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Charles I of Anjou

Charles I (early 1226/1227 – 7 January 1285), commonly called Charles of Anjou or Charles d'Anjou, was a member of the royal Capetian dynasty and the founder of the second House of Anjou. He was Count of Provence (1246–1285) and Forcalquier (1246–1248, 1256–1285) in the Holy Roman Empire, Count of Anjou and Maine (1246–1285) in France; he was also King of Sicily (1266–1285) and Prince of Achaea (1278–1285). In 1272, he was proclaimed King of Albania, and in 1277 he purchased a claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem.

Charles I
Charles is installed as King of Sicily in Rome (1265).
King of Sicily
Contested by Peter I from 1282
Reign1266–1282 (island of Sicily and mainland territories)
1282–1285 (mainland territories, also known as the Kingdom of Naples)
Coronation5 January 1266
PredecessorManfred
Successor
Count of Anjou and Maine
Reign1246–1285
SuccessorCharles II
Count of Provence
Reign1246–1285
PredecessorBeatrice
SuccessorCharles II
Prince of Achaea
Reign1278–1285
PredecessorWilliam
SuccessorCharles II
BornEarly 1226/1227
Died7 January 1285 (aged 57–59)
Foggia, Kingdom of Naples
Burial
Spouses
(m. 1246; died 1267)
(m. 1268)
Issue
More
HouseAnjou-Sicily
FatherLouis VIII of France
MotherBlanche of Castile

The youngest son of Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile, Charles was destined for a Church career until the early 1240s. He acquired Provence and Forcalquier through his marriage to their heiress, Beatrice. His attempts to restore central authority brought him into conflict with his mother-in-law, Beatrice of Savoy, and the nobility. Charles received Anjou and Maine from his brother, Louis IX of France, in appanage. He accompanied Louis during the Seventh Crusade to Egypt. Shortly after he returned to Provence in 1250, Charles forced three wealthy autonomous cities—Marseille, Arles and Avignon—to acknowledge his suzerainty.

Charles supported Margaret II, Countess of Flanders and Hainaut, against her eldest son, John, in exchange for Hainaut in 1253. Two years later Louis IX persuaded him to renounce the county, but compensated him by instructing Margaret to pay him 160,000 marks. Charles forced the rebellious Provençal nobles and towns into submission and expanded his suzerainty over a dozen towns and lordships in the Kingdom of Arles. In 1263, after years of negotiations, he accepted the offer of the Holy See to seize the Kingdom of Sicily from the Hohenstaufens. This kingdom included, in addition to the island of Sicily, southern Italy to well north of Naples and was known as the Regno. Pope Urban IV declared a crusade against the incumbent Manfred of Sicily and assisted Charles in raising funds for the military campaign.

Charles was crowned king in Rome on 5 January 1266. He annihilated Manfred's army and occupied the Regno almost without resistance. His victory over Manfred's young nephew, Conradin, at the Battle of Tagliacozzo in 1268 strengthened his rule. In 1270 he took part in the Eighth Crusade organised by Louis IX, and forced the Hafsid Caliph of Tunis to pay a yearly tribute to him. Charles's victories secured his undisputed leadership among the Papacy's Italian partisans (known as Guelphs), but his influence on papal elections and his strong military presence in Italy disturbed the popes. They tried to channel his ambitions towards other territories and assisted him in acquiring claims to Achaea, Jerusalem and Arles through treaties. In 1281 Pope Martin IV authorised Charles to launch a crusade against the Byzantine Empire. Charles's ships were gathering at Messina, ready to begin the campaign when the Sicilian Vespers rebellion broke out on 30 March 1282 which put an end to Charles's rule on the island of Sicily. He was able to defend the mainland territories (or the Kingdom of Naples) with the support of France and the Holy See. Charles died while making preparations for an invasion of Sicily.

Early life Edit

Childhood Edit

Charles was the youngest child of King Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile.[1] The date of his birth has not survived, but he was probably born posthumously in early 1227.[note 1][2][3] Charles was Louis' only surviving son to be "born in the purple" (after his father's coronation), a fact he often emphasised in his youth, as the contemporaneous chronicler Matthew Paris noted in his Chronica Majora.[2] He was the first Capetian to be named for Charlemagne.[2]

 
Charles depicted alongside his composition Li granz desire et la douce pensée in the Chansonnier du Roi

Louis VIII died in November 1226 and his eldest son, Louis IX, succeeded him. The late King willed that his youngest sons were to be prepared for a career in the Roman Catholic Church.[4] The details of Charles's tuition are unknown, but he received a good education.[5][6] He understood the principal Catholic doctrines and could identify errors in Latin texts.[7] His passion for poetry, medical sciences, and law is well documented.[5][6]

Charles later said that his mother had a strong impact on her children's education;[1] in reality, Blanche was fully engaged in state administration, and could likely spare little time for her youngest children.[3][5] Charles lived at the court of a brother, Robert I, Count of Artois, from 1237.[5] About four years later he was put into the care of his youngest brother, Alphonse, Count of Poitiers.[5] His participation in his brothers' military campaign against Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche, in 1242 showed that he was no longer destined for a Church career.[5]

Provence and Anjou Edit

Raymond Berengar V of Provence died in August 1245,[8] bequeathing Provence and Forcalquier to his youngest daughter, Beatrice, allegedly because he had given generous dowries to her three sisters.[9][10] The dowries were actually not fully discharged,[6] causing two of her sisters, Margaret (Louis IX's wife) and Eleanor (the wife of Henry III of England), to believe that they had been unlawfully disinherited.[10] Their mother, Beatrice of Savoy, claimed that Raymond Berengar had willed the usufruct of Provence to her.[8][10]

The Hohenstaufen Emperor Frederick II (whom Pope Innocent IV had recently excommunicated for his alleged "crimes against the Church"), Count Raymond VII of Toulouse and other neighbouring rulers proposed themselves or their sons as husbands for the young Countess.[11] Her mother put her under the protection of the Holy See.[12] Louis IX and Margaret suggested that Beatrice should be given in marriage to Charles.[10] To secure the support of France against Frederick II, Pope Innocent IV accepted their proposal.[10] Charles hurried to Aix-en-Provence at the head of an army to prevent other suitors from invading Provence, and married Beatrice on 31 January 1246.[10][13][14] Provence was a part of the Kingdom of Arles and so of the Holy Roman Empire,[15] but Charles never swore fealty to the emperor.[16] He ordered a survey of the counts' rights and revenues, outraging both his subjects and his mother-in-law, who regarded this action as an attack against her rights.[15][17]

Being a younger child, destined for a church career, Charles had not received an appanage (a hereditary county or duchy) from his father.[18] Louis VIII had willed that his fourth son, John, should receive Anjou and Maine upon reaching the age of majority, but John died in 1232.[19] Louis IX knighted Charles at Melun in May 1246 and three months later bestowed Anjou and Maine on him.[20][21] Charles rarely visited his two counties and appointed baillies (or regents) to administer them.[22]

While Charles was absent from Provence, Marseille, Arles and Avignon—three wealthy cities, directly subject to the emperor—formed a league and appointed a Provençal nobleman, Barral of Baux, as the commander of their combined armies.[15] Charles's mother-in-law put the disobedient Provençals under her protection.[15] Charles could not deal with the rebels as he was about to join his brother's crusade.[15] To pacify his mother-in-law he acknowledged her right to rule Forcalquier and granted a third of his revenues from Provence to her.[15]

Seventh Crusade Edit

 
The crusaders' defeat in the Battle of Al Mansurah, forcing them to abandon the invasion of Egypt. During the withdrawal, the Egyptians captured Charles and his two brothers, Louis IX of France and Alphonse of Poitiers.

In December 1244 Louis IX took a vow to lead a crusade.[23] Ignoring their mother's strong opposition, his three brothers—Robert, Alphonse and Charles—also took the cross.[24] Preparations for the crusade lasted for years, with the crusaders embarking at Aigues-Mortes on 25 August 1248.[23][25] After spending several months in Cyprus they invaded Egypt on 5 June 1249.[26] They captured Damietta and decided to attack Cairo in November.[27] During their advance Louis's biographer Jean de Joinville noted Charles's personal courage which saved dozens of crusaders' lives.[28] Robert of Artois died fighting against the Egyptians at Al Mansurah. His three brothers survived, but they had to abandon the campaign. While withdrawing from Egypt, they fell into captivity on 6 April 1250.[28][29] The Egyptians released Louis, Charles and Alphonse in exchange for 800,000 bezants and the surrender of Damietta on 6 May.[29] During their voyage to Acre,[29] Charles outraged Louis by gambling while the king was mourning Robert's death.[28] Louis remained in the Holy Land, but Charles returned to France in October 1250.[15]

Wider ambitions Edit

Conflicts and consolidation Edit

Charles's officers continued the survey of the counts' rights and revenues in Provence, provoking a new rebellion during his absence.[15] On his return he applied both diplomacy and military force to deal with them.[15] The Archbishop of Arles and the Bishop of Digne ceded their secular rights in the two towns to Charles in 1250.[30] He received military assistance from his brother, Alphonse.[31] Arles was the first town to surrender to them in April 1251.[32] In May they forced Avignon to acknowledge their joint rule.[31][32] A month later Barral of Baux also capitulated.[32] Marseilles was the only town to resist for several months, but it also sought peace in July 1252.[32] Its burghers acknowledged Charles as their lord, but retained their self-governing bodies.[32]

 
Salt crystals in a puddle in Camargue. Salt pans at the delta of the Rhone significantly increased Charles's revenues in Provence.

Charles's officials continued to ascertain his rights,[33] visiting each town and holding public enquiries to obtain information about all claims.[33] The count's salt monopoly (or gabelle) was introduced in the whole county.[33] Income from the salt trade made up about 50% of state revenues by the late 1250s.[33] Charles abolished local tolls and promoted shipbuilding and grain trade.[34] He ordered the issue of new coins, called provencaux, to enable the use of the local currency in smaller transactions.[35]

Emperor Frederick II, who was also the ruler of Sicily, died in 1250. The Kingdom of Sicily, also known as the Regno, included the island of Sicily and southern Italy nearly as far as Rome. Pope Innocent IV claimed that the Regno had reverted to the Holy See.[36] The Pope first offered it to Richard of Cornwall, but Richard did not want to fight against Frederick's son, Conrad IV of Germany.[36] Then the Pope proposed to enfeoff Charles with the kingdom.[36] Charles sought instructions from Louis IX, who forbade him to accept the offer, because he regarded Conrad as the lawful ruler.[36] After Charles informed the Holy See on 30 October 1253 that he would not accept the Regno, the Pope offered it to Edmund of Lancaster.[37]

Queen Blanche, who had administered France during Louis' crusade,[32] died on 1 December 1252.[38] Louis made Alphonse and Charles co-regents, so that he could remain in the Holy Land.[39] Margaret II, Countess of Flanders and Hainaut had come into conflict with her son by her first marriage, John of Avesnes.[40] After her sons by her second marriage were captured in July 1253, she needed foreign assistance to secure their release.[41][42] Ignoring Louis IX's 1246 ruling that Hainaut should pass to John, she promised the county to Charles.[41] He accepted the offer and invaded Hainaut, forcing most local noblemen to swear fealty to him.[32][41] After his return to France, Louis IX insisted that his ruling was to be respected.[32] In November 1255 he ordered Charles to restore Hainaut to Margaret, but her sons were obliged to swear fealty to Charles.[43] Louis also ruled that she was to pay 160,000 marks to Charles over the following 13 years.[43]

Charles returned to Provence, which had again become restive.[32] His mother-in-law continued to support the rebellious Boniface of Castellane and his allies, but Louis IX persuaded her to return Forcalquier to Charles and relinquish her claims for a lump sum payment from Charles and a pension from Louis in November 1256.[34][44] A coup by Charles's supporters in Marseilles resulted in the surrender of all political powers there to his officials.[45] Charles continued to expand his power along the borders of Provence in the next four years.[45] He received territories in the Lower Alps from the Dauphin of Vienne.[45] Raymond I of Baux, Count of Orange, ceded the title of regent of the Kingdom of Arles to him.[45] The burghers of Cuneo—a town strategically located on the routes from Provence to Lombardy—sought Charles's protection against Asti in July 1259.[46][47] Alba, Cherasco, Savigliano and other nearby towns acknowledged his rule.[48] The rulers of Mondovì, Ceva, Biandrate and Saluzzo did homage to him.[45]

Emperor Frederick II's illegitimate son, Manfred, had been crowned king of Sicily in 1258.[49] After the English barons had announced that they opposed a war against Manfred, Pope Alexander IV annulled the 1253 grant of Sicily to Edmund of Lancaster.[50] Alexander's successor, Pope Urban IV, was determined to put an end to the Emperor's rule in Italy.[51][52] He sent his notary, Albert of Parma, to Paris to negotiate with Louis IX for Charles to be placed on the Sicilian throne.[53] Charles met with the Pope's envoy in early 1262.[32]

