At the death of Archbishop Raimbaud in 1069, and following negotiations between the
petty nobility and the counts, the
see of Arles fell to Aicard sometime between 1069 and 1073, probably in 1070. In his first years of government, Aicard continued the policies of his predecessor: an alliance with the counts and the Baux. The elevation of Aicard did not please Count
Bertrand II of Provence. Bernard felt threatened by the rising power of the House of Marseilles and by the exercise of archiepiscopal power over the
abbey of Montmajour, which the counts had
de facto appropriated as part of their
demesne, to act as a dynastic
necropolis. In the wider politico-ecclesiastical context of the time, in which
Pope and
Emperor fought the
Investiture Controversy for power over the dioceses of the Church, Aicard was a partisan of emperor against pope and the count, being a vassal of the emperor, was a natural ally of the pope. However that may have been, it is unlikely that the controversy played a great role in the particular events which led to Aicard's expulsion from office. ==Conflict with the pope and counts of Provence==