County of Osona (Catalan: Comtat d'Osona, IPA: [kumˈtad duˈzonə]; Latin: Comitatus Ausonae) was one of the Catalan counties of the Marca Hispanica in the Early and High Middle Ages. It was based around the capital city of Vic (Vicus) and the corresponding diocese, whose territory was roughly the current comarca of Osona.
The ancient diocese of Osona was conquered by the Arabs in the early eighth century. Its reconquest by Christian powers began in 798; in that year Louis of Aquitaine ordered a Goth Borrel to enter the abandoned region and repair the castles of Vic, Cardona, and Casserès.[1] Vic was in Frankish hands by 799. After the successful siege of Barcelona in 801, Borrel, already Count of Cerdanya and Urgel, received Osona as a countship from his liege lord, King Louis. On Borrel's death, Osona was granted to the Frankish Count of Barcelona, Rampo. After the rebellion of 826, during which Guillemó and Aissó succeeded in taking it with help from the Emirate of Córdoba, Osona remained depopulated and outside of Frankish control until 879.[2] It was united to Barcelona throughout that period.
In 879, Wilfred the Hairy began the repopulation of the county with free minores, who cultivated the lands given them as aprisiones; they turned Osona into a central and important part of Catalonia.[3] There was a viscounty of Osona from 900.[4] The viscounts controlled the region on behalf of the counts, who were usually resident in Barcelona. The viscountship later changed its name to Viscounty of Cabrera. Wilfred, who established the viscounty, also built new castles along the frontier of Osona, at Torello[disambiguation needed ] (881), Montgrony (887), and Tarabaldi (892).[5] All these fortresses were controlled either directly by the count or by a castellan who also controlled the appendici or surrounding territory on certain specific terms.[6] The castle, in fact, and its mandamenta (commandment) were the central organising feature of Osona after its repopulation. Wilfred also reorganised the church in Osona — after the bishopric, Wilfred's foundation of the convent of Saint-Joan de les Abadesses, originally under his daughter Emma, was the most important ecclesiastical institution in the county[7] — and introduced serfdom on a limited scale.
Throughout the tenth century, Osona remained tied to Barcelona (except for the brief rule of Ermengol from 939 to 943). In 990, the small pagus of Berga was detached from it and granted to the Cerdagne. In 1035, Ausona was detached from Barcelona for a second brief stint when Berengar Raymond I left it to his widow, Guisla de Lluça, on his death. She ruled it with her son William until she remarried and he renounced it. After that it was reatached to Barcelona, but was augmented by the addition of the County of Manresa, which was subsumed within Ausona and ceased to be a distinct polity in the region.
Raymond Berengar III ceded the county as a dowry to Bernard III of Besalú, the husband of his daughter Jimena in 1107. When both Jimena and Bernard died without heirs, Ausona returned to Barcelona. This was to be the final straw for the nominally distinct county. The use of the term "County" or "Count of Ausona" disappeared subsequently. The title was revived for the Cabrera[disambiguation needed ] family in 1373 and it passed to the Montcada in 1574 and the Medinaceli in 1722, but none of these families ever controlled the feudal region.
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Ausona (today Ausonia) was a 4th-century BC city in the central Italian region of Latium. It was one of the three cities possessed by the tribe of the Ausones and its name seems to imply that it was their chief city or metropolis. (The others were Cales and Aurunca.) It is only once mentioned in history: during the Second Samnite War (326–304 BC), when—the Ausones having revolted against the Romans—all three of their cities were betrayed into the hands of the Roman consuls, and their inhabitants put to the sword without mercy. No subsequent notice is found of Ausona; but it is supposed to have been situated on the banks of the little river still called Ausente, which flows into the Liris near its mouth. The plain below the modern village of Le Fratte, near the sources of this little stream, is still known as the Piano dell'Ausente; and some remains of a Roman town have been discovered there.