Taking advantage of Charles's absence, Boniface of Castellane stirred up a new revolt in Provence.[45][54] The burghers of Marseilles expelled Charles's officials, but Barral of Baux stopped the spread of the rebellion before Charles's return.[55] Charles renounced Ventimiglia in favour of the Republic of Genoa to secure her neutrality.[56] He defeated the rebels and forced Castellane into exile.[56] The mediation of James I of Aragon brought about a settlement with Marseilles: its fortifications were dismantled and the townspeople surrendered their arms, but the town retained its autonomy.[56]

Conquest of the Regno Edit

Louis IX decided to support Charles's military campaign in Italy in May 1263.[57] Pope Urban IV promised to proclaim a crusade against Manfred, while Charles pledged that he would not accept any offices in the Italian towns.[58] Manfred staged a coup in Rome, but the Guelphs elected Charles senator (or the head of the civil government of Rome).[58][59] He accepted the office, at which a group of cardinals requested that the Pope revoke the agreement with him, but the Pope, being otherwise defenceless against Manfred, could not break with Charles.[60]

In the spring of 1264 Cardinals Simon of Brie and Guy Foulquois were sent to France to reach a compromise and start raising support for the crusade.[53][60] Charles sent troops to Rome to protect the Pope against Manfred's allies.[61] At Foulquois' request, Charles's sister-in-law Margaret (who had not abandoned her claims to her dowry) pledged that she would not take actions against Charles during his absence.[61] Foulquois also persuaded the French and Provençal prelates to offer financial support for the crusade.[59][61] Pope Urban died before the final agreement was concluded.[62] Charles made arrangements for his campaign against Sicily during the interregnum; he concluded agreements to secure his army's route across Lombardy and had the leaders of the Provençal rebels executed.[62]

Foulquois was elected pope in February 1265; he soon confirmed Charles's senatorship and urged him to come to Rome.[63] Charles agreed that he would hold the Kingdom of Sicily as the popes' vassal for an annual tribute of 8,000 ounces of gold.[59] He also promised that he would never seek the imperial title.[59] He embarked at Marseilles on 10 May and landed at Ostia ten days later.[62] He was installed as senator on 21 June and four cardinals invested him with the Regno a week later.[62] To finance further military actions he borrowed money from Italian bankers with the Pope's assistance, who had authorised him to pledge Church property.[64][65] Five cardinals crowned him king of Sicily on 5 January 1266.[65] The crusaders from France and Provence—reportedly 6,000 fully equipped mounted warriors, 600 mounted bowmen and 20,000 foot-soldiers—arrived in Rome ten days later.[64][66]

 
Battle of Benevento: Charles defeats his opponent, Manfred, King of Sicily (1266).

Charles decided to invade southern Italy without delay, because he was unable to finance a lengthy campaign.[66][67] He left Rome on 20 January 1266.[67] He marched towards Naples, but changed his strategy after learning of a muster of Manfred's forces near Capua.[68] He led his troops across the Apennines towards Benevento.[68] Manfred also hurried to the town and reached it before Charles.[68] Worried that further delays might endanger his subjects' loyalty, Manfred attacked Charles's army, then in disarray from the crossing of the hills, on 26 February 1266.[68] In the ensuing battle, Manfred's army was defeated and he was killed.[68]

Resistance throughout the Regno collapsed[66][69] and towns surrendered even before Charles's troops reached them.[69] The Saracens of Lucera—a Muslim colony established during Frederick II's reign[70]—paid homage to him.[69] His commander, Philip of Montfort, took control of the island of Sicily.[69] Manfred's widow, Helena of Epirus, and their children were captured.[71] Charles laid claim to her dowry—the island of Corfu and the region of Durazzo (now Durrës in Albania)—by right of conquest.[71] His troops seized Corfu before the end of the year.[72]

Conradin Edit

Charles was lenient with Manfred's supporters, but they did not believe that this conciliatory policy could last.[73] They knew that he had promised to return estates to the Guelph lords expelled from the Regno.[73] Neither could Charles gain the commoners' loyalty, partly because he continued enforcing the subventio generalis despite the popes declaring it an illegal charge.[74][75] He introduced a ban on the use of foreign currency in large transactions and made a profit of the compulsory exchange of foreign coinage for locally minted currency.[76] He also traded in grain, spices and sugar, through a joint venture with Pisan merchants.[77]

Pope Clement censured Charles for his methods of state administration, describing him as an arrogant and obstinate monarch.[78] The consolidation of Charles's power in northern Italy also alarmed Clement.[79] To appease the Pope, Charles resigned his senatorship in May 1267.[78][80] His successors, Conrad Monaldeschi and Luca Savelli, demanded the re-payment of the money that Charles and the Pope had borrowed from the Romans.[78]

Victories by the Ghibellines, the imperial family's supporters, forced the Pope to ask Charles to send his troops to Tuscany.[81] Charles's troops ousted the Ghibellines from Florence in April 1267.[81] After being elected the Podestà (ruler) of Florence and Lucca for seven years, Charles hurried to Tuscany.[81] Charles's expansionism along the Papal States' borders alarmed Pope Clement and he decided to change the direction of Charles's ambitions.[80] The Pope summoned him to Viterbo, forcing him to promise that he would abandon all claims to Tuscany in three years.[82] He persuaded Charles to conclude agreements with William of Villehardouin, Prince of Achaea, and the titular Latin Emperor[note 2] Baldwin II in late May.[84] According to the first treaty, Villehardouin acknowledged Charles's suzerainty and made Charles's younger son, Philip, his heir, also stipulating that Charles would inherit Achaea if Philip died childless.[85][86] Baldwin confirmed the first agreement and renounced his claims to suzerainty over his vassals in favour of Charles.[86][87] Charles pledged that he would assist Baldwin in recapturing Constantinople from the Byzantine emperor, Michael VIII Palaiologos, in exchange for one third of the conquered lands.[88][89]

 
Charles's sixteen-year-old enemy, Conradin, is executed in Naples (1268).

Charles returned to Tuscany and laid siege to the fortress of Poggibonsi, but it did not fall until the end of November.[90] Manfred's staunchest supporters had meanwhile fled to Bavaria to attempt to persuade Conrad IV's 15-year-old son Conradin to assert his hereditary right to the Kingdom of Sicily.[91] After Conradin accepted their proposal, Manfred's former vicar in Sicily, Conrad Capece, returned to the island and stirred up a revolt.[91] At Capece's request Muhammad I al-Mustansir, the Hafsid caliph of Tunis,[92] allowed Manfred's former ally, Frederick of Castile, to invade Sicily from North Africa.[93] Frederick's brother, Henry—who had been elected senator of Rome—also offered support to Conradin.[91][94] Henry had been Charles's friend, but Charles had failed to repay a loan to him.[95]

Conradin left Bavaria in September 1267.[96] His supporters' revolt was spreading from Sicily to Calabria; the Saracens of Lucera also rose up.[96][97] Pope Clement urged Charles to return to the Regno, but he continued his campaign in Tuscany until March 1268, when he met with the Pope.[96] In April, the Pope made Charles imperial vicar of Tuscany "during the vacancy of the empire", a move of dubious legality.[98][99] Charles marched to southern Italy and laid siege to Lucera, but he then had to hurry north to prevent Conradin's invasion of Abruzzo in late August.[100] At the Battle of Tagliacozzo, on 23 August 1268, it appeared that Conradin had won the day, but a sudden charge by Charles's reserve routed Conradin's army.[100]

The burghers of Potenza, Aversa and other towns in Basilicata and Apulia massacred their fellows who had agitated on Conradin's behalf, but the Sicilians and the Saracens of Lucera did not surrender.[66][101] Charles marched to Rome where he was again elected senator in September.[102] He appointed new officials to administer justice and collect state revenues.[102] New coins bearing his name were struck.[102] During the following decade, Rome was ruled by Charles's vicars, each appointed for one year.[102]

Conradin was captured at Torre Astura.[103] Most of his retainers were summarily executed, but Conradin and his friend, Frederick I, Margrave of Baden, were brought to trial for robbery and treason in Naples.[104] They were sentenced to death and beheaded on 29 October.[105] Conrad of Antioch was Conradin's only partisan to be released, but only after his wife threatened to execute the Guelph lords she held captive in her castle.[103] The Ghibelline noblemen of the Regno fled to the court of Peter III of Aragon, who had married Manfred's daughter, Constance.[106]

Mediterranean empire Edit

Italy Edit

Charles's wife, Beatrice of Provence, had died in July 1267. The widowed Charles married Margaret of Nevers in November 1268.[107] She was co-heiress to her father, Odo, the eldest son of Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy.[107] Pope Clement died on 29 November 1268.[102] The papal vacancy lasted for three years, which strengthened Charles's authority in Italy, but it also deprived him of the ecclesiastic support that only a pope could provide.[108][109]

Charles returned to Lucera to personally direct its siege in April 1269.[108] The Saracens and the Ghibellines who had escaped to the town[108] resisted until starvation forced them to surrender in August 1269.[66][110] Charles sent Philip and Guy of Montfort to Sicily to force the rebels there into submission, but they could only capture Augusta.[111] Charles made William l'Estandart the commander of the army in Sicily in August 1269.[111] L'Estandart captured Agrigento, forcing Frederick of Castile and Frederick Lancia to seek refuge in Tunis.[111] After L'Estandart's subsequent victory at Sciacca, only Capece resisted, but he also had to surrender in early 1270.[111]

Charles's troops forced Siena and Pisa—the last towns to resist him in Tuscany—to sue for peace in August 1270.[112] He granted privileges to the Tuscan merchants and bankers which strengthened their position in the Regno.[113][114] His influence was declining in Lombardy, because the Lombard towns no longer feared an invasion from Germany after Conradin's death.[115] In May 1269 Charles sent Walter of La Roche to represent him in the province, but this failed to strengthen his authority.[115][116] In October Charles's officials convoked an assembly at Cremona, and invited the Lombard towns to attend.[115][116] The Lombard towns accepted the invitation, but some towns—Milan, Bologna, Alessandria and Tortona—only confirmed their alliance with Charles, without acknowledging his rule.[115][116]

Eighth Crusade Edit

Louis IX never abandoned the idea of the liberation of Jerusalem, but he decided to begin his new crusade with a military campaign against Tunis.[117][118] According to his confessor, Geoffrey of Beaulieu, Louis was convinced that al-Mustansir of Tunis was ready to convert to Christianity.[117] The 13th-century historian Saba Malaspina stated that Charles persuaded Louis to attack Tunis, because he wanted to secure the payment of the tribute that the rulers of Tunis had paid to the former Sicilian monarchs.[119]

The French crusaders embarked at Aigues-Mortes on 2 July 1270; Charles departed from Naples six days later.[120] He spent more than a month in Sicily, waiting for his fleet.[120] By the time he landed at Tunis on 25 August,[120] dysentery and typhoid fever had decimated the French army.[118] Louis died the day Charles arrived.[118]

The crusaders twice defeated Al-Mustansir's army, forcing him to sue for peace.[121] According to the peace treaty, signed on 1 November, Al-Mustansir agreed to fully compensate Louis' son and successor, Philip III of France, and Charles for the expenses of the military campaign and to release his Christian prisoners.[121] He also promised to pay a yearly tribute to Charles and to expel Charles's opponents from Tunis.[122] The gold from Tunis, along with silver from the newly opened mine at Longobucco, enabled Charles to mint new coins, known as carlini, in the Regno.[123]

Charles and Philip departed Tunis on 10 November.[118] A storm dispersed their fleet at Trapani and most of Charles's galleys were lost or damaged.[121] Genoese ships returning from the crusade were also sunk or forced to land in Sicily.[124] Charles seized the damaged ships and their cargo, ignoring all protests from the Ghibelline authorities of Genoa.[124] Before leaving Sicily he granted temporary tax concessions to the Sicilians, because he realised that the conquest of the island had caused much destruction.[125]

Attempts to expand Edit

Charles accompanied Philip III as far as Viterbo in March 1271.[126] Here they failed to convince the cardinals to elect a new pope.[127] Charles's brother, Alphonse of Poitiers, fell ill.[128] Charles sent his best doctors to cure him, but Alphonse died.[128] He claimed the major part of Alphonse's inheritance, including the Marquisate of Provence and the County of Poitiers, because he was Alphonse's nearest kin.[129] After Philip III objected, he took the case to the Parlement of Paris.[129] In 1284 the court ruled that appanages escheated to the French crown if their rulers died without descendants.[130]

 
Charles's empire in the early 1270s

An earthquake destroyed the walls of Durazzo in the late 1260s or early 1270s.[131][132] Charles's troops took possession of the town with the assistance of the leaders of the nearby Albanian communities.[133][134] Charles concluded an agreement with the Albanian chiefs, promising to protect them and their ancient liberties in February 1272.[133] He adopted the title of King of Albania and appointed Gazzo Chinardo as his vicar-general.[134][135] He also sent his fleet to Achaea to defend the principality against Byzantine attacks.[136]

Charles hurried to Rome to attend the enthronement of Pope Gregory X on 27 March 1272.[137] The new pope was determined to put an end to the conflicts between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines.[138] While in Rome Charles met with the Guelph leaders who had been exiled from Genoa.[124] After they offered him the office of captain of the people, Charles promised military assistance to them.[124] In November 1272 Charles commanded his officials to take prisoner all Genoese within his territories, except for the Guelphs, and to seize their property.[139][140] His fleet occupied Ajaccio in Corsica.[140] Pope Gregory condemned his aggressive policy, but proposed that the Genoese should elect Guelph officials.[140] Ignoring the Pope's proposal, the Genoese made alliance with Alfonso X of Castile, William VII of Montferrat and the Ghibelline towns of Lombardy in October 1273.[140]

