The Rulers of Sicily
The Hautevilles
Robert Guiscard, 1061-85
Robert was a member of the very minor family of Hauteville from
Normandy. His father was Tancred Hauteville of Hauteville le
Guichard near Coutances. Tancred died in 1041. Robert was
probably the eldest of at least 6 boys by Tancred's second wife,
Fressenda. Consequently, with nothing to inherit at home, there
being at least 5 sons by Tancred's first wife, Moriella, Robert sought
his fortune abroad. After conquering much of southern Italy and
being made duke of Apulia, Calabria and Sicily with the pope's
blessing, in 1059 he turned his attention to the conquest of
Sicily. His initial campaigns there from 1061 to 1072 saw the
capture of the northern coast of the island. He then devoted the
rest of his life to helping the pope and conquering Constantinople as
well as keeping a weary eye on his younger brother, Count Roger of
Sicily.
Count Roger, 1060-1101
Roger was the youngest son of Tancred and Fressenda and soon went south
to join his elder brother, Robert. However, their relationship
was not the happiest and there seems to have been an element of
jealousy from Robert against his younger sibling that occasionally led
to tension. Roger was first to invade Sicily in an unsuccessful
expedition in 1060 which initially captured Milazzo castle. In 1061 both brothers, acting in harmony returned and secured Messina, Paterno
and built a castle at San Marco d'Alunzio. In 1071 Roger was made
count of Sicily by his elder brother and the next year they jointly
took Palermo. It was only after Robert's death in 1085 when Roger took control of the other half of Messina
and the NE corner of the island known as Val Demone, that the count
could move decisively against the remaining Arab fortresses. In
1091, Noto, the last Muslim stronghold, made
terms and Roger became de facto ruler of the island, his nephew, Roger
Borsa (d.1111), in the same year granting away to Roger his inheritance
in Palermo. For the last 10 years of his life Roger was active in reforming Sicily and campaigning on the mainland.
Count Simon, 1101-05
Simon never wielded power in Sicily, dying in 1105 at the age of 12. His mother, Adelaide Vasto (d.1118) was his regent.
Count Roger, 1105-30
Roger was the younger brother of Simon and inherited from him without
trouble, again under the regency of his mother which ended in
1112. In 1122 Duke William of Apulia, the son and heir of Roger
Borsa, renounced to Roger his remaining rights in Sicily as heir of
Robert Guiscard (d.1085). Roger went on to succeed him on his
heirless death in 1127 and became the senior Hauteville in southern
Italy.
King Roger, 1130-54
In 1130 Count Roger was made king of Sicily (which included much of
southern Italy) by the antipope Anacletus II, being crowned in Palermo on Christmas day. This resulted in a 10 year war against Pope Innocent II and his royal backers, Louis VI of France, Henry I
of England and Lothair III of Germany. In 1139 Roger's forces
captured the pope, bringing the war to an end with a satisfactory peace
treaty between them, Anacletus having died in 1138. In 1140 Roger
inaugurated a new coinage, called the ducat, the same year he reformed
his Sicilian realm to strengthen it both militarily and
economically. The result was a golden age for Sicily which
attracted to Roger's court such men as Muhammad al-Idris, the
geographer and Nilus Doxopatrius the Byzantine historian. He also
imported Englishmen, Arabs and Greeks to his court was well as Normans
and Frenchmen, the Greek George Antioch, the builder of the Martorana or the Church of St
Mary of the Admiral,
becoming the first Emir of Emirs, or admiral. Between 1135 and
1148 Roger's forces conquered much of the African coast opposite Sicily
and even warred successfully against Byzantium, capturing the silk
weavers of Thebes who were then set to business in Palermo.
According to Romuald's chronicle King Roger spent his last years
working to convert all his Jews and Muslims to Christianity.
