- Roger-Bernard II of Foix
Roger Bernard II (c.1195 –
26 May 1241 ), called the Great, was the sixth count of Foix from 1223 until his death. He was the son and successor of the illustrious count Raymond-Roger and his wife Philippa of Montcada.He made his name famous in 1217 when, for six weeks, he defended the castle of
Montgrenier against the onslaught ofSimon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester . That same year, he distinguished himself at the siege of Toulouse. In 1220, he assisted his father in the recapture ofLavaur andPuylaurens and was instrumental in helping his father retake his lost dominions. The resumption ofMirepoix wasn't accomplished until his own reign, however.At the moment of his accession, he and the new
count of Toulouse , Raymond VII, besiegedCarcassonne . On14 September 1224 , theAlbigensian Crusade rs surrendered and the war came to an end, each southern lord making peace with the church. However, in 1226, the newking of France , Louis VIII, called "the Lion", renewed the conflict in order to enforce his royal rights inLanguedoc . Roger-Bernard tried to keep the peace, but the king rejected his embassy and the counts of Foix and Toulouse took up arms again. Roger-Bernard and a small contingent of his feudatories constituted a pocket of resistance inLimoux from June 1226 to June 1227, but the war was largely a discontinuous series of skirmishes. In January 1229, Raymond of Toulouse signed theTreaty of Meaux with Louis the Lion's successor, Louis IX. Already excommunicated (since March or April 1227) and with his only ally gone and a new royal army in the field against him, Roger-Bernard sued for peace in June. By the ensuing treaty, he received back much of his land, but not Mirepoix, which he had previously fought so hard to reconquer.In 1226, he married Ermesinda, viscountess of
Castelbon and aCathar , and from then on, when his relations with his French sovereign allowed it, he concentrated on expansion and fortification southwards. He fortified the towns guarding the way toAndorra andUrgel . He fell into conflict with thebishop of Urgel over the valley of Caboet in May 1233. He opposed theInquisition and got into even more conflict with the bishop in April 1239. He did not involve himself in the war of Raymond Trencavel on behalf of his family, theTrencavel , though he did negotiate an honourable treaty in 1240. He ended his days at peace with the established church (having been excommunicated a second time in 1236) and was buried in the abbey ofBoulbonne . He was succeeded by his son Roger IV, whom he had married to the Cardona heiress.External links
* [http://www.foixstory.com/data/comtes/07.htm Histoire des comtes de Foix] .
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