The conflict with Genoa prevented Charles from invading the Byzantine Empire, but he continued to forge alliances in the Balkan Peninsula.[141] The Bulgarian ruler, Konstantin Tih, was the first to conclude a treaty with him in 1272 or 1273.[135] John I Doukas of Thessaly and Stefan Uroš I, King of Serbia, joined the coalition in 1273.[135] However, Pope Gregory forbade Charles to attack, because he hoped to unify the Orthodox and Catholic churches with the assistance of Emperor Michael VIII.[142][143]

The renowned theologian Thomas Aquinas died unexpectedly near Naples on 7 March 1274, before departing to attend the Second Council of Lyon.[144] According to a popular legend, immortalised by Dante Alighieri, Charles had him poisoned, because he feared that Aquinas would make complaint against him.[144] The historian Steven Runciman emphasises that "there is no evidence for supposing that the great doctor's death was not natural".[144] Southern Italian churchmen at the council accused Charles of tyrannical acts.[142] Their report reinforced the Pope's attempt to reach a compromise with Rudolf of Habsburg, who had been elected king of Germany by the prince-electors of the Holy Roman Empire.[145] In June, the Pope acknowledged Rudolf as the lawful ruler of both Germany and Italy.[145] Charles's sisters-in-law, Margaret and Eleanor, approached Rudolf, claiming that they had been unlawfully disinherited in favour of Charles's late wife.[146][147]

Michael VIII's personal envoy announced at the Council of Lyon on 6 July that he had accepted the Catholic creed and papal primacy.[89] About three weeks later, Pope Gregory again prohibited Charles from launching military actions against the Byzantine Empire.[148] The Pope also tried to mediate a truce between Charles and Michael, but the latter chose to attack several smaller states in the Balkans, including Charles's vassals.[142] The Byzantine fleet took control of the maritime routes between Albania and southern Italy in the late 1270s.[149] Gregory only allowed Charles to send reinforcements to Achaea.[142] The organisation of a new crusade to the Holy Land remained the Pope's principal object.[150] He persuaded Charles to start negotiations with Maria of Antioch about purchasing her claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[151] The High Court of Jerusalem had already rejected her in favour of Hugh III of Cyprus,[151] but the Pope had a low opinion of Hugh.[152]

The war with Genoa and the Lombard towns increasingly occupied Charles's attention.[153] He appointed his nephew Robert II of Artois as his deputy in Piedmont in October 1274, but Artois could not prevent Vercelli and Alessandria from joining the Ghibelline League.[153] The following summer, a Genoese fleet plundered Trapani and the island of Gozo.[153] Convinced that only Rudolf I could achieve a compromise between the Guelphs and Ghibellines, the Pope urged the Lombard towns to send envoys to him.[153] He also urged Charles to renounce Tuscany.[145] In the autumn of 1275 the Ghibellines offered to make peace with Charles, but he did not accept their terms.[153] Early the next year the Ghibellines defeated his troops at Col de Tende, forcing them to withdraw to Provence.[153]

Papal elections Edit

 
The Palace of the Popes in Viterbo

Pope Gregory X died on 10 January 1276.[154] After the hostility he experienced during Gregory's pontificate, Charles was determined to secure the election of a pope willing to support his plans.[155] Gregory's successor, Pope Innocent V, had always been Charles's partisan and he rapidly confirmed Charles as senator of Rome and imperial vicar of Tuscany.[156] He also mediated a peace treaty between Charles and Genoa,[142] which was signed in Rome on 22 June 1276.[157] Charles restored the privileges of the Genoese merchants and renounced his conquests, and the Genoese acknowledged his rule in Ventimiglia.[157]

Pope Innocent died on 30 June 1276.[157] After the cardinals assembled in the Lateran Palace, Charles's troops surrounded it, enabling only his allies to communicate with other cardinals and with outsiders.[157] On 11 July the cardinals elected Charles's old friend, Ottobuono de' Fieschi, pope, but he died on 18 August.[158] The cardinals met again, this time at Viterbo.[159] Although Charles was staying in the nearby Vetralla, he could not directly influence the election, because his vehement opponent, Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, dominated the papal conclave.[159] Pope John XXI, who was elected on 20 September, excommunicated Charles's opponents in Piedmont and prohibited Rudolf from coming to Lombardy, but did not forbid the Lombardian Guelph leaders swearing fealty to Rudolf.[159] The Pope also confirmed the treaty concluded by Charles and Maria of Antioch on 18 March which transferred her claims to Jerusalem to Charles for 1,000 bezants and a pension of 4,000 livres tournois.[159][160]

Charles appointed Roger of San Severino to administer the Kingdom of Jerusalem as his bailiff.[160] San Severino landed at Acre on 7 June 1277.[161] Hugh III's bailiff, Balian of Arsuf, surrendered the town without resistance.[162] Although initially only the Knights Hospitaller and the Venetians acknowledged Charles as the lawful ruler, the barons of the realm also paid homage to San Severino in January 1278, after he had threatened to confiscate their estates.[160][162] The Mamluks of Egypt had already confined the kingdom to a coastal strip covering 2,600 km2 (1,000 square miles)[162] and Charles had ordered San Severino to avoid conflicts with Egypt.[163]

Pope John died on 20 May 1277.[164] Charles was ill and could not prevent the election of Giovanni Gaetano Orsini as Pope Nicholas III on 25 November.[165] The Pope soon declared that no foreign prince could rule in Rome[166] and reminded Charles that he had been elected senator for ten years.[167] Charles swore fealty to the new pope on 24 May 1278 after lengthy negotiations.[167] He had to pledge that he would renounce both the senatorship of Rome and the vicariate of Tuscany in four months.[167] On the other hand, Nicholas III confirmed the excommunication of Charles's enemies in Piedmont and started negotiations with Rudolf to prevent him from making an alliance against Charles with Margaret of Provence and her nephew, Edward I of England.[168] The negotiations with Rudolf lay behind Nicholas' refusal to renew Charles's vicariate in Tuscany, to which Rudolf had appointed his own vicar.[98]

Charles announced his resignation from the senatorship and the vicariate on 30 August 1278.[169] He was succeeded by the Pope's brother, Matteo Orsini, in Rome, and by the Pope's nephew, Cardinal Latino Malabranca, in Tuscany.[169] To ensure that Charles fully abandoned his ambitions in central Italy the Pope started negotiations with Rudolf about the restoration of the Kingdom of Arles for Charles's grandson, Charles Martel.[166] Margaret of Provence sharply opposed the plan, but Philip III of France did not stand by his mother.[169] After lengthy negotiations, in the summer of 1279 Rudolf recognised Charles as the lawful ruler of Provence without demanding his oath of fealty.[169] An agreement about Charles Martel's rule in Arles and his marriage to Rudolf's daughter, Clemence, was signed in May 1280.[170] The plan disturbed the rulers of the lands along the Upper Rhone, especially Duke Robert II and Count Otto IV of Burgundy.[171]

Charles had meanwhile inherited the Principality of Achaea from William II of Villehardouin, who had died on 1 May 1278.[160][172] He appointed the unpopular senechal of Sicily, Galeran of Ivry, as his baillif in Achaea.[173][174] Galeran could not pay his troops who started to pillage the peasants' homes.[174] John I de la Roche, Duke of Athens, had to lend money to him to finance their salaries.[173] Nicephoros I of Epirus acknowledged Charles's suzerainty on 14 March 1279 to secure his assistance against the Byzantines.[172] Nicephoros also ceded three towns—Butrinto, Sopotos and Panormos—to Charles.[172]

Pope Nicholas died on 22 August 1280.[175] Charles sent agents to Viterbo to promote the election of one of his supporters, taking advantage of the rift between the late Pope's relatives and other Italian cardinals.[175] When a riot broke out in Viterbo, after the cardinals had not reached a decision for months, Charles's troops took control of the town.[175] On 22 February 1281 his staunchest supporter, Simon of Brie, was elected pope.[176] Pope Martin IV dismissed his predecessor's relatives and made Charles the senator of Rome again.[177][178] Guido I da Montefeltro rose up against the Pope, but Charles's troops under Jean d'Eppe stopped the spread of the rebellion at Forlì.[177] Charles also sent an army to Piedmont, but Thomas I, Marquess of Saluzzo, annihilated it at Borgo San Dalmazzo in May.[179]

End of the Church union Edit

Pope Martin excommunicated Emperor Michael VIII on 10 April 1281 because the Emperor had not imposed the Church union in his empire.[160][180] The Pope soon authorised Charles to invade the empire.[180] Charles's vicar in Albania, Hugh of Sully, had already laid siege to the Byzantine fortress of Berat.[173] A Byzantine army of relief under Michael Tarchaneiotes and John Synadenos arrived in March 1281.[181] Sully was ambushed and captured, his army put to flight and the interior of Albania was lost to the Byzantines.[182] On 3 July 1281 Charles and his son-in-law, Philip of Courtenay, the titular Latin emperor, made an alliance with Venice "for the restoration of the Roman Empire".[183] They decided to start a full-scale campaign early the next year.[180]

Margaret of Provence called Robert and Otto of Burgundy and other lords who held fiefs in the Kingdom of Arles to a meeting at Troyes in the autumn of 1281.[184] They were willing to unite their troops to prevent Charles's army from taking possession of the kingdom, but Philip III of France strongly opposed his mother's plan and Edward I of England would not promise any assistance to them.[184] Charles acknowledged that his wife held the County of Tonnerre and her other inherited estates as a Burgundian fief, which appeased Robert of Burgundy.[185] Charles's ships started to assemble at Marseilles to sail up the Rhone in the spring of 1282.[184] Another fleet was gathering at Messina to start the crusade against the Byzantine Empire.[186]

The empire's collapse Edit

Sicilian Vespers Edit

 
Charles's Sicilian seal (from the Cabinet des Médailles in Paris)

Always in need of funds, Charles could not cancel the subventio generalis, although it was the most unpopular tax in the Regno.[187] Instead he granted exemptions to individuals and communities, especially to the French and Provençal colonists, which increased the burden on those who did not enjoy such privileges.[188] The yearly, or occasionally more frequent, obligatory exchange of the deniers—the coins almost exclusively used in local transactions—was also an important, and unpopular, source of revenue for the royal treasury.[189][190] Charles took out forced loans whenever he needed "immediately a large sum of money for certain arduous and pressing business", as he explained in one of his decrees.[191]

Purveyances, the requisitioning of goods, increased the unpopularity of Charles's government in southern Italy and Sicily.[191] His subjects were also liable to be forced to guard prisoners or lodge soldiers in their homes.[191] The restoration of old fortresses, bridges and aqueducts and the building of new castles required the employment of craftsmen, although most of them were unwilling to participate in such lengthy projects.[192] Thousands of people were forced to serve in the army in foreign lands, especially after 1279.[191][193] Trading in salt was declared a royal monopoly.[194] In December 1281, Charles again ordered the collection of the subventio generalis, requiring the payment of 150 per cent of the customary amount.[187]

Charles did not pay attention to the island of Sicily, although it had been the centre of resistance against him in 1268.[195] He transferred the capital from Palermo to Naples.[21] He did not visit the island after 1271, preventing Sicilians from directly informing him of their grievances.[195][196] Sicilian noblemen were seldom employed as royal officials, although he often appointed their southern Italian peers to represent him in his other realms.[195] Furthermore, having seized large estates on the island in the late 1260s Charles almost exclusively employed French and Provençal clerics to administer them.[125]

Popular stories credited John of Procida—Manfred of Sicily's former chancellor—with staging an international plot against Charles.[197][198] Legend says that he visited Constantinople, Sicily and Viterbo in disguise in 1279 and 1280 to convince Michael VIII, the Sicilian barons and Pope Nicholas III to support a revolt.[199] On the other hand, Michael VIII would later claim that he "was God's instrument in bringing freedom to the Sicilians" in his memoirs.[200] The Emperor's wealth enabled him to send money to the discontented Sicilian barons.[201] Peter III of Aragon decided to lay claim to the Kingdom of Sicily in late 1280: he did not hide his disdain when he met with Charles's son, Charles, Duke of Salerno, in Toulouse in December 1280.[199] He began to assemble a fleet, ostensibly for another crusade to Tunis.[202]

Rioting broke out in Sicily after a burgher of Palermo killed a drunken French soldier who had insulted his wife before the Church of the Holy Spirit on Easter Monday (30 March),[203] 1282.[204][205] When the soldier's comrades attacked the murderer, the mob turned against them and started to massacre all the French in the town.[204] The riot, known since the 16th century as the Sicilian Vespers,[206] developed into an uprising and most of Charles's officials were killed or forced to flee the island.[204] Charles ordered the transfer of soldiers and ships from Achaea to Sicily, but could not stop the spread of the revolt to Calabria.[207] San Severino also had to return to Italy, accompanied by the major part of the garrison at Acre.[208] Odo Poilechien, who succeeded him in Acre, had limited authority.[208]

