludwig , Die 'Historia Compostelana und die Kirchenpolitik des nordwestspanischen Raumes (Cologne, 1980)
  • Falque, Emma, "The Manuscript Transmission of the 'Historia Compostellana," in Manuscripta (1985): pp 80–90

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Diego Gelmírez — (en gallego Diego Xelmírez, Catoira/Padrón?, 1059? Santiago de Compostela, 1139), fue el primer arzobispo de Santiago, e impulsó la construcción de la Catedral de Santiago de Compostela. Escribió en latín la Historia Compostelana, o sea, hechos… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Diego Gelmírez — (* vermutlich um 1069; † 1149) war der erste Erzbischof von Santiago de Compostela. Leben Diego Gelmírez war der Sohn eines galicischen Adligen, der zur Verteidigung der Küste gegen die Normannen nach Iria Flavia abkommandiert war. Nach der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Diego Gelmírez — (né à Padrón en 1059 et mort à Saint Jacques de Compostelle en 1139), est un homme d église galicien, archevêque de Saint Jacques de Compostelle. Biographie Second d une fratrie de quatre enfants, il est le fils du comte Gelmiro. Il reçoit une… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Gelmirez — Diego Gelmírez (* vermutlich um 1069; † 1149) war der erste Erzbischof von Santiago de Compostela. Leben Diego Gelmírez war der Sohn eines galicischen Adligen, der zur Verteidigung der Küste gegen die Normannen nach Iria Flavia abkommandiert war …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Gelmírez — Diego Gelmírez (* vermutlich um 1069; † 1149) war der erste Erzbischof von Santiago de Compostela. Leben Diego Gelmírez war der Sohn eines galicischen Adligen, der zur Verteidigung der Küste gegen die Normannen nach Iria Flavia abkommandiert war …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Diego (bishop of Ourense) — Diego (died 1132) was the third bishop of the restored diocese of Ourense from between 1097 and 1100 until his death. He was a canon of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela and a protégé of its bishop, Diego Gelmírez, with whom he remained in… …   Wikipedia

  • Diego (given name) — Diego is a very common male given name of Spanish origin – also used in Portuguese speaking countries, Italy and France. It may refer to: Diego, a variety of footballers who are known as simply Diego (see article); Diego de Oviedo, 10th century… …   Wikipedia

  • Diego — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Diego …   Wikipedia Español

  • Diego Peláez — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Diego Peláez fue un obispo medieval de Santiago de Compostela. Una de las grandes figuras medievales de la nobleza eclesiástica gallega. Contribuyó a la grandeza de la diócesis y su señorío territorial durante los… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Gelmírez — Gelmírez, Diego …   Enciclopedia Universal

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”