- William II Sánchez of Gascony
William II Sánchez (also William Sancho, Basque: "Gilen Antso", [There are many alternate spellings of his Basque patronymic, see the nomenclature of the dukes of Gascony for more explanation.] French: "Guillaume Sanche", Gascon: "Guilhem Sans", Latin: "Willelmus Sancio", Spanish: "Guillén" or "Guillermo Sancho"),
Duke of Gascony from "circa" 961 at least until 996, was the younger illegitimate son of Sancho IV and successor of his childless elder brother, Sancho V. Documents of his reign say that his grandfather came from Iberia, lending credence to "phantasmagorical" genealogies placing the origins of García II Sánchez across thePyrenees . [Higounet, p 44.]Around 970, William was using only the title of count as when "Dominus Willelmus Sancii comes Gasconiorum" ["Lord William Sancho, count of the Gascons."] donated land in the village of "Luco Deo" to the monastery of
Saint Vincent-de-Lucq . He later carried the ducal title. He inherited the county ofBordeaux from his cousin William the Good, son of his auntEntregodis , who married one Raymond, and united it to Gascony permanently.Aimoin entitled him "Burdegalensium comes et ac totius Guasconiae dux" ["Count of Bordeaux and duke of all Gascony."] in his act of a life ofAbbo of Fleury . Before 977, William also added theAgen ais and theBazadais . This expansion of the duchy was probably the cause of an increase in our information about the region and its dukes after a period of obscurity lasting from theViking raids of the 840s. In a charter of that year, William restored the priory ofLa Réole with the titel of "dux Wasconum" and did not carry the comital title. He did have Bordeaux by 988, when he sought the advice of the council of "seniores" ["Leading men."] of Bordeaux for the restoration ofSaint-Sever .While Gascony had long been out of the orbit of the
French kings , Bordeaux had not been. With its acquisition, William began dating his charters by the reign of the king,Hugh Capet , "regnante rege Hugone". In the latter decades of the tenth century, his brother Gombald controlled all the dioceses in Gascony and then becamearchbishop of Bordeaux and thus William's family controlled the church hierarchy. When William went toNavarre to combat theMoors in theReconquista , he left Gombald in charge in Gascony. He picked up a wife in Navarre and returned to Gascony when Viking raids had become increasingly serious. He defeated the Vikings atTaller in 982 and they vanished as a serious threat thereafter. Their permanent settlements along theArdour were removed.He was married to Urraca, daughter of
García Sánchez I of Pamplona and widow ofFernán González of Castile , and was succeeded by his son Bernard and his second son, Sancho, later ruled Gascony as well. His daughter Brisca marriedWilliam V of Aquitaine and thus brought the Gascon claim to theHouse of Poitiers , which eventually inherited it in the person of Odo on Sancho's death. [Lewis, p 348.] He may be the father (or uncle) ofGersenda , who marriedHenry I, Duke of Burgundy , and Toda, who marriedBernard I of Besalú . __NOTOC__Notes
ources
Primary sources
*Aimoin. "Vita Abbonis, abbatis Floriacensis". published by J. Mabillon in "Acta sanctorum ordinis sancti Benedicti". Paris, 1668–1701.
econdary sources
* [http://home.yawl.com.br/hp/sedycias/historia2_04d.htm Sedycias, João. "História da Língua Espanhola".]
* [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/GASCONY.htm Foundation for Medieval Genealogy: Gascony.]
* [http://books.google.com/books/pdf/Histoire_de_la_Gascogne.pdf?id=sHW_kCR87l8C&output=pdf&sig=KDJUp8tgj00AvnNhQuhkFl1Daow Monlezun, Jean Justin. "Histoire de la Gascogne". 1846.]
*Collins, Roger. "The Basques". Blackwell Publishing: London, 1990.
*Higounet, Charles. "Bordeaux pendant le haut moyen age". Bordeaux, 1963.
*Lewis, Archibald R. "The Development of Southern French and Catalan Society, 718–1050". University of Texas Press: Austin, 1965.
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