The burghers of the major Sicilian towns established communes which sent delegates to Pope Martin, asking him to take them under the protection of the Holy See.[209][210] Instead of accepting their offer, the Pope excommunicated the rebels on 7 May.[211] Charles issued an edict on 10 June, accusing his officials of having ignored his instructions on good administration, but he failed to promise fundamental changes.[207] In July he sailed to Sicily and laid siege to Messina.[207]

War with Aragon Edit

Peter III of Aragon's envoy, William of Castelnou, started negotiations with the rebels' leaders in Palermo.[212] Realizing that they could not resist without foreign support, they acknowledged Peter and Constance as their king and queen.[212] They appointed envoys to accompany Castelnou to Collo where the Aragonese fleet was assembling.[213] After a short hesitation, Peter decided to intervene on the rebels' behalf and sailed to Sicily.[214] He was declared king of Sicily at Palermo on 4 September.[207] Thereafter two realms, each ruled by a monarch styled king (or queen) of Sicily, coexisted for more than a century, with Charles and his successors ruling in southern Italy (known as the Kingdom of Naples) while Peter and his descendants ruled the island of Sicily.[215][216]

In the face of the Aragonese landing, Charles was compelled to withdraw from the island, but the Aragonese moved swiftly and destroyed part of his army and most of his baggage.[217][218] Peter took control of the whole island and sent troops to Calabria, but they could not prevent Charles of Salerno from leading an army of 600 French knights to join his father at Reggio Calabria.[219] Further French troops arrived under the command of Charles's nephews, Robert II of Artois and Peter of Alençon, in November.[219] In the same month, the Pope excommunicated Peter.[220]

Neither Peter nor Charles could afford to wage a lengthy war.[220][221] Charles made an astonishing proposal in late December 1282, challenging Peter to a judicial duel.[222] Peter insisted that the war should be continued, but agreed that a battle between the two kings, each accompanied by 100 knights, should decide the possession of Sicily.[222] The duel was set to take place at Bordeaux on 1 June 1283, but they did not fix the hour.[222][223] Charles appointed Charles of Salerno to administer the Regno during his absence.[222] To secure the loyalty of the local lords in Achaea, he made one of their peers, Guy of Dramelay, baillif.[206] Pope Martin declared the war against the Sicilians a crusade on 13 January 1283.[224] Charles met with the Pope in Viterbo on 9 March, but he ignored the Pope's ban on his duel with Peter of Aragon.[222] After visiting Provence and Paris in April, he left for Bordeaux to meet with Peter.[225] The duel turned into a farce; the two kings each arriving at different times on the same day, declaring a victory over their absent opponent, and departing.[226]

Skirmishes and raids continued to occur in southern Italy.[227] Aragonese guerrillas attacked Catona and killed Peter of Alençon in January 1283; the Aragonese seized Reggio Calabria in February; and the Sicilian admiral, Roger of Lauria, annihilated a newly raised Provençal fleet at Malta in April.[228] However, tensions arose between the Aragonese and the Sicilians and in May 1283 one of the leaders of the anti-Angevin rebellion, Walter of Caltagirone, was executed for his secret correspondence with Charles's agents.[229] Pope Martin declared the war against Aragon a crusade and conferred the kingdom upon Philip III of France's son, Charles of Valois, on 2 February 1284.[230]

Charles started to raise new troops and a fleet in Provence, and instructed his son, Charles of Salerno, to maintain a defensive posture until his return.[231] Roger of Lauria based a small squadron on the island of Nisida to blockade Naples in May 1284.[232] Charles of Salerno attempted to destroy the squadron, but most of his fleet was captured, and he himself was taken prisoner after a short, sharp fight on 5 June.[232] News of the reverse caused a riot in Naples, but the papal legate, Gerard of Parma, crushed it with the assistance of local noblemen.[233] Charles learnt of the disaster when he landed at Gaeta on 6 June.[233] He was furious at Charles of Salerno and his disobedience.[233] He allegedly stated that "Who loses a fool loses nothing", referring to his son's capture.[233]

Charles left Naples for Calabria on 24 June 1284.[234] A large army—reportedly 10,000 mounted warriors and 40,000 foot-soldiers—accompanied him as far as Reggio Calabria.[234] He laid siege to the town by sea and land in late July.[235] His fleet approached the coast of Sicily, but his troops could not land in the island.[235] After Lauria landed troops near Reggio Calabria, Charles had to lift the siege and retreat from Calabria on 3 August.[235]

Death Edit

 
Charles's death

Charles went to Brindisi and made preparations for a campaign against Sicily in the new year.[236] He dispatched orders to his officials for the collection of the subventio generalis.[208] However, he fell seriously ill before travelling to Foggia on 30 December.[208] He made his last will on 6 January 1285, appointing Robert II of Artois regent for his grandson, Charles Martel, who was to rule his realms until Charles of Salerno was released.[237][238] He died in the morning of 7 January.[239] He was buried in a marble sepulchre in Naples, but his heart was placed at the Couvent Saint-Jacques in Paris.[239][240] His corpse was moved to a chapel of the newly built Naples Cathedral in 1296.[238]

Family Edit

 
Charles and his first wife, Beatrice of Provence

All records show that Charles was a faithful husband and a caring father.[241] His first wife, Beatrice of Provence, gave birth to at least six children.[107] According to contemporaneous gossips, she persuaded Charles to claim the Kingdom of Sicily, because she wanted to wear a crown like her sisters.[242] Before she died in July 1267,[90] she had willed the usufruct of Provence to Charles.[31]

The widowed Charles first proposed himself to Margaret of Hungary.[247] However, Margaret, who had been brought up in a Dominican nunnery, did not want to marry.[248] According to legend, she disfigured herself to prevent the marriage.[247] Charles and his second wife, Margaret of Nevers, had several children, but none survived to adulthood.[249]

Legacy Edit

The works of two 13th-century historians, Bartholomaeus of Neocastro and Saba Malaspina, strongly influenced modern views about Charles, although they were biased.[216][250] The former described Charles as a tyrant to justify the Sicilian Vespers, the latter argued for the cancellation of the crusade against Aragon in 1285.[251] Charles had continued his imperial predecessors' policies in several fields, including coinage, taxation, and the employment of unpopular officials from Amalfi.[252] Nevertheless, the monarchy underwent a "Frenchification" or "Provençalistion" during his reign.[253] He donated estates in the Regno to about 700 noblemen from France or Provence.[254] He did not adopt the rich ceremonial robes, inspired by Byzantine and Islamic art, of earlier Sicilian kings, but dressed like other western European monarchs,[253] or as "a simple knight", as it was observed by the chronicler Thomas Tuscus who visited Naples in 1267.[255]

 
Charles as count of Provence (statue by Louis-Joseph Daumas in Hyères)

Around 1310, the Florentine historian, Giovanni Villani, stated that Charles had been the most powerful Christian monarch in the late 1270s.[256] Luchetto Gattilusio, a Genoese poet, compared Charles directly with Charlemagne.[256] Both reports demonstrate that Charles was regarded almost as an emperor.[256] Among modern historians, Runciman says that Charles tried to build an empire in the eastern Mediterraneum;[239] Gérard Sivéry writes that he wanted to dominate the west; and Jean Dunbabin argues that his "agglomeration of lands was in the process of forming an empire".[257]

The historian Hiroshi Takayama concludes that Charles's dominion "was too large to control".[258] Nevertheless, economic links among his realms strengthened during his reign.[259] Provençal salt was transported to his other lands, grain from the Regno was sold in Achaea, Albania, Acre and Tuscany, and Tuscan merchants settled in Anjou, Maine, Sicily and Naples.[260] His highest-ranking officials were transferred from their homelands to represent him in other territories: his senechals in Provence were from Anjou; French and Provençal noblemen held the highest offices in the Regno; and he chose his vicars in Rome from among southern Italian and Provençal nobles.[261] Although his empire collapsed before his death, his son retained southern Italy and Provence.[262]

Charles always emphasised his royal rank, but did not adopt "imperial rhetoric".[263] His renowned justiciar, Marino de Caramanico, developed a new political theory. Traditional interpretators of Roman law were convinced that the Holy Roman Emperors had a monopoly on law-making. In contrast with them, Caramanico stated that an emperor could not claim sovereignty over a king and emphasised Charles full competence to issue decrees.[264] To promote legal education Charles paid high salaries—20–50 ounces of gold in a year—to masters of law at the University of Naples.[265] Masters of medicine received similar remunerations, and the university became a principal centre of medical science.[266] Charles's personal interest in medicine grew during his life and he borrowed Arabic medical texts from the rulers of Tunis to have them translated.[267] He employed at least one Jewish scholar, Moses of Palermo, who could translate texts from Arabic to Latin.[268] Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi's medical encyclopaedia, known as Kitab al-Hawi, was one of the books translated at Charles's order.[267]

Charles was also a poet, which distinguished him from his Capetian relatives.[269] He composed love songs and a jeu-parti (the latter with Pierre d'Angicourt).[269] He was requested to judge two poetic competitions in his youth, but modern scholars do not esteem his poetry.[270] The Provençal troubadours were mostly critical when writing of Charles, but French poets were willing to praise him.[271] Bertran d'Alamanon wrote a poem against the salt tax and Raimon de Tors de Marseilha rebuked Charles for invading the Regno. The trouvère Adam de la Halle dedicated an unfinished epic poem, entitled The King of Sicily, to Charles and Jean de Meun glorified his victories in the Romance of the Rose.[272] Dante described Charles—"who bears a manly nose"—singing peacefully together with his one-time rival, Peter III of Aragon, in Purgatory.[273]

Charles also showed interest in architecture.[274] He designed a tower in Brindisi, but it soon collapsed.[275] He ordered the erection of the Castel Nuovo in Naples, of which only the palatine chapel survives.[275] He is also credited with the introduction of French-style glassed windows in southern Italy.[276]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The historian Peter Herde notes that Charles may have also been identical with the first son of Louis VIII and Blanche born in 1226, Stephen, or with the unnamed son who was born in late 1226. If Charles was identical with Stephen, he must have changed his name before the late 1230s.[2]
  2. ^ The Latin Empire of Constantinople was established on the ruins of the Byzantine Empire during the Fourth Crusade in 1204. The Emperors of Nicaea, a Byzantine successor state, restored Greek rule on most territories lost to the Latin Emperors during the following decades. The Latins also lost Constantinople to the Nicaeans in 1261.[83]

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Sources Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • Fischer, Klaus Dietrich (1982). "Moses of Palermo: Translator from the Arabic at the Court of Charles of Anjou". Histoires des Sciences Médicales. 17 (Special 17): 278–281. ISSN 0440-8888.
  • Holloway, Julia Bolton (1993). Twice-Told Tales: Brunetto Latino and Dante Aligheri. Peter Lang Inc. ISBN 978-0-82041-954-1.

External links Edit

Charles I of Anjou
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 1226/1227 Died: 7 January 1285
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Sicily
1266–1282/1285
Succeeded byas king on Sicily from 1282
Succeeded byas king in Southern Italy from 1285
New title King of Albania
1272–1285
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prince of Achaea
1278–1285
Preceded by Count of Provence
1246–1285
Vacant
Title last held by
John
Count of Anjou and Maine
1246–1285
Preceded by Count of Forcalquier
1246–1248
Succeeded by
Preceded by Count of Forcalquier
1256–1285
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Senator of Rome
1263–1266
Succeeded by
Conrad Monaldeschi
Luca Savelli
Preceded by Senator of Rome
1268–1278
Succeeded by
Preceded by Senator of Rome
1281–1285
Succeeded by

