ÃÂñigo Arista (, , Wannaqo, 771âÂÂ790 â 851 or 852) was a Basque chieftain and the first king of Pamplona. He is thought to have risen to prominence after the defeat of local Frankish partisans at the Battle of Pancorbo in 816, and his rule is usually dated from shortly after the defeat of a Carolingian army in 824.
He is first attested by chroniclers as a rebel against the Emirate of Córdoba from 840 until his death a decade later. Remembered as the nation's founder, he would be referred to as early as the 10th century by the nickname "Arista", coming either from Basque Aritza (Haritza/Aiza, literally 'the oak', meaning 'the resilient') or Latin Aresta ('the considerable').
The origin of ÃÂñigo Arista is obscure. There is even disagreement regarding the name of his father. A charter preserved at Leyre describes him as Enneco ... filius Simeonis (ÃÂñigo son of Jimeno) and another Leyre document reports the obituary of Enneco Garceanes, que fuit vulgariter vocas Areista (ÃÂñigo Garcés [son of GarcÃÂa], who is commonly called Arista). Many later historians have followed one or the other of these, but the reliability of either is questioned due to the possibility of later corruption or forgery.
Eleventh-century chroniclers Ibn Hayyan, who calls him and his brother ibn Wannaqo (, ÃÂñiguez) al-Bascunis, and Al-Udri, calling him ibn Yannaqo, both thus indicate that his father was likewise named ÃÂñigo. He is said by Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada (c. 1170âÂÂ1247) to have been Count of Bigorre, or at least to have come from there, but there is no near-contemporary evidence of this.
It has been speculated that he was kin to , who in the late 8th century succeeded his father Jimeno the Strong in resisting Carolingian expansion into Vasconia. A second dynasty of Pamplona monarchs that would supplant his, the Jimena, is usually made to be related to him.
The name of ÃÂñigo's mother is unknown (she is sometimes called Onneca, without foundation) but it is known that she also married local muwallad lord Musa ibn Fortun al-Qasawi, by him having a son Musa ibn Musa al-Qasawi. This younger Musa would become head of the Banu Qasi, ruler of Tudela and one of the chief lords of Ebro Valley. Due to this relationship, ÃÂñigo and his kin frequently acted in alliance with Musa ibn Musa, a relationship that allowed ÃÂñigo to extend his influence over large territories in the Pyrenean valleys, and was also instrumental in the rebellions that would lead to Pamplona breaking with the Emirate.
The family came to power through struggles over Frankish and Córdoban influence in northern Iberia. In 799, pro-Frankish assassins murdered Mutarrif ibn Musa, governor of Pamplona, probably kinsman of Musa ibn Musa al-Qasawi. Ibn Hayyan reports that in 816, Abd al-Karim ibn Abd al-Wahid ibn Mugit launched a military campaign against the pro-Frankish "Enemy of God", Velasco the Gascon (, Balaà ¡k al-à ¶alaà ¡që), Sahib of Pamplona (), who had united Christian and pagan factions. They fought a three-day battle in which the pro-Córdoba faction routed their enemies and killed Velasco, along with GarcÃÂa López, kinsman of Alfonso II of Asturias, Sancho "warrior/knight of Pamplona", and pagan warrior "á¹¢altÃÂn". This defeat of the pro-Frankish force appears to have allowed the anti-Frankish ÃÂñigo to come to power.
In 820, ÃÂñigo is said to have intervened in the County of Aragon, ejecting a Frankish vassal, count Aznar I GalÃÂndez, in favor of GarcÃÂa GalÃÂndez, who became ÃÂñigo's son-in-law. In 824, a Carolingian force led by counts Aeblus and Aznar Sánchez made an expedition against Pamplona, but were defeated in the second battle of Roncesvalles.
Traditionally, this battle is portrayed as resulting in the crowning of ÃÂñigo as king of Pamplona, but there is no direct evidence of his involvement in the battle or his crowning thereafter, and he is referred to by Arab chroniclers with the same title as given Velasco, "lord of Pamplona". His realm continually played Muslims and Christians against themselves and each other to maintain independence against the outside powers.
In 840 ÃÂñigo's lands were attacked by Abd Allah ibn Kulayb, wali of Zaragoza, leading his half-brother, Musa ibn Musa, into rebellion. ÃÂñigo's son GarcÃÂa acted as regent, in concert with ÃÂñigo's warrior brother Fortún ÃÂñiguez (, Fortà «n ibn Wannaqo), who was also half-brother of Musa, and they joined Musa in an uprising against the Emirate of Córdoba. Abd-ar-Rahman II, emir of Córdoba, launched reprisal campaigns in the succeeding years.
In an 843 battle, Fortún ÃÂñiguez was killed, and Musa unhorsed and forced to escape on foot, while ÃÂñigo and his son Galindo escaped with wounds--and several noblemen, most notably Velasco Garcés, defected to Abd-ar-Rahman. The subsequent year, ÃÂñigo's own son, Galindo ÃÂñiguez, and Musa's son Lubb ibn Musa went over to Córdoba, and Musa was forced to submit. Following a brief campaign in 845, a general peace was achieved. In 850, Mà «sàagain rose in open rebellion, supported by Pamplona, and envoys of Induo (thought to be ÃÂñigo) and Mitio, "Dukes of the Navarrese", were received at the French court.
ÃÂñigo died in the Muslim year 237 A.H., which is late 851 or early 852, and was succeeded by his son GarcÃÂa ÃÂñiguez who was already governing the kingdom during his father's long illness prior to his death.
During the lifetime of ÃÂñigo, the existence of several monasteries is attested across Navarre, when the Cordovan priest Eulogius had to stay in the area (848). In a letter written to Wiliesind, not only does Eulogius reveal that the Basque leader was a christicola princeps but he provides the names of three monasteries not far from Pamplona: Siresa, St. Zacharias and Leyre.
The iconic monastery of Leyre, founded in the 9th century and claimed later to be founded by the king of Pamplona, was fostered by granting lands and estates to it. A document in the archives of the monastery shows that in 842, ÃÂñigo bestowed the town and lands of Yesa on Leyre ("Ego rex Eneco concedo..."), although the authenticity of the document recording this grant is disputed. ÃÂñigo himself is reported to have been buried in the monastery after his death in 851/852.
The name of the wife (or wives) of ÃÂñigo is not reported in contemporary records, although sources from centuries later assign her the name of Toda or Onneca. There is also scholarly debate regarding her derivation, some hypothesizing that she was daughter of Velasco, lord of Pamplona (killed 816), and others making her kinswoman of Aznar I GalÃÂndez. He was father of the following known children:
The dynasty founded by ÃÂñigo reigned for about 80 years, being supplanted by a rival dynasty in 905. However, due to intermarriages, subsequent kings of Navarre descended from ÃÂñigo, and some accounts even wrongly showed them to descend from ÃÂñigo in the direct male line. He is remembered as the founder of the nation of Navarre.