Presumably these converts were noble as no incentives were given to
peasants to change faith. Roger's hardening Catholicism is
exemplified by his execution of Admiral Philip of Mahdia, who had
reverted to Islam in the last months of 1153. Perhaps Roger's
greatest achievement was to hire the exiled Moroccan Prince Idrisi to
write his Book of King Roger which detailed the geography of Sicily as
well as commenting on the rest of the known world. He also made a
silver map of the world, but this was stolen and melted down during the
1161 uprising. Unfortunately the claims put forward in later
years for the book were never realised and it remained a forgotten
treasure that had little impact on Sicily. King Roger, corpulent,
but still intelligent, died at the age of 58 in Palermo on 26 February
1154 of a fever.
William I, 1154-66
The only surviving son of Roger was about 24 when he inherited the
throne, having been crowned joint ruler with his father in 1151.
The chronicler Hugh Falcandus, who loathed nearly everybody he wrote
about, described him as cruel, suspicious, indolent and foolish.
Consequently by the fourteenth century he was known as William
the Bad
and his son as William the Good. However, judging by
their reigns, for most Sicilians the titles would appear to be
reversed, as chaos ruled under the younger William, while the elder
tended to keep the baronage in check. Despite Falcandus' claims
that William was all but useless, he was regularly used by his father
at his court from 1142 onwards and one surviving dedication by Henry
Aristippus, claims that William was a patron of the arts just like his
father. Certainly the pope thought that King William I was
suspicious of his barons and that his widow during the minority of
William II reversed this policy of suppression of the baronage and
allowed all those exiled to return home.
The young William continued his father's policy of ruling through low born advisors or new men, just like Henry I and Henry II
did in England, and keeping the barons out of government. This
led to several revolts against his main advisor, Maio of Bari, the
builder of San Cataldo church.
On
assuming power William faced a revolt in Southern Italy encouraged by
Pope Adrian IV, Emperor Manuel Comnenus of Byzantium and Emperor
Frederick I. In 1156 the king defeated the Greeks and made peace
with the pope, but his African domains were overrun by 1160. This
was the only dark side in the early part of the reign that had seen all
the king's enemies bar the Holy Roman Emperor neutralised and the
reorganisation of the dioceses undertaken under Anacletus accepted,
although Cefalu and Lipari had to wait until 1166 for their formal recognition. In all the reign had started successfully.
However, the Sicilian nobles, to the great pleasure of the chronicler
Falcandus, proceeded to murder Maio on 10 November and then in an
abortive uprising stormed the palace on 9 March 1161,
capturing the king, which led during the ensuing debacle on 11 March,
to the killing of William's heir, Roger. After
destroying the rebellion and killing its leader, Matthew Bonellus of
Caccamo and Mistretta,
the rest of William's reign proved relatively
peaceful, but he died young in May 1166 aged only about 45, having
solved
his father's papal problems as 'the faithful and devoted son of the
church'. He was buried in his palace in St Peter's chapel,
although his son had him reburied at Montreale cathedral before 1189.
During his reign and probably at the end of that of his father, there
was a demographic change in the kingdom with immigration of Latins from
the Continent to the island. They mostly settled in Palermo and
the SE region. This helped lead to the anti-Muslim pogroms of
1161 in both these places and the Islamic centre of the island
receiving the displaced Muslim populations.
William II, 1166-89
On the early death of his father, Sicily was ruled by his mother,
Margaret Navarre as regent. Her first act was to release all
prisoners and then cut taxes. During this period of her rule, she
initially
relied on her French relatives, and in particular Stephen Perche
(d.1169), a young man who probably never reached 30. Stephen
arrived in Sicily with an entourage of 37 in 1167. About 1174 one
of these, Peter Blois (d.c.1211), noted that he was one of only 2 of
them still alive. Perche was specially brought in as it was
thought he would be above the local squabbles of the aristocracy.
However his rule succumbed to just such factionalism and he was
overthrown.
In 1171, aged 17, William was declared of age, although, Peter Blois,
an intimate of Stephen Perche (d.1169), commented that William was a
most ill advised youth and took treacherous counsel. Others
recorded that the king ‘paid too much attention to his
astrologers'. The result was a council riven with faction
between Archbishop Walter of Palermo
(d.1191) and Matthew, the vice chancellor, who loathed one another.
