Agenais (French pronunciation:[aʒ(ə)nɛ]ⓘ), or Agenois (French pronunciation:[aʒ(ə)nwa]), was an ancient region that became a county (Old French: conté or cunté) of France, south of Périgord.[1]
History
In ancient Gaul the region was the country of the Nitiobroges with Aginnum for their capital, which in the fourth century was the Civitas Agennensium, which was a part of Aquitania Secunda[2] and which formed the diocese of Agen. From 833 to 848, all the land seems to have been ravaged by the Vikings.[3] Having in general shared the fortunes of Aquitaine during the Merovingian and Carolingian periods, Agenais from about 886 became an hereditary county in the part of the country now called Gascony (Vasconia).[4][5] The first count of Agenais (comte d'Agen) was William I of Périgord (d. 920), son of Wulgrin I of Angoulême.
This, however, was not for long; the king of France had to recognize the prior rights of the king of England to the possession of the county, and restored it to him in 1279. During the Hundred Years' War between the English and the French, Agenais was frequently taken and retaken, the final retreat of the English in 1453 at last leaving the king of France in peaceable possession.[4]
^ abFollowing the death of Charles, Count of Armagnac in 1751, the title of 'Count of Armagnac' passed to the King of France, at the time being Louis XV. This made the county a crownland, belonging to the King.