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High
Middle Ages
Avignon,
Arles and Marseille are the three most important cities of Provence.
Avignon was a "fortress city" of roman aspects. It was also a
reputed intellectual center. In the year 55, the Parisian abbot Domnole
refused the bishopric of Avignon because he feared "sophistic
senators and philosophical magistrates."
The
provençal nobility considered itself of "Roman rights."
Cultured and proud, they badly withstood the Frank protectorate. It is
likely that they called upon the Saracens, who entered Arles and Avignon
in 734 - 735. Having become an Arab stronghold, Avignon will be retaken
by Charles Martel for a first time in 737, after a bloody siege; and
again a second time two years later. The city became once again the
property of the Franks, and the traitors were severely chastised. The
Frankish aristocracy took the country definitively in hand. In 932, the
kingdom of Provence was united with Burgundy, thus forming the kingdom
of Arles, attached to the empire in 1033.
In 948, the counties of Provence are regrouped under a common authority
: one of the descendants of Boson, (king of Provence in 879), elected
count of Arles, became the first count to govern Provence.
The
Middle Ages : the Commune of Avignon
Parallel
to the enfeeblement of royal power under the Carolingian dynasty, the
nobility took control of the countryside, and lost interest in the
cities. This was an epoch of feudal wars, and the absolute authority of
a local seigneur over his lands. Avignon was governed by a count and a
bishop nominated by the count. In the beginning of the 11th century, the
count of Provence and the bishop took residence on each side of the
cliff : the former in the Fort St Martin, constructed on the
groundwork of the old roman castrum and destroyed in 1655, while the
latter erected a chapel, Notre-Dame-du-Château.
(Notre dames des Doms).
Trade
flourishing in all of Western Europe, Avignon benefits from its position
on the trade route between Italy and Spain, and from heavy river
traffic. Craftsmen's and tradesmen's guilds developed and installed
themselves at the foot of the cliff. Enriched noblemen, knights and
ombudsmen gained importance and began to enjoy a non-negligible
authority. The repopulated city rediscovered its gallo-roman dimensions.
A double wall is built in the 12th century. The grounds around it are
drained and the marshes dried up.
The
power of the Vice-count, and that of the Bishop was reduced. The
dynasty, founded by Boson of Arles was divided, and in the beginning of
the 12th century Provence belonged to three families. Avignon, finding
itself at the intersection of three counties, with none of them willing
to share her, was never divided. In 1129, just before dying, William
III, Count of Forcalquier granted the bishops, knights and ombudsmen of
Avignon "power, jurisdiction and seigneurship", of which the
vice-count had previously been invested. Avignon was thus liberated from
the counts' and vice-counts' authority and set itself up as a commune.
In 1161, the emperor Frederick Barbarossa confirmed this privilege.
The
Commune : the bishop is the president, but authority lies in the
hands of 8 councilmen. (4 at the start) Four knights and four ombudsmen,
elected for one year. The councilmen are assisted by judges and
streetmasters. For important decisions the people were convoked at the
foot of Escalier St. Anne which joins the Rhone with Notre Dame des
Doms.
The famous Avignon bridge, named St Benezet Bridge in honor of its
founder, was built in 1185. Its construction and maintenance costs were
high, and from the 17th century on it was regularly damaged by the
abrupt and violent swelling of the Rhone. It operated until 1669 when
Avignon renounced the financing of its expensive maintenance. In the
Middle Ages, it was the only bridge over the Rhone between the
Mediterranean sea and Lyon. It also contributed to the inflow of
marchandise. Commercial and cosmopolitan, Avignon was, at this time, one
of the richest, most opulent and most populated cities of the Empire.
Avignon's prosperity was to such an extent that she became one of the
most powerful cities of the Midi. Protégée par sa double
enceinte, son pont assure sa renommée et lui assure une source de
revenu considérable. Elle est terre d'Empire, le fleuve est la frontière
avec le Royaume de France.
The
conflict between Raymond VI, count of Toulouse, and Louis VIII, king of
France, would nevertheless upset the order of things. The commune of
Avignon sided resolutely with the count of Toulouse when the Council of
Lotran (1215) dispossesses him of many territories. Avignon, loyal to
her suzerain, attacked William II of Orange, who wanted to appropriate
the County of Venaissin. She eliminated him and received in gratitude
Caumont, Le Thor, Thouzon, Jonquerette. As reimbursement of a loan, she
received in 1226 the entire County of Venaissin, the chateaux of
Malaucene and Beaucaire. The commune of Avignon, at the zenith of its
power, carried on as a veritable feudal lord, even believing itself
capable of resisting the French king.
Louis
VIII arrived, coursing down the Rhone valley with an immense army, on
crusade against Albigenien heretics. After some hesitation, the
inhabitants closed their gates, thus denying him passage over the Rhone.
The king's army laid siege, a harsh and brutal siege lasting three month
from June 10 to September 12, 1226. In the end, the famished Avigonnais
surrendered, just a few days before the swelling of the Rhone flooded
the positions where the king and his army had held fast for so long. The
king took hostages, demanding a high ransom, ordered the destruction of
the ramparts and ordered the peasants, overjoyed by the opportunity to
revenge themselves on the oppressive guardianship, to dismantle the 300
stronghouses of the Avignon knights.
The bridge, as well, was reduced to one fourth its span.
Thus ended the power of Avignon. In 1229, the County of Venaissin was
given over to the Church. Following the death of the Count of Toulouse,
Raymond VII, in 1245, the city came under the double protectorate of
Charles 1st of Anjou, count of Provence, and Alphonse of Poitiers, count
of Toulouse, both of them brothers of the king, Saint Louis. They
restored the authority of the counts by reducing for good the power of
the commune in 1251. In 1274, the king Philip the Bold, successor to his
uncle Alphonse of Poitiers, dead without heirs, gave the County of
Venaissin to the Church and ceded his part of Avignon in 1290 to the
count of Provence Charles II of Anjou, who thereby became the sole ruler
of Avignon.
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