charles, anjou, charles, anjou, redirects, here, other, uses, charles, anjou, disambiguation, charles, early, 1226, 1227, january, 1285, commonly, called, charles, anjou, charles, anjou, member, royal, capetian, dynasty, founder, second, house, anjou, count, p. Charles of Anjou redirects here For other uses see Charles of Anjou disambiguation Charles I early 1226 1227 7 January 1285 commonly called Charles of Anjou or Charles d Anjou was a member of the royal Capetian dynasty and the founder of the second House of Anjou He was Count of Provence 1246 1285 and Forcalquier 1246 1248 1256 1285 in the Holy Roman Empire Count of Anjou and Maine 1246 1285 in France he was also King of Sicily 1266 1285 and Prince of Achaea 1278 1285 In 1272 he was proclaimed King of Albania and in 1277 he purchased a claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem Charles ICharles is installed as King of Sicily in Rome 1265 King of SicilyContested by Peter I from 1282Reign1266 1282 island of Sicily and mainland territories 1282 1285 mainland territories also known as the Kingdom of Naples Coronation5 January 1266PredecessorManfredSuccessorPeter I and Constance II island of Sicily Charles II mainland territories Count of Anjou and MaineReign1246 1285SuccessorCharles IICount of ProvenceReign1246 1285PredecessorBeatriceSuccessorCharles IIPrince of AchaeaReign1278 1285PredecessorWilliamSuccessorCharles IIBornEarly 1226 1227Died7 January 1285 aged 57 59 Foggia Kingdom of NaplesBurialNaples CathedralSpousesBeatrice of Provence m 1246 died 1267 wbr Margaret of Burgundy m 1268 wbr IssueMoreBeatrice Latin Empress Charles II King of Naples Philip Elisabeth Queen of HungaryHouseAnjou SicilyFatherLouis VIII of FranceMotherBlanche of CastileThe youngest son of Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile Charles was destined for a Church career until the early 1240s He acquired Provence and Forcalquier through his marriage to their heiress Beatrice His attempts to restore central authority brought him into conflict with his mother in law Beatrice of Savoy and the nobility Charles received Anjou and Maine from his brother Louis IX of France in appanage He accompanied Louis during the Seventh Crusade to Egypt Shortly after he returned to Provence in 1250 Charles forced three wealthy autonomous cities Marseille Arles and Avignon to acknowledge his suzerainty Charles supported Margaret II Countess of Flanders and Hainaut against her eldest son John in exchange for Hainaut in 1253 Two years later Louis IX persuaded him to renounce the county but compensated him by instructing Margaret to pay him 160 000 marks Charles forced the rebellious Provencal nobles and towns into submission and expanded his suzerainty over a dozen towns and lordships in the Kingdom of Arles In 1263 after years of negotiations he accepted the offer of the Holy See to seize the Kingdom of Sicily from the Hohenstaufens This kingdom included in addition to the island of Sicily southern Italy to well north of Naples and was known as the Regno Pope Urban IV declared a crusade against the incumbent Manfred of Sicily and assisted Charles in raising funds for the military campaign Charles was crowned king in Rome on 5 January 1266 He annihilated Manfred s army and occupied the Regno almost without resistance His victory over Manfred s young nephew Conradin at the Battle of Tagliacozzo in 1268 strengthened his rule In 1270 he took part in the Eighth Crusade organised by Louis IX and forced the Hafsid Caliph of Tunis to pay a yearly tribute to him Charles s victories secured his undisputed leadership among the Papacy s Italian partisans known as Guelphs but his influence on papal elections and his strong military presence in Italy disturbed the popes They tried to channel his ambitions towards other territories and assisted him in acquiring claims to Achaea Jerusalem and Arles through treaties In 1281 Pope Martin IV authorised Charles to launch a crusade against the Byzantine Empire Charles s ships were gathering at Messina ready to begin the campaign when the Sicilian Vespers rebellion broke out on 30 March 1282 which put an end to Charles s rule on the island of Sicily He was able to defend the mainland territories or the Kingdom of Naples with the support of France and the Holy See Charles died while making preparations for an invasion of Sicily Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Provence and Anjou 1 3 Seventh Crusade 2 Wider ambitions 2 1 Conflicts and consolidation 2 2 Conquest of the Regno 2 3 Conradin 3 Mediterranean empire 3 1 Italy 3 2 Eighth Crusade 3 3 Attempts to expand 3 4 Papal elections 3 5 End of the Church union 4 The empire s collapse 4 1 Sicilian Vespers 4 2 War with Aragon 4 3 Death 5 Family 6 Legacy 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditChildhood Edit Charles was the youngest child of King Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile 1 The date of his birth has not survived but he was probably born posthumously in early 1227 note 1 2 3 Charles was Louis only surviving son to be born in the purple after his father s coronation a fact he often emphasised in his youth as the contemporaneous chronicler Matthew Paris noted in his Chronica Majora 2 He was the first Capetian to be named for Charlemagne 2 nbsp Charles depicted alongside his composition Li granz desire et la douce pensee in the Chansonnier du RoiLouis VIII died in November 1226 and his eldest son Louis IX succeeded him The late King willed that his youngest sons were to be prepared for a career in the Roman Catholic Church 4 The details of Charles s tuition are unknown but he received a good education 5 6 He understood the principal Catholic doctrines and could identify errors in Latin texts 7 His passion for poetry medical sciences and law is well documented 5 6 Charles later said that his mother had a strong impact on her children s education 1 in reality Blanche was fully engaged in state administration and could likely spare little time for her youngest children 3 5 Charles lived at the court of a brother Robert I Count of Artois from 1237 5 About four years later he was put into the care of his youngest brother Alphonse Count of Poitiers 5 His participation in his brothers military campaign against Hugh X of Lusignan Count of La Marche in 1242 showed that he was no longer destined for a Church career 5 Provence and Anjou Edit Raymond Berengar V of Provence died in August 1245 8 bequeathing Provence and Forcalquier to his youngest daughter Beatrice allegedly because he had given generous dowries to her three sisters 9 10 The dowries were actually not fully discharged 6 causing two of her sisters Margaret Louis IX s wife and Eleanor the wife of Henry III of England to believe that they had been unlawfully disinherited 10 Their mother Beatrice of Savoy claimed that Raymond Berengar had willed the usufruct of Provence to her 8 10 The Hohenstaufen Emperor Frederick II whom Pope Innocent IV had recently excommunicated for his alleged crimes against the Church Count Raymond VII of Toulouse and other neighbouring rulers proposed themselves or their sons as husbands for the young Countess 11 Her mother put her under the protection of the Holy See 12 Louis IX and Margaret suggested that Beatrice should be given in marriage to Charles 10 To secure the support of France against Frederick II Pope Innocent IV accepted their proposal 10 Charles hurried to Aix en Provence at the head of an army to prevent other suitors from invading Provence and married Beatrice on 31 January 1246 10 13 14 Provence was a part of the Kingdom of Arles and so of the Holy Roman Empire 15 but Charles never swore fealty to the emperor 16 He ordered a survey of the counts rights and revenues outraging both his subjects and his mother in law who regarded this action as an attack against her rights 15 17 Being a younger child destined for a church career Charles had not received an appanage a hereditary county or duchy from his father 18 Louis VIII had willed that his fourth son John should receive Anjou and Maine upon reaching the age of majority but John died in 1232 19 Louis IX knighted Charles at Melun in May 1246 and three months later bestowed Anjou and Maine on him 20 21 Charles rarely visited his two counties and appointed baillies or regents to administer them 22 While Charles was absent from Provence Marseille Arles and Avignon three wealthy cities directly subject to the emperor formed a league and appointed a Provencal nobleman Barral of Baux as the commander of their combined armies 15 Charles s mother in law put the disobedient Provencals under her protection 15 Charles could not deal with the rebels as he was about to join his brother s crusade 15 To pacify his mother in law he acknowledged her right to rule Forcalquier and granted a third of his revenues from Provence to her 15 Seventh Crusade Edit nbsp The crusaders defeat in the Battle of Al Mansurah forcing them to abandon the invasion of Egypt During the withdrawal the Egyptians captured Charles and his two brothers Louis IX of France and Alphonse of Poitiers In December 1244 Louis IX took a vow to lead a crusade 23 Ignoring their mother s strong opposition his three brothers Robert Alphonse and Charles also took the cross 24 Preparations for the crusade lasted for years with the crusaders embarking at Aigues Mortes on 25 August 1248 23 25 After spending several months in Cyprus they invaded Egypt on 5 June 1249 26 They captured Damietta and decided to attack Cairo in November 27 During their advance Louis s biographer Jean de Joinville noted Charles s personal courage which saved dozens of crusaders lives 28 Robert of Artois died fighting against the Egyptians at Al Mansurah His three brothers survived but they had to abandon the campaign While withdrawing from Egypt they fell into captivity on 6 April 1250 28 29 The Egyptians released Louis Charles and Alphonse in exchange for 800 000 bezants and the surrender of Damietta on 6 May 29 During their voyage to Acre 29 Charles outraged Louis by gambling while the king was mourning Robert s death 28 Louis remained in the Holy Land but Charles returned to France in October 1250 15 Wider ambitions EditConflicts and consolidation Edit Charles s officers continued the survey of the counts rights and revenues in Provence provoking a new rebellion during his absence 15 On his return he applied both diplomacy and military force to deal with them 15 The Archbishop of Arles and the Bishop of Digne ceded their secular rights in the two towns to Charles in 1250 30 He received military assistance from his brother Alphonse 31 Arles was the first town to surrender to them in April 1251 32 In May they forced Avignon to acknowledge their joint rule 31 32 A month later Barral of Baux also capitulated 32 Marseilles was the only town to resist for several months but it also sought peace in July 1252 32 Its burghers acknowledged Charles as their lord but retained their self governing bodies 32 nbsp Salt crystals in a puddle in Camargue Salt pans at the delta of the Rhone significantly increased Charles s revenues in Provence Charles s officials continued to ascertain his rights 33 visiting each town and holding public enquiries to obtain information about all claims 33 The count s salt monopoly or gabelle was introduced in the whole county 33 Income from the salt trade made up about 50 of state revenues by the late 1250s 33 Charles abolished local tolls and promoted shipbuilding and grain trade 34 He ordered the issue of new coins called provencaux to enable the use of the local currency in smaller transactions 35 Emperor Frederick II who was also the ruler of Sicily died in 1250 The Kingdom of Sicily also known as the Regno included the island of Sicily and southern Italy nearly as far as Rome Pope Innocent IV claimed that the Regno had reverted to the Holy See 36 The Pope first offered it to Richard of Cornwall but Richard did not want to fight against Frederick s son Conrad IV of Germany 36 Then the Pope proposed to enfeoff Charles with the kingdom 36 Charles sought instructions from Louis IX who forbade him to accept the offer because he regarded Conrad as the lawful ruler 36 After Charles informed the Holy See on 30 October 1253 that he would not accept the Regno the Pope offered it to Edmund of Lancaster 37 Queen Blanche who had administered France during Louis crusade 32 died on 1 December 1252 38 Louis made Alphonse and Charles co regents so that he could remain in the Holy Land 39 Margaret II Countess of Flanders and Hainaut had come into conflict with her son by her first marriage John of Avesnes 40 After her sons by her second marriage were captured in July 1253 she needed foreign assistance to secure their release 41 42 Ignoring Louis IX s 1246 ruling that Hainaut should pass to John she promised the county to Charles 41 He accepted the offer and invaded Hainaut forcing most local noblemen to swear fealty to him 32 41 After his return to France Louis IX insisted that his ruling was to be respected 32 In November 1255 he ordered Charles to restore Hainaut to Margaret but her sons were obliged to swear fealty to Charles 43 Louis also ruled that she was to pay 160 000 marks to Charles over the following 13 years 43 Charles returned to Provence which had again become restive 32 His mother in law continued to support the rebellious Boniface of Castellane and his allies but Louis IX persuaded her to return Forcalquier to Charles and relinquish her claims for a lump sum payment from Charles and a pension from Louis in November 1256 34 44 A coup by Charles s supporters in Marseilles resulted in the surrender of all political powers there to his officials 45 Charles continued to expand his power along the borders of Provence in the next four years 45 He received territories in the Lower Alps from the Dauphin of Vienne 45 Raymond I of Baux Count of Orange ceded the title of regent of the Kingdom of Arles to him 45 The burghers of Cuneo a town strategically located on the routes from Provence to Lombardy sought Charles s protection against Asti in July 1259 46 47 Alba Cherasco Savigliano and other nearby towns acknowledged his rule 48 The rulers of Mondovi Ceva Biandrate and Saluzzo did homage to him 45 Emperor Frederick II s illegitimate son Manfred had been crowned king of Sicily in 1258 49 After the English barons had announced that they opposed a war against Manfred Pope Alexander IV annulled the 1253 grant of Sicily to Edmund of Lancaster 50 Alexander s successor Pope Urban IV was determined to put an end to the Emperor s rule in Italy 51 52 He sent his notary Albert of Parma to Paris to negotiate with Louis IX for Charles to be placed on the Sicilian throne 53 Charles met with the Pope s envoy in early 1262 32 Taking advantage of Charles s absence Boniface of Castellane stirred up a new revolt in Provence 45 54 The burghers of Marseilles expelled Charles s officials but Barral of Baux stopped the spread of the rebellion before Charles s return 55 Charles renounced Ventimiglia in favour of the Republic of Genoa to secure