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  1. Ramon Berenguer II the Towhead [1] or Cap de estopes [2] (1053 or 1054 – December 5, 1082) was Count of Barcelona from 1076 until his death. He was the son of Ramon Berenguer I, Count of Barcelona, and Almodis de La Marche. [3] The Chronicle of San Juan de la Pena called him, "… exceeding brave and bold, kind, pleasant, pious, joyful ...

  2. Ramon Berenguer I, Count of Barcelona. Ramon Berenguer I (1023 – 26 May 1076), called the Old (Catalan: el Vell, French: le Vieux), was Count of Barcelona in 1035–1076. He promulgated the earliest versions of a written code of Catalan law, the Usages of Barcelona. Born in 1024, he succeeded his father, Berenguer Ramon I the Crooked in 1035.

  3. Ramon Berenguer was born 1114, the son of Count Ramon Berenguer III of Barcelona and Countess Douce I of Provence. [4] He inherited the county of Barcelona from his father Ramon Berenguer III on 19 August 1131. [5] On 11 August 1137, at the age of about 24, he was betrothed to the infant Petronilla of Aragon, aged one at the time. [6]

  4. Bera ( Catalan: Berà) (died 844) was the first count of Barcelona from 801 until his deposition in 820. He was also the count of Razès and Conflent from 790, and the count of Girona and Besalú from 812 (or 813 or 817) until his deposition. In 811, he was witness to the last will and testament of Charlemagne.

  5. Origins. He was the son of Wilfred the Hairy and younger brother of the previous count of Barcelona, Wilfred II Borrel. He worked jointly with his brother in the government of the counties held by their father after his death in 897. He did not reign independently until his brother's death in 911.

  6. 18 de sept. de 2023 · King Ferdinand II of Aragon, Count of Barcelona. A time jump into the 15th century saw the Moors losing significant amounts of their lands. The union between King Ferdinand II of Aragon, Valencia, Sardinia, Majorca, Navarre, Naples and Sicily, Duke of Neopatria and Athens, Count of Barcelona and Isabella of Castille and Leon established joint rule over a vast swathe of Spain.

  7. The Ciutat Comtal. In the Middle Ages, Barcelona became the Ciutat Comtal (Count’s City) and its political importance increased. It became the seat of the main political institutions in Old Catalonia and that favoured the development of trade which, in turn, led to the city’s growth and expansion, and the construction of some magnificent Gothic-style buildings.