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Pelayo Rodríguez (fl. 985–1007) was an important magnate and a count (comes) of the Kingdom of León and a common presence at the courts of Vermudo II (984–999) and Alfonso V (999–1028). The historian Rubén García Álvarez suggested that he was a member of the family that founded the monastery of Lourenzá and probably a son of count Rodrigo Gutiérrez (fl. 945–992). The earliest document to mention him by name is dated to 976, but is considered false by Emilio Sáez. The next time he appears in the historical record is 8 July 985, as a witness to a donation to the monastery of Sahagún. He is a mainstay of royal charters until his last appearance on either 13 September 1005 or 1 February 1007.[1] He rebelled with Gonzalo Vermúdez and Munio Fernández against Vermudo II, and succeeded in expelling the monarch from his kingdom between November 991 and September 992. After the revolt he was soon restored to royal favour.[2] He married Gotina Fernández, daughter of Fernando Vermúdez de Cea and Elvira Díaz. She was a sister of Jimena, queen of García Sánchez II of Pamplona, and thus an aunt of Sancho III the Great. She brought him many estates in Galicia and León proper.[2] She joined her son, Fernando Peláez and his wife in making a donation to San Millán de la Cogolla on 13 November 1028, the last time she is recorded living, as donna Gutina. Other than Fernando she probably bore Pelayo two daughters: Fronilda, who married Ordoño Vermúdez, an illegitimate son of Vermudo II, and probably the Elvira who married Fernando Flaínez.[2] References ^ This last document is a twelfth-century copy of a charter of Alfonso V for the abbey of Celanova containing the name Pelagius Hosterici, presumably an error for Roderici, cf. Jaime de Salazar y Acha, "El conde Fernando Peláez, un rebelde leonés del siglo XI", Anuario de estudios medievales, 19 (1989), 88. ^ a b c Salazar y Acha, 89.