García Galíndez (died 833), called
the
Bad (
el Malo), was the
Count of Aragon and
Conflent from 820.
Son of
Galindo Belascotenes, he
married Matrona, daughter of
Aznar
Galíndez I. He later murdered his brother-in-law Centule and
repudiated Matrona to marry Nunila, daughter of
Íñigo Arista of Pamplona.
According to tradition, which bestowed upon García his nickname, he
murdered his brother-in-law for a joke that Centule and
Galindo Aznárez I had played on him,
namely, locking him up in a house during the
Hogueras de San Juan.
In 820, Íñigo gathered a small army and deposed Aznar from Aragon
and his other counties, bestowing them on García.
In 824, when Aeblus and Aznar
Sánchez marched on Pamplona
, García and
Musa ibn Fortún of the Banu Qasi lent their support to Íñigo and the
Frankish counts were defeated.
Depending on the source, he either died in 833 or just retired,
leaving the government to his son
Galindo Garcés.
Sources