Ponç Hug IV, Count of Empúries

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A seal of Ponç Hug IV

Pons V or Pons Hugh IV[1] (Spanish: Ponce V or Ponce Hugo IV,[2] Occitan: Pons Uc, Catalan: Ponç V or Ponç Hug IV[3]) (c.1264 – 1313) was the Count of Empúries (Ampurias) from 1277 until his death[4] and viscount of Bas from 1285 to 1291. He was the son and successor of Hug V[1][4] and Sibila de Palau.

His mother, widowed, purchased the viscounty of Bas from Peter III of Aragon in 1280. In 1282 Ponç Hug participated in the Aragonese Crusade against the crusaders, on the side of Peter III. In 1285 the viscounty of Bas devolved to Ponç in reward for his services in 1282 and Peter also compensated him with the rights over Fernando and Castellfollit de Riubregós.

Ponç served as admiral of the fleet to James I of Sicily and was in Sicily in 1291, when he exchanged Bas with his brother Huguet, also in Sicily that year, on the condition that it would devolve to Ponç's descendants if Huguet had none. Ponç received Castellfollit, Montros, and Montagut in the exchange. He returned with James later that year after he inherited Aragon and Catalonia, but Huguet stayed behind in Siciy.[5]

When James signed the Treaty of Anagni with the French and the Papacy, thus putting an end to the War of the Vespers, in 1295, the people of Sicily under James' younger brother Frederick III opposed him. When Frederick heard that James was preparing to go to war with him, he sent a messenger, Mountainer Pérez de Sosa, to Catalonia in an effort to stir up the barons and cities against James in 1298.[5] Mountainer carried with him an Occitan poem, Ges per guerra no.m chal aver consir, intended as a communication with his supporters in Catalonia. This communiqué seems to have had in mind Ponç Hug as a recipient, for the count penned a response (under the title con d'Emppuria), A l'onrat rei Frederic terz vai dir, in which he praised Frederick's tact and diplomacy, but told him bluntly that he would not abandon his sovereign.[5] This poetic transaction is usually dated to January–March, Spring, or August 1296, but Gerónimo Zurita in the seventeenth century specifically dated the embassy of Mountainer to 1298.

In the subsequent war, Ponç and his vassals fought with James' galleys at the Battle of Cape Orlando, while Huguet his brother fought among the ships of Frederick. Many subsequent scholars have assumed that Ponç had gone over to the side of his brother, but this is unlikely.[5]

Ponç later turned against James and rose in revolt, driving his functionaries out of Empúries. But the king proved to powerful for his most powerful baron and Ponç was ruined and forced to submit in 1306.

Family[edit]

Ponç married (1281) the Marquesa de Cabrera, uniting Cabrera to Empúries. Between 1282 and 1313, Fra Romeu Sabruguera translated much of the Bible from Old French into 11,000 verses in Old Catalan. He dedicated the work (the "Biblia rimada") to the Countess Marquesa, whose interest was primarily in battles, of which he bragged there would be many. He had excluded the prophetic books in favour of the Books of Kings and the Maccabees.[6][7]

The couple had three children:

  • Hug (assassinated 1309), named heir
  • Ponç VI (c.1290–1322), successor
  • Blancaflor (died 1313)

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b The Central Convent of Hospitallers and Templars: History, Organization, and Personnel (1099/1120-1310), Jochen Burgtorf, BRILL, 2008; accessed October 2018.
  2. ^ Descripcion general de las monedas hispanocristianas desde la invasion de los Arabes, Volume 2, Aloiss Heiss, Milagro, 1867; accessed October 2018.
  3. ^ Aprofundir en els temps de Ponç Hug IV. Dimarts, 4 de Setembre del 2018. Accessed October 2018.
  4. ^ a b Dynasties of the World. John Morby, Oxford University Press, Sep 18, 2014; accessed October 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d Riquer (1975), 1687–88.
  6. ^ Hillgarth (1976), 146.
  7. ^ Courcelles (2001), 67.

Sources[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Joaquim Miret i Sans, Sempre han tingut béch les oques. Apuntacions per la historia de les costumes privades, Badia, Barcelona 1905.
  • Martín de Riquer. Los trovadores: historia literaria y textos. 3 vol. Barcelona: Planeta, 1975.
  • James Brundage, The politics of sodomy: Rex v. Pons Hugh de Ampurias (1311), in: Joyce E. Salisbury (ed.), Sex in the Middle Ages: a book of essays, Garland publishing, New York 1991, pp. 239–246. ISBN 978-0824057664.
  • Ramon Rosselló, El procés contra Ponç Hug, comte d'Empúries, per pecat de sodomia, Palma, Lleonard Muntaner, 2003.
  • Pep Vila, Un text autèntic: el procés contra el comte d'Empúries per pecat de sodomia, "Annals de l'Institut d'Estudis Gironins", XLVI 2005, pp. 481–489.
  • Daniel Genís i Mas, Un procés polític difamatori: l'acusació per pecat de sodomia contra Ponç Hug IV, "Mot, So, Razo", 6 (2007), 18-31.