Historical and cultural region encompassing the southern French département of Pyrénées-Orientales and coextensive with the former province of Roussillon. Its chief city has always been Perpignan.
At the final separation, in 865, between Septimania (part of the future Languedoc) to the north and the Spanish March (Frankish Catalonia) to the south, Roussillon was included in the latter. Later in the 9th century, feudalism gave rise to hereditary countships in the area, most of which were held by relatives of the contemporary counts of Barcelona. The latter dynasty acquired direct rights to Roussillon in 1172, and Roussillon thus became part of Aragon, which the counts of Barcelona had also acquired by then.
There was a great flowering of monasticism
in Roussillon from the 10th century on, with the result that the area is
rich in Romanesque architectural remains. The house of Barcelona-Aragon
granted privileges to the towns, and commerce benefited from the integration
of Roussillon with neighbouring Catalonia to the south. In the 13th century
Roussillon formed the core of the kingdom of Majorca, an amalgamation formed
by James I of Aragon and Majorca in the 13th century. The house of Aragon
continued to hold Roussillon until the 1640s, when, during the Thirty Years'
War, France occupied Spain's lands north of the Pyrenees. The town of Perpignan
fell to the French in 1642, and in 1659 Spain formally ceded the province
to France by the Treaty of the Pyrenees.
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Zdravko Batzarov