her neutrality 56 He defeated the rebels and forced Castellane into exile 56 The mediation of James I of Aragon brought about a settlement with Marseilles its fortifications were dismantled and the townspeople surrendered their arms but the town retained its autonomy 56 Conquest of the Regno Edit Louis IX decided to support Charles s military campaign in Italy in May 1263 57 Pope Urban IV promised to proclaim a crusade against Manfred while Charles pledged that he would not accept any offices in the Italian towns 58 Manfred staged a coup in Rome but the Guelphs elected Charles senator or the head of the civil government of Rome 58 59 He accepted the office at which a group of cardinals requested that the Pope revoke the agreement with him but the Pope being otherwise defenceless against Manfred could not break with Charles 60 In the spring of 1264 Cardinals Simon of Brie and Guy Foulquois were sent to France to reach a compromise and start raising support for the crusade 53 60 Charles sent troops to Rome to protect the Pope against Manfred s allies 61 At Foulquois request Charles s sister in law Margaret who had not abandoned her claims to her dowry pledged that she would not take actions against Charles during his absence 61 Foulquois also persuaded the French and Provencal prelates to offer financial support for the crusade 59 61 Pope Urban died before the final agreement was concluded 62 Charles made arrangements for his campaign against Sicily during the interregnum he concluded agreements to secure his army s route across Lombardy and had the leaders of the Provencal rebels executed 62 Foulquois was elected pope in February 1265 he soon confirmed Charles s senatorship and urged him to come to Rome 63 Charles agreed that he would hold the Kingdom of Sicily as the popes vassal for an annual tribute of 8 000 ounces of gold 59 He also promised that he would never seek the imperial title 59 He embarked at Marseilles on 10 May and landed at Ostia ten days later 62 He was installed as senator on 21 June and four cardinals invested him with the Regno a week later 62 To finance further military actions he borrowed money from Italian bankers with the Pope s assistance who had authorised him to pledge Church property 64 65 Five cardinals crowned him king of Sicily on 5 January 1266 65 The crusaders from France and Provence reportedly 6 000 fully equipped mounted warriors 600 mounted bowmen and 20 000 foot soldiers arrived in Rome ten days later 64 66 nbsp Battle of Benevento Charles defeats his opponent Manfred King of Sicily 1266 Charles decided to invade southern Italy without delay because he was unable to finance a lengthy campaign 66 67 He left Rome on 20 January 1266 67 He marched towards Naples but changed his strategy after learning of a muster of Manfred s forces near Capua 68 He led his troops across the Apennines towards Benevento 68 Manfred also hurried to the town and reached it before Charles 68 Worried that further delays might endanger his subjects loyalty Manfred attacked Charles s army then in disarray from the crossing of the hills on 26 February 1266 68 In the ensuing battle Manfred s army was defeated and he was killed 68 Resistance throughout the Regno collapsed 66 69 and towns surrendered even before Charles s troops reached them 69 The Saracens of Lucera a Muslim colony established during Frederick II s reign 70 paid homage to him 69 His commander Philip of Montfort took control of the island of Sicily 69 Manfred s widow Helena of Epirus and their children were captured 71 Charles laid claim to her dowry the island of Corfu and the region of Durazzo now Durres in Albania by right of conquest 71 His troops seized Corfu before the end of the year 72 Conradin Edit See also Frederick I Margrave of Meissen Charles was lenient with Manfred s supporters but they did not believe that this conciliatory policy could last 73 They knew that he had promised to return estates to the Guelph lords expelled from the Regno 73 Neither could Charles gain the commoners loyalty partly because he continued enforcing the subventio generalis despite the popes declaring it an illegal charge 74 75 He introduced a ban on the use of foreign currency in large transactions and made a profit of the compulsory exchange of foreign coinage for locally minted currency 76 He also traded in grain spices and sugar through a joint venture with Pisan merchants 77 Pope Clement censured Charles for his methods of state administration describing him as an arrogant and obstinate monarch 78 The consolidation of Charles s power in northern Italy also alarmed Clement 79 To appease the Pope Charles resigned his senatorship in May 1267 78 80 His successors Conrad Monaldeschi and Luca Savelli demanded the re payment of the money that Charles and the Pope had borrowed from the Romans 78 Victories by the Ghibellines the imperial family s supporters forced the Pope to ask Charles to send his troops to Tuscany 81 Charles s troops ousted the Ghibellines from Florence in April 1267 81 After being elected the Podesta ruler of Florence and Lucca for seven years Charles hurried to Tuscany 81 Charles s expansionism along the Papal States borders alarmed Pope Clement and he decided to change the direction of Charles s ambitions 80 The Pope summoned him to Viterbo forcing him to promise that he would abandon all claims to Tuscany in three years 82 He persuaded Charles to conclude agreements with William of Villehardouin Prince of Achaea and the titular Latin Emperor note 2 Baldwin II in late May 84 According to the first treaty Villehardouin acknowledged Charles s suzerainty and made Charles s younger son Philip his heir also stipulating that Charles would inherit Achaea if Philip died childless 85 86 Baldwin confirmed the first agreement and renounced his claims to suzerainty over his vassals in favour of Charles 86 87 Charles pledged that he would assist Baldwin in recapturing Constantinople from the Byzantine emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos in exchange for one third of the conquered lands 88 89 nbsp Charles s sixteen year old enemy Conradin is executed in Naples 1268 Charles returned to Tuscany and laid siege to the fortress of Poggibonsi but it did not fall until the end of November 90 Manfred s staunchest supporters had meanwhile fled to Bavaria to attempt to persuade Conrad IV s 15 year old son Conradin to assert his hereditary right to the Kingdom of Sicily 91 After Conradin accepted their proposal Manfred s former vicar in Sicily Conrad Capece returned to the island and stirred up a revolt 91 At Capece s request Muhammad I al Mustansir the Hafsid caliph of Tunis 92 allowed Manfred s former ally Frederick of Castile to invade Sicily from North Africa 93 Frederick s brother Henry who had been elected senator of Rome also offered support to Conradin 91 94 Henry had been Charles s friend but Charles had failed to repay a loan to him 95 Conradin left Bavaria in September 1267 96 His supporters revolt was spreading from Sicily to Calabria the Saracens of Lucera also rose up 96 97 Pope Clement urged Charles to return to the Regno but he continued his campaign in Tuscany until March 1268 when he met with the Pope 96 In April the Pope made Charles imperial vicar of Tuscany during the vacancy of the empire a move of dubious legality 98 99 Charles marched to southern Italy and laid siege to Lucera but he then had to hurry north to prevent Conradin s invasion of Abruzzo in late August 100 At the Battle of Tagliacozzo on 23 August 1268 it appeared that Conradin had won the day but a sudden charge by Charles s reserve routed Conradin s army 100 The burghers of Potenza Aversa and other towns in Basilicata and Apulia massacred their fellows who had agitated on Conradin s behalf but the Sicilians and the Saracens of Lucera did not surrender 66 101 Charles marched to Rome where he was again elected senator in September 102 He appointed new officials to administer justice and collect state revenues 102 New coins bearing his name were struck 102 During the following decade Rome was ruled by Charles s vicars each appointed for one year 102 Conradin was captured at Torre Astura 103 Most of his retainers were summarily executed but Conradin and his friend Frederick I Margrave of Baden were brought to trial for robbery and treason in Naples 104 They were sentenced to death and beheaded on 29 October 105 Conrad of Antioch was Conradin s only partisan to be released but only after his wife threatened to execute the Guelph lords she held captive in her castle 103 The Ghibelline noblemen of the Regno fled to the court of Peter III of Aragon who had married Manfred s daughter Constance 106 Mediterranean empire EditFurther information Frankokratia Italy Edit Charles s wife Beatrice of Provence had died in July 1267 The widowed Charles married Margaret of Nevers in November 1268 107 She was co heiress to her father Odo the eldest son of Hugh IV Duke of Burgundy 107 Pope Clement died on 29 November 1268 102 The papal vacancy lasted for three years which strengthened Charles s authority in Italy but it also deprived him of the ecclesiastic support that only a pope could provide 108 109 Charles returned to Lucera to personally direct its siege in April 1269 108 The Saracens and the Ghibellines who had escaped to the town 108 resisted until starvation forced them to surrender in August 1269 66 110 Charles sent Philip and Guy of Montfort to Sicily to force the rebels there into submission but they could only capture Augusta 111 Charles made William l Estandart the commander of the army in Sicily in August 1269 111 L Estandart captured Agrigento forcing Frederick of Castile and Frederick Lancia to seek refuge in Tunis 111 After L Estandart s subsequent victory at Sciacca only Capece resisted but he also had to surrender in early 1270 111 Charles s troops forced Siena and Pisa the last towns to resist him in Tuscany to sue for peace in August 1270 112 He granted privileges to the Tuscan merchants and bankers which strengthened their position in the Regno 113 114 His influence was declining in Lombardy because the Lombard towns no longer feared an invasion from Germany after Conradin s death 115 In May 1269 Charles sent Walter of La Roche to represent him in the province but this failed to strengthen his authority 115 116 In October Charles s officials convoked an assembly at Cremona and invited the Lombard towns to attend 115 116 The Lombard towns accepted the invitation but some towns Milan Bologna Alessandria and Tortona only confirmed their alliance with Charles without acknowledging his rule 115 116 Eighth Crusade Edit Main article Eighth Crusade Louis IX never abandoned the idea of the liberation of Jerusalem but he decided to begin his new crusade with a military campaign against Tunis 117 118 According to his confessor Geoffrey of Beaulieu Louis was convinced that al Mustansir of Tunis was ready to convert to Christianity 117 The 13th century historian Saba Malaspina stated that Charles persuaded Louis to attack Tunis because he wanted to secure the payment of the tribute that the rulers of Tunis had paid to the former Sicilian monarchs 119 The French crusaders embarked at Aigues Mortes on 2 July 1270 Charles departed from Naples six days later 120 He spent more than a month in Sicily waiting for his fleet 120 By the time he landed at Tunis on 25 August 120 dysentery and typhoid fever had decimated the French army 118 Louis died the day Charles arrived 118 The crusaders twice defeated Al Mustansir s army forcing him to sue for peace 121 According to the peace treaty signed on 1 November Al Mustansir agreed to fully compensate Louis son and successor Philip III of France and Charles for the expenses of the military campaign and to release his Christian prisoners 121 He also promised to pay a yearly tribute to Charles and to expel Charles s opponents from Tunis 122 The gold from Tunis along with silver from the newly opened mine at Longobucco enabled Charles to mint new coins known as carlini in the Regno 123 Charles and Philip departed Tunis on 10 November 118 A storm dispersed their fleet at Trapani and most of Charles s galleys were lost or damaged 121 Genoese ships returning from the crusade were also sunk or forced to land in Sicily 124 Charles seized the damaged ships and their cargo ignoring all protests from the Ghibelline authorities of Genoa 124 Before leaving Sicily he granted temporary tax concessions to the Sicilians because he realised that the conquest of the island had caused much destruction 125 Attempts to expand Edit Charles accompanied Philip III as far as Viterbo in March 1271 126 Here they failed to convince the cardinals to elect a new pope 127 Charles s brother Alphonse of Poitiers fell ill 128 Charles sent his best doctors to cure him but Alphonse died 128 He claimed the major part of Alphonse s inheritance including the Marquisate of Provence and the County of Poitiers because he was Alphonse s nearest kin 129 After Philip III objected he took the case to the Parlement of Paris 129 In 1284 the court ruled that appanages escheated to the French crown if their rulers died without descendants 130 nbsp Charles s empire in the early 1270sAn earthquake destroyed the walls of Durazzo in the late 1260s or early 1270s 131 132 Charles s troops took possession of the town with the assistance of the leaders of the nearby Albanian communities 133 134 Charles concluded an agreement with the Albanian chiefs promising to protect them and their ancient liberties in February 1272 133 He adopted the title of King of Albania and appointed Gazzo Chinardo as his vicar general 134 135 He also sent his fleet to Achaea to defend the principality against Byzantine attacks 136 Charles hurried to Rome to attend the enthronement of Pope Gregory X on 27 March 1272 137 The new pope was determined to put an end to the conflicts between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines 138 While in Rome Charles met with the Guelph leaders who had been exiled from Genoa 124 After they offered him the office of captain of the people Charles promised military assistance to them 124 In November 1272 Charles commanded his officials to take prisoner all Genoese within his territories except for the Guelphs and to seize their property 139 140 His fleet occupied Ajaccio in Corsica 140 Pope Gregory condemned his aggressive policy but proposed that the Genoese should elect Guelph officials 140 Ignoring the Pope s proposal the Genoese made alliance with Alfonso X of Castile William VII of Montferrat and the Ghibelline towns of Lombardy in October 1273 140 The conflict with Genoa prevented Charles from invading the Byzantine Empire but he continued to forge alliances in the Balkan Peninsula 141 The Bulgarian ruler Konstantin Tih was the first to conclude a treaty with him in 1272 or 1273 135 John I Doukas of Thessaly and Stefan Uros I King of Serbia joined the coalition in 1273 135 However Pope Gregory forbade Charles to attack because he hoped to unify the Orthodox and Catholic churches with the assistance