Consequently at William's death, Walter supported Henry VI and
Matthew King Tancred.
In 1177 William married Joan the daughter
of Henry II
of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Their son, Duke Bohemond of
Apulia, was born and died in 1181 and no further children
followed. This marriage was the first real contact between
England and Sicily and gave rise to the Norman myth of their joint
foundations by ‘Normans' in the late eleventh century.
In 1186 William married off his 30 year old half sister to the future
Emperor Henry VI and made her his heir presumptive to his realm.
This allowed him to go Crusading against Saladin and Byzantium.
However, he died aged only 36 in November 1189, thus plunging his realm
into chaos, with his widow, Queen Joan, as well as many members of the
aristocracy, opening supporting the claim of William's designated
heiress, Constance.
On the king's death, the Latins of Palermo again attacked their Muslim
neighbours. This led to another exodus to the interior of the
island and the revolt of the Saracens of Western Sicily based upon area
around Segesta.
This revolt was not finally crushed until the campaigns of
Frederick II in the 1220s. Interestingly in the prelude to this
rebellion, Ibn Jubayr visited William's court and noted that it
consisted of those of his own religion 'all, or nearly all, concealing
their faith, yet holding firm to the Muslim divine law'.
Count Tancred of Lecce, 1190-94
An illegitimate son of Count Roger's eldest son, Duke Roger III of
Apulia (d.1148), Tancred had taken part in the baronial opposition to King William I at
first Palermo in 1160 and then Piazza Armerina in 1161, but had
survived, taking exile in Constantinople, before returning in 1166 upon
the accession of his cousin, King William II. During this time he
was known as the count of Lecce. His short stature and visage led
his enemies to christen him The Monkey King. He Crusaded
unsuccessfully for William in 1174 and on William's death in 1189 seized the
throne. In this he was backed by the
official class of Sicily, but opposed by the nobles who were more
inclined to support his aunt and uncle, Constance and King Henry VI of
the Romans.
Tancred's rule was not a happy one. Initially he was attacked by
Richard I of England and Philip Augustus of France who were passing by
on Crusade. This resulted in the English capture of Messina and
Tancred having to buy the approval of the two foreign kings. This
was followed by the inevitable war with Henry VI who was now Holy Roman Emperor.
During the fighting the Empress Constance was captured, although she
soon regained her freedom. Tancred died young aged 56 on 20
February 1194, two months after the death of his eldest son and heir,
Roger.
William III, 1194
Tancred's widow, Queen Sibylla, declared herself regent for her next
son by Tancred, the 4 year old William III. However, there was no
fight left in the kingdom and Henry VI and Constance, buoyed by the money they had squeezed from Richard I of England for his ransom, had advanced through
southern Italy and then Sicily virtually without opposition. The
queen and her young charge took refuge in Caltabellotta and from there
negotiated a surrender. William then attended the Christmas
crowning of his great uncle and aunt at Palermo, before being seized
with his mother and supporters 4 days later on an alleged charge of
treason. He was apparently castrated and blinded in Germany and
died there in 1198. His mother and sister lived out their days in
obscurity in France after their release.
Queen Constance, 1195-98
Born posthumously to King Roger in 1154, Constance was the last of the
main line of the Hautevilles and heir presumptive since 1172. She
was kept under close confinement by her family and it was only in 1184 that she was
allowed to marry, presumably after William II had decided that he was
unlikely to have any heir of his own. When she left Sicily for
Germany King William had his 3 main nobles, Tancred of Lecce (the future king), Roger
Andria and Matthew Ajello, swear loyalty to her as heiress to the
throne. This did not stop the 3 abandoning her cause and making
Tancred king on William's unexpected death in 1189. In 1191
Constance remained in Salerno when her ill husband returned to
Germany. There she was turned upon by the locals, captured and
sent to King Tancred in Messina. She was then half released and
half escaped in 1192, before returning with Henry VI in 1194, with a
giant army that met little opposition in its victorious march to
Palermo. However, she had to wait in southern Italy due to her
pregnancy with the future Emperor Frederick II. After giving birth she was
crowned early in 1195 and left to rule Sicily when her husband
returned to Germany. After Henry's return and death in 1197,
Constance had the 3 year old Frederick crowned as king of Sicily in May
1198, all but revoking the boy's rights to Germany. Possibly
realising her own mortality, she placed the boy in the care of Pope
Innocent III and then died that November.
