Banu Gómez
|label1 = |pos1=top |coordinates2 = |label2 = |pos2 = right |coordinates3 = |label3 = |coordinates4 = |label4 = |mark4 = green pog.svg |pos4 =left |coordinates5 = |label5 = |mark5 = green pog.svg |pos5 =left |coordinates6 = |mark6 = blue pog.svg |pos6 = top |label6 = |coordinates7 = |mark7 = blue pog.svg |pos7 = top |label7 = |coordinates8 = |mark8 = blue pog.svg |pos = top |label8 = |coordinates9 = |label9 = |mark9 = orange pog.svg |pos9 = bottom }}The Banu Gómez (Beni Gómez) were a powerful but fractious noble family living on the Castilian marches of the Kingdom of León from the 10th to the 12th centuries. They rose to prominence in the 10th century as counts in Saldaña, Carrión and Liébana, and reached their apogee when, allied with Córdoba warlord, Almanzor, their head, García Gómez, expelled king Vermudo II of León and briefly ruled there. He would reconcile with the royal family, but launched two subsequent rebellions. On his death, the senior line of the family was eclipsed, but a younger branch would return to prominence, producing Pedro Ansúrez, one of the premier noblemen under king Alfonso VI and queen Urraca in the late 11th and early 12th centuries. The family would be portrayed in the ''Cantar de Mio Cid'' as rivals and antagonists of the hero, El Cid, and their rebellions would serve as a basis for the legend of Bernardo del Carpio. Provided by Wikipedia
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4by Beni Gómez-Zúñiga, Rafael Pulido Moyano, Modesta Pousada Fernández, Alicia García Oliva, Manuel Armayones RuizGet full text
Published 2019-06-01
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7by Montse Romero-Mas, Anna Ramon-Aribau, Dyego Leandro Bezerra de Souza, Andrew M. Cox, Beni Gómez-ZúñigaGet full text
Published 2021-01-01
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