- Geoffrey I of Provence
Geoffrey I or Josfred [Also spelled Jauffred, Jozfred, Gosfred, or Gausfred.] (died February between 1061 and 1063) was the joint
Count of Provence with his elder brothers William IV and Fulk from 1018 to his death. He was the third son ofWilliam III of Provence andGerberga of Mâcon and a scion of the younger line of the family. It is possible that he did not carry the title "count" until after the death of his eldest brother William around 1032.He became
Count of Arles in 1032 and he and Fulk made a donation to theAbbey of Cluny on26 May 1037 . During his brother's life, he was secondary to him. With the death of his brother, he became sole count with the title "marchyo sive comes Provincie". The title of "marchio" (margrave ) implied that he was the head of the dynasty.He was a great builder of the church in his region, devastated in the previous century by
Saracen raids. He restored the abbey ofSparro , which they had destroyed, and gave it to the archiepiscopal see of Aix. Following the example of most of his ancestors, he was a patron ofSaint Victor inMarseille . In 1045, he consented to a donation of one of his vicecomital vassals to the monastery and in March 1048 to the transferral of property fromRaimbaud, Archbishop of Arles , to the church. On1 July 1055 and again in 1057, with his wife Stephanie and his son Bertrand, he himself donated property to St Victor. His patronage far exceeded his predecessors however. He relinquished his rights over any lands the viscount of Marseilles, Fulk, wished to donate to the monastery in 1044, while in 1032 he had consented to turn over lands to the church asallod s. In 1038, he gave over comital rights which had been possessed of his house since the reign of his great-grandfather William the Liberator to his vassals, losing control over many castles and fortresses. The royal "fisc ", which had been under control of the counts of Provence since the time of William, was mostly parcelled out as allods to the vassals during Geoffrey's tenure and the weakening of the county of Provence as a united polity can be dated from his reign. Even whenRudolf III of Burgundy , his lord, sold any remaining rights over some royal villae, Geoffrey gave these away as allodial holdings.Geoffrey was succeeded by his son Bertrand. One daughter became the first wife of
Raymond IV of Toulouse , another, Stephanie, marriedWilliam II of Besalú and the third was Gerberga, marriedGilbert I of Gévaudan .Notes
ources
*Lewis, Archibald R. "The Development of Southern French and Catalan Society, 718–1050". University of Texas Press: Austin, 1965.
* [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#_Toc147469708 Foundation for Medieval Genealogy: Provence.]
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