The Swabians
Emperor Henry VI, 1194-97
Henry, as king of the Romans, had married Constance the posthumous daughter
of King Roger (d.1166) in 1186. Having failed to dislodge King
Tancred from Sicily in 1191, Henry returned in 1194 with a great army,
paid for by the ransom of King Richard I
of England, whom he had held
imprisoned since the end of the third Crusade. Part of the enmity
between Richard and Henry was no doubt the fact that Richard had helped
Tancred secure his throne and given him the alleged sword Excalabur to
grant him victory in his coming battles. In March 1195
Henry made Constance queen of Sicily
After disposing of his rival, William III, Henry played international
politics until a revolt in Catania during 1197 brought him to Messina in
March. It is said that both the pope and Queen Constance were at
the time plotting Henry's death. After rapidly crushing the
revolt with German soldiers
he intended to set off for the Holy Land, but died at the port on 28
September at the age of only 31, presumably the victim of a war related
disease or malaria.
Emperor Frederick II, 1197-1250
At the age of only 3, Frederick became king of Sicily, and was placed
under the care of Pope Innocent III by his dying mother. Sicily
then descended into anarchy until 1208 when Frederick began to take
control of his kingdom at the end of his minority. He got off to a bad start as the pope had
given away most of the royal demesne during the minority and then
presented Henry with the bill for keeping order during his minority.
A noted polyglot speaking 6 languages,
Latin, Sicilian, German, Occitan, Greek and Arabic, Frederick was an
avid patron of science and the arts. As such, like his wife's
grandfather, Henry II of England, he outlawed trial by ordeal as
superstitious.
Frederick's reign began badly. After his mother's death his uncle, Philip of Swabia
invaded Sicily in 1200 and seized Frederick the next year. He
then ruled Sicily until 1202 when he was succeeded by the German,
William Capparone, who kept Frederick under his power until 1206.
In 1208 Frederick was declared of age at 14 and began to reassert his
power over the barons and adventurers who had usurped his royal
authority. Despite this Frederick was absent from Sicily from 1212 until 1220 when he pursued his inheritance in Germany.
In 1220 he became Holy Roman Emperor, but obviously
preferred his domain in Southern Italy and Sicily where he mostly
resided from then on. Suppressing the revolt of the Muslims of Entella, Segesta
and Iota he destroyed some castles and relocated their inhabitants at
Lucera on the mainland from 1223 onwards. In 1231 he issued his
Constitutions of Melfi, which
might be compared to Henry II's Constitutions of Clarendon, except by
this mode Frederick made himself an absolute monarch of Sicily.
This remained the basis of Sicilian law until 1819. Although
Sicily remained peaceful war raged throughout Italy and Germany as the
pope sought to overthrow the emperor. Eventually Frederick died
in Apulia of dysentery aged only 56 in 1250. He was buried in
Palermo cathedral with his Hauteville ancestors, the mummified body
surviving intact until 1781. Frederick's scientific book on
falconry, The Art of Hunting with Birds (De arte venandi cum avibus) is
also the first authored by a king to survive.
Conrad IV, 1250-54
With the death of Frederick in 1250 riots occurred in the kingdom of
Sicily and Conrad was obliged to rely on his half brother, Manfred, to
govern the kingdom. In 1253 the pope offered Sicily to King Henry III
for his son, Edmund, which helped begin civil war in England.
