The 'Kingdom of Galicia' (anciently 'Gallaecia') was a
medieval kingdom in
Iberia for two distinct periods. In the first period, it was a
barbarian state. In this sense it is the name for the land ruled by the
Suebi, a
Germanic people, in
Hispania. Their kingdom corresponded to the
Roman province of
Gallaecia. This kingdom was annexed by the
Visigoths. When the later
Asturian kingdom was divided in
910, the region of
Galicia gained independence. It had this independence off and on for over two centuries until the southern region, the county of
Portucale (southern Gallaecia), became independent in 1128 and known as the
Kingdom of Portugal. Galicia (northen Gallaecia) was finally united to León in the partition of the realm in
1157. It was thus united ever thereafter.
The Suebic Kingdom
Main articles: Suebi
The
Suebic kingdom of
Galicia lasted from
410 to
584 and seems to have enjoyed relatively stable government for most of that time. In the beginning Gallaecia was divided between two kingdoms, the kingdom of the
Vandals Hasdingi and the kingdom of the Suebi. Latter on the kingdom of the
Hasdingi was conquered by the Suebi when a war broke out between the Vandal
Gunderic and the Suebi
Hermeric. The Suebi were helped by the Romans and the Vandal army fled to the kingdom of the
Silingi Vandals in
Baetica. Historians like
José Antonio López Silva, the translator of
Idatius' chronicles, the primary written source for the period, find that the essential temper of Galician culture was established in the blending of Ibero-Roman culture with that of the Suebi
[1].
As with most Germanic invasions, the number of the original Suebi invaders is estimated at fewer than 30,000, settling mainly in the zones around modern Northern
Portugal and Galicia, mainly in
Braga (''Bracara Augusta''),
Porto,
Lugo (''Lucus Augusta''), and
Astorga (''Asturica Augusta''). The valley of the
Lima river is thought to have received the largest concentration of germanic settlers. Bracara Augusta, the modern city of Braga, became the capital of the Suebi, as it was previously the capital of the Gallaecian province. Suebic Gallaecia was larger than the modern region: it extended south to the
Douro and to
Ãvila in the east. At its heyday it extended as far as
Mérida or
Seville.
In
438,
Hermeric ratified the peace with the ''Galaicos'', the native Hispano-Roman people, and, tired of fighting, abdicated in favor of his son
Rechila. In
448, Rechila died, leaving a state in expansion to his son
Rechiar, who imposed his
Roman Catholic faith on the pagan Suebi and Priscillianist Galaico population, having converted in
447. In
456, Rechiar died and Suebi glory began to fade. Multiple candidates for the throne appeared, grouped in two factions. A division marked by the river
Minius (modern Minho) is noticed, probably a consequence of the two tribes,
Quadi and
Marcomanni, who constituted the Suebi nation in the
Iberian Peninsula. Together with the Suebi came another germanic tribe, the
Buri, that settled in the lands known as
Terras de Bouro (Lands of the Buri) in what is now Portugal.
There were occasional clashes with the
Visigoths, who arrived in the Iberian peninsula in
416, having been sent from
Aquitaine by the
Western Roman Emperor to battle the
Vandals and
Alans. They came to dominate most of it, but the Suebi maintained their independence until
584, when the Visigothic King
Leovigild, on the pretext of conflict over the succession, invaded the Suebic kingdom and finally defeated it.
Andeca, the last king of the Suebi, held out for a year before surrendering in
585. With his surrender, this branch of the Suebi was absorbed into the Visigothic kingdom. The kingdom of Galicia, nevertheless, existed (off and on) officially on paper until
1833. Only after the Visigoths conquered the kingdom of the Suebi in 585,
St Braulio of Zaragoza (590 - 651) depicted the region as "the extremity of the west in an illiterate country where naught is heard but the sound of gales". As with the Visigothic language, there are just some traces of the Suebi tongue as the barbarians quickly adopted the local vulgar Latin ( suev. lawerka: ''laverca'').
The Suebi kingdom of Gallaecia should not be mistaken for the later medieval kingdom of Galicia, which existed (off and on) from
910 to
1070. The
historiography of the Suebi, and of Galicia in general, was long marginalised in Spanish culture; it was left to a
German scholar to write the first connected history of the Suebi in Galicia, as writer-historian
Xoán Bernárdez Vilar has pointed out
[2].
