Pelayo is traceable in the historical record from 1128, when he was serving as the archbishop's merino. In that year, García Pérez de Traba and his followers robbed some merchants who had come to Padrón from England and Lotharingia to sell their wares in the market of Santiago de Compostela. According to the Historia Compostellana, the archbishop sent Pelayo at the head of a group of soldiers to recover the loot. The robbers were confronted in the mountains, defeated in combat and the loot recovered and restored to the merchants.[6]
Pelayo remained loyal to King Alfonso VII of León after the Portugal rebelled. He was probably the anonymous merino deputed by Diego Gelmírez to lead Galician forces against the rebels in the early 1130s, according to the Historia Compostellana.[7] In 1137, he took part in the recapture of Tui.[8] He was also present at the siege of Oreja in 1139.[9] In 1141, during a visit to Compostela, Alfonso VII found Pelayo to have violently seized some property of the monastery of San Martiño Pinario and ordered him to restore it.[10]
Pelayo witnessed his first royal charter in May 1133.[7] He never regularly attended the royal court and, until 1155, he almost never attended without his father. After 1155, he generally appeared only on major occasions when the itinerant court was in the north of the kingdom.[3] When his father was granted tenancies in the south of the kingdom in the 1140s, Pelayo was given his Galician tenancies. By 1149, he was tenant of region around Tui and by 1152 also of Toroño.[3] He mostly resided in these tenancies, which were on the border with Portugal.[3]
Pelayo did not inherit Montoro from his father in 1154. It was given instead to Nuño Pérez de Lara.[16] On 26 September 1158, King Ferdinand II granted him lands in compensation for damage done to his lands in Galicia by Portuguese forces.[17] On 20 April 1159, he and his wife purchased a share in the church of Santa Cristina in Lavadores [es] from Alfonso Oséviz for seventy solidi.[4]
Barton, Simon (1997). The Aristocracy in Twelfth-Century León and Castile. Cambridge University Press.
Calderón Medina, Inés; Martins Ferreira, João Paulo (2014). "Beyond the Border: The Aristocratic Mobility Between the Kingdoms of Portugal and León (1157–1230)". e-Journal of Portuguese History. 12 (1): 1–48.
Fernández Rodríguez, Manuel (2004). Toronium: Aproximación a la Historia de una Tierra Medieval: Galicia y Portugal en la Edad Media. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas.
Hall, Martin; Phillips, Jonathan (2013). Caffaro, Genoa and the Twelfth-Century Crusades. Ashgate.
Reilly, Bernard F. (1998). The Kingdom of León-Castilla Under King Alfonso VII, 1126–1157. University of Pennsylvania Press.
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