Garsenda, Countess of Forcalquier
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Garsenda or
Garsende (
II)
de Sabran (c. 1180 – c. 1242) was the
Countess of Provence as the wife of
Alfonso II from 1193 and the
Countess of Forcalquier in her own right from 1209. She brought Forcalquier to the
House of Barcelona and united it to Provence. She was also a patron of
Occitan literature, especially the
troubadours, and herself wrote some
lyric poetry and is counted among the
trobairitz as Garsenda de Proensa or Proença. She was, in the words of her most recent editors, "one of the most powerful women in Occitan history".
[1]Early life and marriage
Garsenda was the daughter of
Renier de Sabran, lord of
Caylar and
Ansouis, and Garsenda, daughter of
William IV of Forcalquier. She was named after her mother, who was the heiress of William IV, but predeceased him. Garsenda therefore inherited Forcalquier from her grandfather. She was only thirteen years of age when, in 1193, her grandfather William IV and Alfonso II signed the
Treaty of Aix whereby Garsenda would inherit William's county and would marry Alfonso, who was in line to become Count of Provence. The marriage took place at
Aix-en-Provence in July 1193.
Regency and patronage
In 1209 both William IV and Alfonso died and Garsenda became the natural guardian of their son and heir,
Raymond Berengar IV. Initially her brother-in-law,
Peter II of Aragon, assigned the
regency of Provence to his brother
Sancho, but when Peter died in 1213 Sancho became regent of
Aragon and passed Provence and Forcalquier to his son
Nuño Sánchez. Dissension broke out between the Catalans and the partisans of the countess, who accused Nuño of attempting to supplant his nephew in the county. The Provençal aristocracy originally took advantage of the situation for their own ambitious ends, but eventually they lined up behind Garsenda and removed Nuño, who returned to Catalonia. The regency was passed to Garsenda and a regency council was established consisting of the native nobles.
It was probably during her tenure as regent (1209/1213–1217/1220) that Garsenda became the focus of a literary circle of poets, though the
vida of
Elias de Barjols refers to his patron as Alfonso. There is a
tenso between a bona dompna (good lady), identified in one
chansonnier as la contessa de Proessa,
[2] and an anonymous troubadour. The two
coblas of the exchange are found in two different orders in the two chansonniers, called F and T, that preserve them. It cannot be know therefore who spoke first, but the woman's half begins Vos q'em semblatz dels corals amadors. In the poem the countess declares her love for her interlocutor, who then responds courteously but carefully. Under some interpretations the troubadour is
Gui de Cavaillon, whose vida repeats the rumour (probably unfounded) that he was the countess' lover. Gui, however, was at the Provençal court between 1200 and 1209, pushing the date of the exchange forward a bit. Elias de Barjols apparently "fell in love" with her as a widow and wrote songs about her "for the rest of his life", until he entered a monastery.
Raimon Vidal also praised her renowned patronage of troubadours.
Retirement and later life
In 1220
Guillaume de Sabran, a nephew of William IV, who claimed Forcalquier and had been in revolt in the region of
Sisteron, was neutralised in part through the mediation of the
Archbishop of Aix,
Bermond le Cornu. By 1217 or 1220 Garsenda had finally ceded Forcalquier to her son and handed the reins of government over, retiring to the monastery of
La Celle in 1222 or 1225.
Garsend may have been alive as late as 1257, when a certain woman of that name made a donation to a church of St-Jean on the condition that three priests be kept to pray for her soul and that of her husband.
Poetry
Vos que.m semblatz dels corals amadors,
ja non volgra que fossetz tan doptanz;
e platz me molt quar vos destreing m'amors,
qu'atressi sui eu per vos malananz.
Ez avetz dan en vostre vulpillatge
quar no.us ausatz de preiar enardir,
e faitz a vos ez a mi gran dampnatge;
que ges dompna no ausa descobrir
tot so qu'il vol per paor de faillir.
You're so well-suited as a lover,
I wish you wouldn't be so hesitant;
but I'm glad my love makes you the penitent,
otherwise I'd be the one to suffer.
Still, in the long run it's you who stands to lose
if you're not brave enough to state your case,
and you'll do both of us great harm if you refuse.
For a lady doesn't dare uncover
her true will, lest those around her think her base.
father: Alphonso II the Chaste of Aragón, King of Aragón, b. MAY 1152