of Emperor Michael VIII 142 143 The renowned theologian Thomas Aquinas died unexpectedly near Naples on 7 March 1274 before departing to attend the Second Council of Lyon 144 According to a popular legend immortalised by Dante Alighieri Charles had him poisoned because he feared that Aquinas would make complaint against him 144 The historian Steven Runciman emphasises that there is no evidence for supposing that the great doctor s death was not natural 144 Southern Italian churchmen at the council accused Charles of tyrannical acts 142 Their report reinforced the Pope s attempt to reach a compromise with Rudolf of Habsburg who had been elected king of Germany by the prince electors of the Holy Roman Empire 145 In June the Pope acknowledged Rudolf as the lawful ruler of both Germany and Italy 145 Charles s sisters in law Margaret and Eleanor approached Rudolf claiming that they had been unlawfully disinherited in favour of Charles s late wife 146 147 Michael VIII s personal envoy announced at the Council of Lyon on 6 July that he had accepted the Catholic creed and papal primacy 89 About three weeks later Pope Gregory again prohibited Charles from launching military actions against the Byzantine Empire 148 The Pope also tried to mediate a truce between Charles and Michael but the latter chose to attack several smaller states in the Balkans including Charles s vassals 142 The Byzantine fleet took control of the maritime routes between Albania and southern Italy in the late 1270s 149 Gregory only allowed Charles to send reinforcements to Achaea 142 The organisation of a new crusade to the Holy Land remained the Pope s principal object 150 He persuaded Charles to start negotiations with Maria of Antioch about purchasing her claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem 151 The High Court of Jerusalem had already rejected her in favour of Hugh III of Cyprus 151 but the Pope had a low opinion of Hugh 152 The war with Genoa and the Lombard towns increasingly occupied Charles s attention 153 He appointed his nephew Robert II of Artois as his deputy in Piedmont in October 1274 but Artois could not prevent Vercelli and Alessandria from joining the Ghibelline League 153 The following summer a Genoese fleet plundered Trapani and the island of Gozo 153 Convinced that only Rudolf I could achieve a compromise between the Guelphs and Ghibellines the Pope urged the Lombard towns to send envoys to him 153 He also urged Charles to renounce Tuscany 145 In the autumn of 1275 the Ghibellines offered to make peace with Charles but he did not accept their terms 153 Early the next year the Ghibellines defeated his troops at Col de Tende forcing them to withdraw to Provence 153 Papal elections Edit nbsp The Palace of the Popes in ViterboPope Gregory X died on 10 January 1276 154 After the hostility he experienced during Gregory s pontificate Charles was determined to secure the election of a pope willing to support his plans 155 Gregory s successor Pope Innocent V had always been Charles s partisan and he rapidly confirmed Charles as senator of Rome and imperial vicar of Tuscany 156 He also mediated a peace treaty between Charles and Genoa 142 which was signed in Rome on 22 June 1276 157 Charles restored the privileges of the Genoese merchants and renounced his conquests and the Genoese acknowledged his rule in Ventimiglia 157 Pope Innocent died on 30 June 1276 157 After the cardinals assembled in the Lateran Palace Charles s troops surrounded it enabling only his allies to communicate with other cardinals and with outsiders 157 On 11 July the cardinals elected Charles s old friend Ottobuono de Fieschi pope but he died on 18 August 158 The cardinals met again this time at Viterbo 159 Although Charles was staying in the nearby Vetralla he could not directly influence the election because his vehement opponent Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini dominated the papal conclave 159 Pope John XXI who was elected on 20 September excommunicated Charles s opponents in Piedmont and prohibited Rudolf from coming to Lombardy but did not forbid the Lombardian Guelph leaders swearing fealty to Rudolf 159 The Pope also confirmed the treaty concluded by Charles and Maria of Antioch on 18 March which transferred her claims to Jerusalem to Charles for 1 000 bezants and a pension of 4 000 livres tournois 159 160 Charles appointed Roger of San Severino to administer the Kingdom of Jerusalem as his bailiff 160 San Severino landed at Acre on 7 June 1277 161 Hugh III s bailiff Balian of Arsuf surrendered the town without resistance 162 Although initially only the Knights Hospitaller and the Venetians acknowledged Charles as the lawful ruler the barons of the realm also paid homage to San Severino in January 1278 after he had threatened to confiscate their estates 160 162 The Mamluks of Egypt had already confined the kingdom to a coastal strip covering 2 600 km2 1 000 square miles 162 and Charles had ordered San Severino to avoid conflicts with Egypt 163 Pope John died on 20 May 1277 164 Charles was ill and could not prevent the election of Giovanni Gaetano Orsini as Pope Nicholas III on 25 November 165 The Pope soon declared that no foreign prince could rule in Rome 166 and reminded Charles that he had been elected senator for ten years 167 Charles swore fealty to the new pope on 24 May 1278 after lengthy negotiations 167 He had to pledge that he would renounce both the senatorship of Rome and the vicariate of Tuscany in four months 167 On the other hand Nicholas III confirmed the excommunication of Charles s enemies in Piedmont and started negotiations with Rudolf to prevent him from making an alliance against Charles with Margaret of Provence and her nephew Edward I of England 168 The negotiations with Rudolf lay behind Nicholas refusal to renew Charles s vicariate in Tuscany to which Rudolf had appointed his own vicar 98 Charles announced his resignation from the senatorship and the vicariate on 30 August 1278 169 He was succeeded by the Pope s brother Matteo Orsini in Rome and by the Pope s nephew Cardinal Latino Malabranca in Tuscany 169 To ensure that Charles fully abandoned his ambitions in central Italy the Pope started negotiations with Rudolf about the restoration of the Kingdom of Arles for Charles s grandson Charles Martel 166 Margaret of Provence sharply opposed the plan but Philip III of France did not stand by his mother 169 After lengthy negotiations in the summer of 1279 Rudolf recognised Charles as the lawful ruler of Provence without demanding his oath of fealty 169 An agreement about Charles Martel s rule in Arles and his marriage to Rudolf s daughter Clemence was signed in May 1280 170 The plan disturbed the rulers of the lands along the Upper Rhone especially Duke Robert II and Count Otto IV of Burgundy 171 Charles had meanwhile inherited the Principality of Achaea from William II of Villehardouin who had died on 1 May 1278 160 172 He appointed the unpopular senechal of Sicily Galeran of Ivry as his baillif in Achaea 173 174 Galeran could not pay his troops who started to pillage the peasants homes 174 John I de la Roche Duke of Athens had to lend money to him to finance their salaries 173 Nicephoros I of Epirus acknowledged Charles s suzerainty on 14 March 1279 to secure his assistance against the Byzantines 172 Nicephoros also ceded three towns Butrinto Sopotos and Panormos to Charles 172 Pope Nicholas died on 22 August 1280 175 Charles sent agents to Viterbo to promote the election of one of his supporters taking advantage of the rift between the late Pope s relatives and other Italian cardinals 175 When a riot broke out in Viterbo after the cardinals had not reached a decision for months Charles s troops took control of the town 175 On 22 February 1281 his staunchest supporter Simon of Brie was elected pope 176 Pope Martin IV dismissed his predecessor s relatives and made Charles the senator of Rome again 177 178 Guido I da Montefeltro rose up against the Pope but Charles s troops under Jean d Eppe stopped the spread of the rebellion at Forli 177 Charles also sent an army to Piedmont but Thomas I Marquess of Saluzzo annihilated it at Borgo San Dalmazzo in May 179 End of the Church union Edit Pope Martin excommunicated Emperor Michael VIII on 10 April 1281 because the Emperor had not imposed the Church union in his empire 160 180 The Pope soon authorised Charles to invade the empire 180 Charles s vicar in Albania Hugh of Sully had already laid siege to the Byzantine fortress of Berat 173 A Byzantine army of relief under Michael Tarchaneiotes and John Synadenos arrived in March 1281 181 Sully was ambushed and captured his army put to flight and the interior of Albania was lost to the Byzantines 182 On 3 July 1281 Charles and his son in law Philip of Courtenay the titular Latin emperor made an alliance with Venice for the restoration of the Roman Empire 183 They decided to start a full scale campaign early the next year 180 Margaret of Provence called Robert and Otto of Burgundy and other lords who held fiefs in the Kingdom of Arles to a meeting at Troyes in the autumn of 1281 184 They were willing to unite their troops to prevent Charles s army from taking possession of the kingdom but Philip III of France strongly opposed his mother s plan and Edward I of England would not promise any assistance to them 184 Charles acknowledged that his wife held the County of Tonnerre and her other inherited estates as a Burgundian fief which appeased Robert of Burgundy 185 Charles s ships started to assemble at Marseilles to sail up the Rhone in the spring of 1282 184 Another fleet was gathering at Messina to start the crusade against the Byzantine Empire 186 The empire s collapse EditSicilian Vespers Edit Main article Sicilian Vespers nbsp Charles s Sicilian seal from the Cabinet des Medailles in Paris Always in need of funds Charles could not cancel the subventio generalis although it was the most unpopular tax in the Regno 187 Instead he granted exemptions to individuals and communities especially to the French and Provencal colonists which increased the burden on those who did not enjoy such privileges 188 The yearly or occasionally more frequent obligatory exchange of the deniers the coins almost exclusively used in local transactions was also an important and unpopular source of revenue for the royal treasury 189 190 Charles took out forced loans whenever he needed immediately a large sum of money for certain arduous and pressing business as he explained in one of his decrees 191 Purveyances the requisitioning of goods increased the unpopularity of Charles s government in southern Italy and Sicily 191 His subjects were also liable to be forced to guard prisoners or lodge soldiers in their homes 191 The restoration of old fortresses bridges and aqueducts and the building of new castles required the employment of craftsmen although most of them were unwilling to participate in such lengthy projects 192 Thousands of people were forced to serve in the army in foreign lands especially after 1279 191 193 Trading in salt was declared a royal monopoly 194 In December 1281 Charles again ordered the collection of the subventio generalis requiring the payment of 150 per cent of the customary amount 187 Charles did not pay attention to the island of Sicily although it had been the centre of resistance against him in 1268 195 He transferred the capital from Palermo to Naples 21 He did not visit the island after 1271 preventing Sicilians from directly informing him of their grievances 195 196 Sicilian noblemen were seldom employed as royal officials although he often appointed their southern Italian peers to represent him in his other realms 195 Furthermore having seized large estates on the island in the late 1260s Charles almost exclusively employed French and Provencal clerics to administer them 125 Popular stories credited John of Procida Manfred of Sicily s former chancellor with staging an international plot against Charles 197 198 Legend says that he visited Constantinople Sicily and Viterbo in disguise in 1279 and 1280 to convince Michael VIII the Sicilian barons and Pope Nicholas III to support a revolt 199 On the other hand Michael VIII would later claim that he was God s instrument in bringing freedom to the Sicilians in his memoirs 200 The Emperor s wealth enabled him to send money to the discontented Sicilian barons 201 Peter III of Aragon decided to lay claim to the Kingdom of Sicily in late 1280 he did not hide his disdain when he met with Charles s son Charles Duke of Salerno in Toulouse in December 1280 199 He began to assemble a fleet ostensibly for another crusade to Tunis 202 Rioting broke out in Sicily after a burgher of Palermo killed a drunken French soldier who had insulted his wife before the Church of the Holy Spirit on Easter Monday 30 March 203 1282 204 205 When the soldier s comrades attacked the murderer the mob turned against them and started to massacre all the French in the town 204 The riot known since the 16th century as the Sicilian Vespers 206 developed into an uprising and most of Charles s officials were killed or forced to flee the island 204 Charles ordered the transfer of soldiers and ships from Achaea to Sicily but could not stop the spread of the revolt to Calabria 207 San Severino also had to return to Italy accompanied by the major part of the garrison at Acre 208 Odo Poilechien who succeeded him in Acre had limited authority 208 The burghers of the major Sicilian towns established communes which sent delegates to Pope Martin asking him to take them under the protection of the Holy See 209 210 Instead of accepting their offer the Pope excommunicated the rebels on 7 May 211 Charles issued an edict on 10 June accusing his officials of having ignored his instructions on good administration but he failed to promise fundamental changes 207 In July he sailed to Sicily and laid siege to Messina 207 War with Aragon Edit Main article War of the Sicilian Vespers Peter III of Aragon s envoy William of Castelnou started negotiations with the rebels leaders in Palermo 212 Realizing that they could not resist without foreign support they acknowledged Peter and Constance as their king and queen 212 They appointed envoys to accompany Castelnou to Collo where the Aragonese fleet was assembling 213 After a short hesitation Peter decided to intervene on the rebels behalf and sailed to Sicily 214 He was declared king of Sicily at Palermo on 4 September 207 Thereafter two realms each ruled by a monarch styled king or queen of Sicily coexisted for more than a century with Charles and his successors ruling in southern Italy known as the Kingdom of Naples while Peter and his descendants ruled the island of Sicily 215 216 In the face of the Aragonese landing Charles was compelled to withdraw from the island but the Aragonese moved swiftly and destroyed part of his army and most of his baggage 217 218 Peter took control of the whole island and sent troops to Calabria but they could not prevent Charles of Salerno from leading an army of 600 