Eventually the pope turned to Henry's cousin once removed, Charles
Anjou, as champion against the Swabians in Italy. Conrad was
excommunicated and died of malaria in 1254. He was only 26.
Conradin, 1254-58
The 2 year old heir to Conrad IV was left under the regency of his
Uncle Manfred in Sicily. In 1258 Manfred had himself proclaimed
king of Sicily, leaving Conradin as merely
duke of Swabia. In 1267, after the death of his uncle, Manfred in
battle against Charles Anjou, Conradin marched into Italy while a
Castillian
fleet landed at Sciacca. Consequently most of Sicily except for Palermo and
Messina revolted from the Angevins to his cause. After military
reversals in Italy, Conradin was captured when making for Sicily and
executed by King Charles Anjou on 29 October 1268. He was only 16.
Manfred, 1258-66
He was the illegitimate son of Frederick II, although the emperor
regarded him as legitimate and made him prince of Taranto. He
became regent of Sicily for his half brother in 1250, although he was
effectively stripped of this in 1252. He became regent again for
Conradin in 1254, until his usurpation of the throne in 1258.
During this time he was excommunicated for refusing to hand Sicily over
to the pope who had been named guardian by Conrad IV. When a
rumour reached Sicily that Conradin had died in 1258, Manfred
immediately seized the throne and refused to abdicate when Conradin's
envoys arrived demanding him to do so. In Sicily his rule proved
popular when he claimed that the
Sicilians needed a strong local ruler. After claiming the Imperial title in 1263, he was
defeated and killed by Charles Anjou, who had been invested with Sicily
by the pope. He was only 34.
After the battle King Charles captured Manfred's second wife, Helena,
and her children and imprisoned them miserably until their deaths,
although one son, Frederick, supposedly escaped his imprisonment and
fled to Germany, eventually dying in Egypt in 1312.
The Angevins
Charles, 1266-82
Charles was the youngest son of King Louis VIII of France and although
destined for the church became count of Provence through is marriage to
Beatrice, the heiress of Count Raymond Berenguer IV of Provence
(d.1245). Crowned king of Sicily on 5 January 1266, he took a
Crusading army alleged to be 6,000 cavalry, 600 mounted bowmen and
20,000 infantry, with him to Southern Italy where he killed King Manfred at the
battle of Benevento. Philip Montfort then occupied the island of
Sicily for him without resistence. Towards the end of 1267 Sicily rose in
revolt and remained so even after the defeat and death of Conradin in
1268. Philip and his relative, Guy Montfort, the son of the English rebel, Earl
Simon Montfort of Leicester (d.1265), were sent with an army to reduce
Sicily, but only managed to take Augusta, the royal fortress of
Frederick II. The next year, after August 1269, the Angevin army
captured Agrigento and forced the remaining rebels to surrender in
early 1270. Charles then spent a month in Sicily before sailing
to Tunis for the abortive Eighth Crusade. On his return his fleet
was all but wrecked at Trapani under the watchful view of Erice.
Before leaving the island the king granted temporary tax concessions
due to the devastation the fighting during the rebellion had caused in
Sicily.
In 1271 Charles left the island never to return, although he often
demanded increased taxes to pay for his expensive foreign wars as well
as restore old fortresses and build new ones, one of which was Castelbuono. After 1279 many Sicilians
were forced into Charles' armies while the capital of Sicily was
moved from Palermo to Naples. Further some 700 French nobles were
transplanted into the kingdom, much to the annoyance of the
locals. The result was the uprising known, since the sixteenth
century, as the Sicilian Vespers. This resulted in King Peter III
of Aragon (d.1285) seizing the throne. Possibly this part of the
plan of the Vespers, or more likely the revolt, had been paymastered by
the Emperor of Byzantium to take Angevin pressure off his lands.
Certainly the leaders of the revolt seem to have had different
objectives, Walter Caltagirone before July 1283 seizing the royal
Sperlinga castle from the Aragonese in a forlorn bid for total Sicilian
independence. Regardless, Charles failed to return to the island
in victory and died while preparing for another Sicilian adventure in
Brindsi at the age of 58. Interestingly enough he had tried his
hand as an architect in that city, building for himself a tower.