Suebi Kings of Galicia
★
Hermeric, c. 409–438
★
Rechila, 438–448
★
Rechiar, 448–456
★
Aioulf, 456–457, foreigner, possibly appointee of the
Visigoths
★
Maldras, 456–460, in opposition to Framta after 457
★
Framta, 457, in opposition to Maldras
★
Richimund, 457–464, successor of Framta, not titled ''rex''
★
Frumar, 460–464, successor of Maldras, not titled ''rex''
★
Remismund, 464–469, succeeded Frumar, reunited the Suevi
★ ''Obscurity'', 469–550
★
Ariamir, c.550–c.562
★
Carriaric, c.562–c.565, existence not certain
★
Theodemar, c.565–570
★
Miro, 570–583
★
Eboric, (also called ''Euric'') 583–584
★
Andeca, 584–585, deposed and put in a
monastery by
Leovigild
★
Malaric, 585–586, opposed Leovigild and defeated
The
Visigoths conquered the Suevi in 585.
Galicia in the Middle Ages
After the Visigothic collapse in
711, the remaining Gothic independents fled to the
Asturias mountains and eventually set up a state of their own, electing as their leader
Pelayo. The first leader who can assuredly be called king was
Alfonso I, who was also the first to expand the kingdom of Asturias into Galicia. This kingdom continued to expand until the large "Desert of the Douro," a vast no-man's land created by Alfonso in the region between his kingdom and the
Douro to keep out invaders, was repopulated (see
Repoblación). On the death of
Alfonso III (
910), the kingdom was divided between the original
Asturias (including
Cantabria),
Galicia, and the newest province of
León (formed out of the Desert). This division disappeared and reappeared sporadically until Galicia was united completely to
Castile in
1126.
Asturian Kings of Galicia
★
Ordoño II (
910-
924), also
king of León from
914
★
Fruela II (
924-
925, also
king of León from
924 and of
Asturias from
910
★
Alfonso Froilaz the Hunchback (
925-
926)
★
Sancho I Ordóñez (
926–
929)
★
Alfonso IV (
929–
931), also
king of León from
925
The kingdom was hereafter united to León, with the exception of a
Viking raid by Gundered during
966 and:
★
Bermudo II (
982-
999), also
king of León from
984
Kingdom of Galicia and Portugal
Main articles: Kingdom of Galicia and Portugal
The
Kingdom of Galicia and Portugal (as it is now known) was formed in
1065 after the
County of
Portugal declared
independence following the death of
Ferdinand I of Castile. In
1063, Ferdinand I had divided his kingdom among his sons. Galicia was allotted to
GarcÃa. The Count of Portugal,
Nuno II Mendes, took advantage of the internal tension caused by the civil war between Ferdinand's sons to finally break off and declare himself an independent ruler. However, in
1071, King GarcÃa defeated and killed him at the
Battle of Pedroso and annexed his territory, adding the title of ''King of Portugal'' to his previous ones. In
1072, GarcÃa himself was defeated by his brother Sancho II of Castile and fled. In that same year, after Sancho's murder
Alfonso VI became king of León and Castile; he imprisoned GarcÃa for life, proclaiming himself ''King of Galicia and Portugal'' as well, thus reuniting his father's realm. From that time Galicia remained part of the kingdom of Castile and León, although under differing degrees of self-government. Although it did not last for very long, the Kingdom set the stage for future Portuguese nationalism under
Henry, Count of Portugal.
★
GarcÃa II (
1065-
1072)
The kingdom was annexed by Alfonso VI of Castile. Alfonso's daughter gave Galicia to her eldest son in
1111.
Leonese Kings of Galicia
At the
Battle of São Mamede (
1128),
Afonso I of Portugal overcame the troops under Count
Fernando Peres de Trava of Galicia, making his mother his
prisoner and exiling her forever to a
monastery in
León. Thus the possibility of incorporating Portugal into a kingdom of Galicia was eliminated and Afonso become sole ruler ('''
Dux'' of Portugal').
★
Urraca (
1109-
1111), also
queen of Castile and
León until
1126
★
Alfonso VII the Emperor (
1111-
1157), also
king of Castile and
León from
1126
See also
★
List of Asturian monarchs
★
List of Aragonese monarchs
★
List of Castilian monarchs
★
List of Leonese monarchs
★
List of Navarrese monarchs
★
List of Spanish monarchs
★
History of Galicia
External links
★
Reconstruction of the Suebi flag of Gallaecia - in Galician
★
Flag of the Medieval Kingdom of Galicia