Brotherhood of Arriaga
The Brotherhood of Arriaga was a medieval institution in Álava, in the modern-day Basque Country of Spain. Its existence is documented from 1258 until its dissolution in 1332.
History
While there are no documents mentioning the Brotherhood before 1258, by then it was probably well-established. The, written in the 1370s, hints at the existence of the Brotherhood by the time of the Castillian conquest of Álava in 1200. Furthermore, a treaty signed in 1179 between Sancho VI of Navarre and Alfonso VIII of Castile might also hint at its existence.It is likely that the Brotherhood originated in response to the growing power of towns in Álava, which threatened the interests of the rural nobility. It was headed by a Lord who had fiscal and protective powers over its territory. Most high-ranking members of the Brotherhood belonged to notable Castillian families, such as the houses of Lara, Haro, Cameros and Salcedo. Most members of the Brotherhood were hidalgos, but the high clergy and some landed hidalgas also participated.
The first written reference to the Brotherhood of Arriaga dates from 1258. It was an accord granted by Alfonso X of Castile between the governments of Vitoria and Salvatierra and the Brotherhood, by which the Brotherhood ceded a number of hamlets and fishing rights in exchange of confirmation of their Fuero and juridical status. In 1286 king Sancho IV transferred the village of Lasarte from the Brotherhood to the city of Vitoria. In February 1332 an arbitration ruling was issued regarding the ownership of 45 hamlets disputed by the Brotherhood and the towns of Vitoria and Salvatierra. The ruling awarded the Brotherhood only four of the hamlets in dispute. As a consequence, the Brotherhood dissolved itself on April 2 of the same year.