It collapsed.
The Aragonese
Peter I, 1282-85
The husband of King Manfred's eldest daughter, Peter claimed the throne
after the Sicilian Vespers of 1282 and accepted the loyalty of most of
the island against the Angevins. The result was the Crusade against
Aragon which ended with the defeat of the French and the death of King
Philip III of France from dysentery at Perpignan in October 1285.
Peter died just a month later, probably of similar causes, aged about
46.
James, 1285-95
As second son, James succeeded to Sicily on the sudden death of his father and
also became king of Aragon
with the death of his elder brother, Alfonso
III in 1291. James made his younger brother Frederick (d.1337)
viceroy in Sicily, which allowed him to concentrate the Angevin
alliance against him on the mainland. This became so powerful
that in 1295 he ceded Sicily to King Charles of Naples
(d.1309) in return for peace with France, Naples and the papacy, but
the island rebelled
and installed James' brother Frederick as king.
Frederick III, 1295-1337
Frederick was made regent of Sicily by his brother, King James, when he
became king of Aragon in 1291. The brothers were both children of
Constance, the daughter of King Manfred (d.1266). Following the
treaty of Anagni on 10 June 1295, by which James granted Sicily to the
church who would subinfeudate the island to Charles of Naples,
Frederick
seized power on 11 December 1295 and was crowned king on 25 March
1296. There followed a swift campaign against the rebels who
wished to remove all the Catalans, including Frederick, from Sicily.
After receiving the lands of the rebels Sicily unitued in
the continuation of the war against the papacy and Charles of
Naples. This in turn led to the adherence of John Procida and
Roger Lauria of
Aci and Calatabiano to the Angevins. After the defeat of the
Sicilian navy by Lauria, Robert and Philip Naples invaded Sicily in 1299
and took Catania, before being defeated by Frederick. The war was
only ended in 1302 by the Treaty of Caltabellotta. By this
Frederick was recognised as king of Trinacria rather than Sicily to
save face for the pope and the kings of Naples. He was also to
marry Charles' daughter, Eleanor (d.1341), the kingdom reverting to
Naples on Frederick's death and their children receiving compensation
elsewhere.
The war was resumed from 1313 to 1317 and Frederick was excommunicated in
1321. In 1325 Giovanni Chiaramonte came to the fore when he
defeated King Robert of Naples in a naval battle off Palermo.
The
war finally ended in 1335, with major campaigns having been fought in
1325-26, 1327, 1333 and 1335. Despite the end of the war,
Giovanni Chiaramonte went over to Naples due to a private dispute and
the
kingdom of Sicily was all but ruined by the incessant warfare and
resultant slackening of trade, plus a deterioration in the climate that
struck all Europe in the early fourteenth century, with food crises
occurring between 1311 and 1335 and the economy all but collapsing
after 1321. Added to this Mount Etna errupted in 1329 and
1333. Frederick died 2 years after the unstable peace was
achieved, aged 65. To Pope John XXII Frederick was 'an evil man
who whould be even worse if he had the ability, but to his people the
king was the first monarch to care for Sicily in its own right since
the death of King Tancred back in 1194.
Peter II, 1337-42
Despite the terms of the treaty of Caltabellotta, Frederick was succeeded by his
eldest son, Peter, who was 33. Peter was not created in the image
of his father and was portrayed as feeble minded. His kingdom
rapidly broke down into civil strife between the leading families of
Ventimiglia who held Castelbuono and Garaci Siculo and the Alagona of Aci, Delia, Paterno. These led the
Catalan/Aragonese faction. They were opposed by the Latin/Angevin faction led by the Chiaramonte of Caccamo and Vicari and the Palizzi of Calabria.
The latter gained the support of Queen Elizabeth (d.1349), Peter's
wife, while the former found favour with Elizabeth's brother in law,
Duke John of Randazzo (d.1348).
