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  1. Ramon Berenguer IV. Ramon Berenguer IV ( Barcelona, 1113 - Borgo San Dalmazzo, 8 augustus 1162 ), bijgenaamd de heilige, was een zoon van graaf Raymond Berengarius III van Barcelona en diens tweede echtgenote Dulcia van Provence . Hij volgde in 1131 zijn vader op als graaf van Barcelona. Tevens was hij graaf van Osona en Besalu.

  2. 2 de mar. de 2021 · Ramon Berenguer IV. Date of birth. 1114 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584) Barcelona ( County of Barcelona) Date of death. 6 August 1162 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584) Borgo San Dalmazzo. Place of burial. Santa Maria de Ripoll.

  3. Berenguer Ramon II "the Fratricide" (1053/54 – 1097/99) was count of Barcelona from 1076 to 1097. He was the son of Ramon Berenguer I and Almodis of La Marche , and initially ruled jointly with his twin brother Ramon Berenguer II .

  4. Sanç (Sancho) Berenguer [ ca] (birth date unknown), who received the frontier march from the Llobregat to the al-Andalus, which constituted the new county of Penedès with its capital in Olèrdola. [5] Sometime between 1041 and 1049, Sanç swore fealty to his elder brother. Then, on 9 June 1050, he ceded his inheritance to Ramon, who in return ...

  5. When Ramon Berenguer IV Count of Barcelona was born in 1114, in Rodez, Aveyron, Midi-Pyrénées, France, his father, Ramon Berenguer III de Barcelona, was 32 and his mother, Courtess Dulce Aldonza Milhaud x, was 28. He married Petronilla de Aragón in 1151, in Huesca, Huesca, Aragón, Spain. They were the parents of at least 7 sons and 2 daughters.

  6. 26 de jun. de 2024 · Ramon Berenguer V (French: Raimond-Bérenger; 1198 – 19 August 1245) was a member of the House of Barcelona who ruled as count of Provence and Forcalquier. He was the first count of Provence to live in the county in more than one hundred years. During the minority of a previous count, the regency was exercised by Ramon Berenguer IV de ...

  7. Ramon Berenguer IV was, until his death, Count of Barcelona and Prince of Aragon. Their son, Alfonso II , was the first king of Aragon who, in turn was the Count of Barcelona as Alfons I, titles all the kings of the Crown of Aragon inherited from then on. [8]