In 1188, he succeeded his father as Count of Foix. When Raimond Roger and
Arnaud, viscount of
Castelbon, wished to join their possessions, the Count
Ermengol VIII of Urgell and
Bernard de Villemur,
bishop of Urgell, saw in this a threat and declared war. Overcome and captured, the count of Foix and Arnaud were imprisoned from February to September 1203. King
Peter II of Aragón intervened, however, wishing to spare them for his fight to conquer
Languedoc. Moreover, Peter II gave as a
fief the castles of Trenton and
Quérigut (1209) to Raimond Roger, after having already given various other
Catalan seigniories (1208). Raimond Roger was a close relative and staunch ally of
Raymond VI of Toulouse. He was famed for his generalship, chivalry, fidelity, and affection for
haute couture. He was also a patron of
troubadours and an author of verse himself. Though not a
Cathar himself, several of his relatives were. His wife, Philippa of Montcada, even became a
parfaite. His sister,
Esclarmonde de Foix, was also a
parfaite, receiving the
Consolamentum at
Fanjeaux in 1204. == Albigensian Crusade ==