King Peter continued the ongoing war with Naples, losing the Lipari
islands and even Milazzo to them. He died young in August 1342,
aged 38.
Louis, 1342-55
Louis was only 4 when crowned king and a regency was appointed under
his uncle, Duke John of Athens, who achieved a peace treaty at Catania
with Naples in 1347. He died of the plague in 1348 and the
regency passed to Count Matthew Palizzi and Queen Elizabeth, until her
death before July 1349 In 1350 a tripartite division of Sicily
was proposed between the 3 competing noble houses of Ventimiglia,
Chiaramonte and Palizzi, but this only led to a 3 month truce. A
second attempt in 1352 lasted only a year. In 1353 Louis with his
Chiaramonte supporters marched on Castroreale and visited Milazzo and
Taormina before retiring to Messina where his guardian, Matthew Palizzi
was killed by Count Simon Chiaramonte, the king fleeing to Ursino
castle by boat. After an abortive attack on Milazzo the king
declared the Chiaramonte traitors. From Catania he moved to Agira
castle, but failed to take Enna. He also moved on Taormina and
failed to take Calatabiano castle that November.
In April 1354 King Louis of Naples sent an invasion force to Sicily
that took Palermo and then in alliance with the Chiaramonte took most
of Sicily leaving the young King Louis with only Catania and
Messina. In June Louis forgave the Ventimiglia family and then
marched on Piazza Armerina, retaking much of southern Sicily and only
being baulked at Castronovo. On 7 January he reached Giuliana
castle, but retired on Catania where bubonic plague broke out on 10
July 1355. He then moved to Messina and attacked Palermo by sea,
before returning to Catania where he was struck by the plague. He
retired to Aci castle where he died on 16 October 1355, aged just 17.
Frederick IV, 1355-77
Frederick began his reign under the regency of his sister, Euphemia
(d.1359), but power lay in the hands of Artale Alagona. In 1372
he finally arranged peace terms with Naples which was negotiated by the
Chiaramonte. By this Frederick accepted the title king of
Trinacria rather than king of Sicily. The treaty of Villeneuve
was sealed with the king marrying Antoinia Baux, but the marriage
proved childless and on Frederick's death the throne passed to his only
daughter, from his first marriage, Maria. He was only 36 when he
died.
By the end of Frederick's reign the wars, heavy rainfall and plagues
had led to a fall in Sicily's population from an alleged 850,000 in
1277 to only 350,000.
Queen Maria, 1377-1401
Succeeding aged 13, her father had named Artale Alagona to be her
regent. However, in reality power was split between him and three
other vicars, Count Francesco II of Ventimiglia, Count Manfred III Chiaramonte of Modica and Count William Peralta of Caltabellotta.
Each ruled in their own lands. In 1384 after a series of
kidnappings and rescues, Maria was married to Martin of Aragon, who
thereby became titular king of Sicily. However, it was not until
1392 that the couple returned to Sicily with an invasion force,
defeated the opposing barons and began to rule.
Martin, 1392-1409
On Maria's death at the age of 38 in 1401, the king repudiated the
treaty of Villeneuve of 1372 and ruled Sicily in his own name, no
longer offering allegiance to the pope or Naples. After invading
Sardinia Martin died suddenly of malaria. He was little more than
33 years old.
Martin II, 1409-10
Martin II was the father of King Martin of Sicily as the kingdom reverted
to his Crown on his son's death. When the senior Martin had
succeeded to the kingdom of Aragon in 1396, he had remained in Sicily due
to the problems his son was having with the barons there, while his
wife acted as his representative in his peninsula kingdom until he returned home
in 1397. As Martin left no heirs, and castles were becoming
militarily obsolete by this time, he makes a good point to leave this
survey of Sicilian rulers.
Why not join me in Sicily? Information
on this and other tours can be found at Scholarly
Sojourns.
Copyright©2019
Paul Martin Remfry