French knights to join his father at Reggio Calabria 219 Further French troops arrived under the command of Charles s nephews Robert II of Artois and Peter of Alencon in November 219 In the same month the Pope excommunicated Peter 220 Neither Peter nor Charles could afford to wage a lengthy war 220 221 Charles made an astonishing proposal in late December 1282 challenging Peter to a judicial duel 222 Peter insisted that the war should be continued but agreed that a battle between the two kings each accompanied by 100 knights should decide the possession of Sicily 222 The duel was set to take place at Bordeaux on 1 June 1283 but they did not fix the hour 222 223 Charles appointed Charles of Salerno to administer the Regno during his absence 222 To secure the loyalty of the local lords in Achaea he made one of their peers Guy of Dramelay baillif 206 Pope Martin declared the war against the Sicilians a crusade on 13 January 1283 224 Charles met with the Pope in Viterbo on 9 March but he ignored the Pope s ban on his duel with Peter of Aragon 222 After visiting Provence and Paris in April he left for Bordeaux to meet with Peter 225 The duel turned into a farce the two kings each arriving at different times on the same day declaring a victory over their absent opponent and departing 226 Skirmishes and raids continued to occur in southern Italy 227 Aragonese guerrillas attacked Catona and killed Peter of Alencon in January 1283 the Aragonese seized Reggio Calabria in February and the Sicilian admiral Roger of Lauria annihilated a newly raised Provencal fleet at Malta in April 228 However tensions arose between the Aragonese and the Sicilians and in May 1283 one of the leaders of the anti Angevin rebellion Walter of Caltagirone was executed for his secret correspondence with Charles s agents 229 Pope Martin declared the war against Aragon a crusade and conferred the kingdom upon Philip III of France s son Charles of Valois on 2 February 1284 230 Charles started to raise new troops and a fleet in Provence and instructed his son Charles of Salerno to maintain a defensive posture until his return 231 Roger of Lauria based a small squadron on the island of Nisida to blockade Naples in May 1284 232 Charles of Salerno attempted to destroy the squadron but most of his fleet was captured and he himself was taken prisoner after a short sharp fight on 5 June 232 News of the reverse caused a riot in Naples but the papal legate Gerard of Parma crushed it with the assistance of local noblemen 233 Charles learnt of the disaster when he landed at Gaeta on 6 June 233 He was furious at Charles of Salerno and his disobedience 233 He allegedly stated that Who loses a fool loses nothing referring to his son s capture 233 Charles left Naples for Calabria on 24 June 1284 234 A large army reportedly 10 000 mounted warriors and 40 000 foot soldiers accompanied him as far as Reggio Calabria 234 He laid siege to the town by sea and land in late July 235 His fleet approached the coast of Sicily but his troops could not land in the island 235 After Lauria landed troops near Reggio Calabria Charles had to lift the siege and retreat from Calabria on 3 August 235 Death Edit nbsp Charles s deathCharles went to Brindisi and made preparations for a campaign against Sicily in the new year 236 He dispatched orders to his officials for the collection of the subventio generalis 208 However he fell seriously ill before travelling to Foggia on 30 December 208 He made his last will on 6 January 1285 appointing Robert II of Artois regent for his grandson Charles Martel who was to rule his realms until Charles of Salerno was released 237 238 He died in the morning of 7 January 239 He was buried in a marble sepulchre in Naples but his heart was placed at the Couvent Saint Jacques in Paris 239 240 His corpse was moved to a chapel of the newly built Naples Cathedral in 1296 238 Family EditLouis VIII of FranceBlanche of CastileRamon Berenguer IV of ProvenceBeatrice of SavoyRobert I of ArtoisAlphonse of PoitiersCharles I of AnjouBeatrice of ProvenceEleanor of ProvenceLouis IX of FranceMargaret of ProvenceRobert II of ArtoisPhilip III of FrancePeter I of AlenconEdward I of England nbsp Charles and his first wife Beatrice of ProvenceAll records show that Charles was a faithful husband and a caring father 241 His first wife Beatrice of Provence gave birth to at least six children 107 According to contemporaneous gossips she persuaded Charles to claim the Kingdom of Sicily because she wanted to wear a crown like her sisters 242 Before she died in July 1267 90 she had willed the usufruct of Provence to Charles 31 Blanche the eldest daughter of Charles and Beatrice became the wife of Robert of Bethune in 1265 but she died four years later 243 Beatrice her younger sister married Philip the titular Latin emperor in 1273 244 Charles II Charles s eldest son and namesake was granted the Principality of Salerno in 1272 245 Charles the Lame as he was called and his wife Maria of Hungary had fourteen children which secured the survival of the Capetian House of Anjou 234 Philip Charles and Beatrice s next son was elected king of Sardinia by the local Guelphs in 1269 but without the pope s consent 210 He died childless in 1278 245 Robert Charles s third son died in 1265 245 Elisabeth Charles s youngest daughter was given in marriage to the future Ladislaus IV of Hungary in 1269 but Ladislaus preferred his mistresses to her 193 246 The widowed Charles first proposed himself to Margaret of Hungary 247 However Margaret who had been brought up in a Dominican nunnery did not want to marry 248 According to legend she disfigured herself to prevent the marriage 247 Charles and his second wife Margaret of Nevers had several children but none survived to adulthood 249 Legacy EditThe works of two 13th century historians Bartholomaeus of Neocastro and Saba Malaspina strongly influenced modern views about Charles although they were biased 216 250 The former described Charles as a tyrant to justify the Sicilian Vespers the latter argued for the cancellation of the crusade against Aragon in 1285 251 Charles had continued his imperial predecessors policies in several fields including coinage taxation and the employment of unpopular officials from Amalfi 252 Nevertheless the monarchy underwent a Frenchification or Provencalistion during his reign 253 He donated estates in the Regno to about 700 noblemen from France or Provence 254 He did not adopt the rich ceremonial robes inspired by Byzantine and Islamic art of earlier Sicilian kings but dressed like other western European monarchs 253 or as a simple knight as it was observed by the chronicler Thomas Tuscus who visited Naples in 1267 255 nbsp Charles as count of Provence statue by Louis Joseph Daumas in Hyeres Around 1310 the Florentine historian Giovanni Villani stated that Charles had been the most powerful Christian monarch in the late 1270s 256 Luchetto Gattilusio a Genoese poet compared Charles directly with Charlemagne 256 Both reports demonstrate that Charles was regarded almost as an emperor 256 Among modern historians Runciman says that Charles tried to build an empire in the eastern Mediterraneum 239 Gerard Sivery writes that he wanted to dominate the west and Jean Dunbabin argues that his agglomeration of lands was in the process of forming an empire 257 The historian Hiroshi Takayama concludes that Charles s dominion was too large to control 258 Nevertheless economic links among his realms strengthened during his reign 259 Provencal salt was transported to his other lands grain from the Regno was sold in Achaea Albania Acre and Tuscany and Tuscan merchants settled in Anjou Maine Sicily and Naples 260 His highest ranking officials were transferred from their homelands to represent him in other territories his senechals in Provence were from Anjou French and Provencal noblemen held the highest offices in the Regno and he chose his vicars in Rome from among southern Italian and Provencal nobles 261 Although his empire collapsed before his death his son retained southern Italy and Provence 262 Charles always emphasised his royal rank but did not adopt imperial rhetoric 263 His renowned justiciar Marino de Caramanico developed a new political theory Traditional interpretators of Roman law were convinced that the Holy Roman Emperors had a monopoly on law making In contrast with them Caramanico stated that an emperor could not claim sovereignty over a king and emphasised Charles full competence to issue decrees 264 To promote legal education Charles paid high salaries 20 50 ounces of gold in a year to masters of law at the University of Naples 265 Masters of medicine received similar remunerations and the university became a principal centre of medical science 266 Charles s personal interest in medicine grew during his life and he borrowed Arabic medical texts from the rulers of Tunis to have them translated 267 He employed at least one Jewish scholar Moses of Palermo who could translate texts from Arabic to Latin 268 Muhammad ibn Zakariya al Razi s medical encyclopaedia known as Kitab al Hawi was one of the books translated at Charles s order 267 Charles was also a poet which distinguished him from his Capetian relatives 269 He composed love songs and a jeu parti the latter with Pierre d Angicourt 269 He was requested to judge two poetic competitions in his youth but modern scholars do not esteem his poetry 270 The Provencal troubadours were mostly critical when writing of Charles but French poets were willing to praise him 271 Bertran d Alamanon wrote a poem against the salt tax and Raimon de Tors de Marseilha rebuked Charles for invading the Regno The trouvere Adam de la Halle dedicated an unfinished epic poem entitled The King of Sicily to Charles and Jean de Meun glorified his victories in the Romance of the Rose 272 Dante described Charles who bears a manly nose singing peacefully together with his one time rival Peter III of Aragon in Purgatory 273 Charles also showed interest in architecture 274 He designed a tower in Brindisi but it soon collapsed 275 He ordered the erection of the Castel Nuovo in Naples of which only the palatine chapel survives 275 He is also credited with the introduction of French style glassed windows in southern Italy 276 Notes Edit The historian Peter Herde notes that Charles may have also been identical with the first son of Louis VIII and Blanche born in 1226 Stephen or with the unnamed son who was born in late 1226 If Charles was identical with Stephen he must have changed his name before the late 1230s 2 The Latin Empire of Constantinople was established on the ruins of the Byzantine Empire during the Fourth Crusade in 1204 The Emperors of Nicaea a Byzantine successor state restored Greek rule on most territories lost to the Latin Emperors during the following decades The Latins also lost Constantinople to the Nicaeans in 1261 83 References Edit a b Dunbabin 1998 pp 10 11 a b c d Dunbabin 1998 p 10 a b Runciman 1958 p 71 Dunbabin 1998 pp 3 10 a b c d e f Dunbabin 1998 p 11 a b c Runciman 1958 p 72 Dunbabin 1998 pp 11 12 a b Cox 1974 pp 145 146 Cox 1974 pp 146 151 a b c d e f Dunbabin 1998 p 42 Cox 1974 pp 142 147 Cox 1974 p 147 Cox 1974 p 152 Cox 1974 p 153 a b c d e f g h i Runciman 1958 p 73 Dunbabin 1998 p 44 Cox 1974 p 160 Dunbabin 1998 p 12 Dunbabin 1998 pp 12 13 Dunbabin 1998 p 13 a b Takayama 2004 p 78 Dunbabin 1998 p 30 a b Asbridge 2012 p 580 Asbridge 2012 pp 580 581 Lock 2006 p 10 Lock 2006 pp 177 178 Lock 2006 p 178 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 194 a b c Lock 2006 p 108 Dunbabin 1998 p 50 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 43 a b c d e f g h i j Runciman 1958 p 74 a b c d Dunbabin 1998 p 48 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 47 Dunbabin 1998 p 46 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 57 Runciman 1958 p 58 Lock 2006 p 109 Dunbabin 1998 p 16 Nicholas 1992 pp 156 157 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 37 Nicholas 1992 p 157 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 38 Runciman 1958 pp 74 75 a b c d e f Runciman 1958 p 75 Dunbabin 1998 p 79 Cox 1974 p 285 Cox 1974 p 286 Lock 2006 p 111 Runciman 1958 p 63 Housley 1982 p 17 Takayama 2004 p 76 a b Housley 1982 p 18 Dunbabin 1998 pp 77 78 Runciman 1958 pp 75 76 a b c Runciman 1958 p 76 Dunbabin 1998 p 131 a b Runciman 1958 p 78 a b c d Dunbabin 1998 p 132 a b Runciman 1958 p 79 a b c Runciman 1958 p 81 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 82 Runciman 1958 pp 82 83 a b Runciman 1958 p 87 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 133 a b c d e Housley 1982 p 19 a b Runciman 1958 p 90 a b c d e Runciman 1958 p 91 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 96 Housley 1982 p 16 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 89 Runciman 1958 p 136 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 56 Dunbabin 1998 p 57 Takayama 2004 p 77 Dunbabin 1998 pp 163 164 Dunbabin 1998 p 158 a b c Runciman 1958 p 98 Runciman 1958 pp 98 99 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 134 a b c Runciman 1958 p 100 Runciman 1958 pp 100 101 Lock 1995 pp 35 36 Dunbabin 1998 pp 89 134 Fine 2009 p 168 a b Lock 2006 p 114 Fine 2009 p 170 Dunbabin 1998 pp 94 137 a b Harris 2014 p 202 a b Runciman 1958 p 101 a b c Runciman 1958 p 103 Abulafia 2000 p 105 Runciman 1958 pp 99 103 Dunbabin 1998 p 87 Runciman 1958 p 99 a b c Runciman 1958 p 105 Metcalfe 2009 p 292 a b Partner 1972 pp 270 272 Dunbabin 1998 p 135 a b Runciman 1958 p 109 Runciman 1958 pp 118 124 a b c d e Runciman 1958 p 118 a b Runciman 1958 p 114 Runciman 1958 pp 114 115 Runciman 1958 p 115 Dunbabin 1998 p 99 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 182 a b c Runciman 1958 p 119 Dunbabin 1998 p 136 Metcalfe 2009 p 293 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 124 Runciman 1958 p 120 Dunbabin 1998 p 84 Runciman 1958 pp 120 121 a b c d Dunbabin 1998 p 80 a b c Runciman 1958 p 122 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 196 a b c d Lock 2006 p 183 Dunbabin 1998 p 195 a b c Runciman 1958 p 142 a b c Runciman 1958 p 143 Runciman 1958 pp 143 144 Dunbabin 1998 pp 157 161 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 150 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 106 Runciman 1958 p 162 Runciman 1958 p 145 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 17 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 39 Dunbabin 1998 pp 39 40 Nicol 1984 pp 14 15 Fine 2009 p 184 a b Nicol 1984 p 15 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 90 a b c Fine 2009 p 185 Dunbabin 1998 p 91 Runciman 1958 p 146 Runciman 1958 pp 150 151 Dunbabin 1998 p 82 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 156 Runciman 1958 pp 156 158 a b c d e Dunbabin 1998 p 137 Fine 2009 p 186 a b c Runciman 1958 p 161 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 138 Runciman 1958 p 167 Barany 2010 p 62 Runciman 1958 p 166 Nicol 1984 p 18 Runciman 1958 pp 168 169 a b Lock 2006 p 118 Runciman 1958 p 169 a b c d e f Runciman 1958 p 168 Runciman 1958 p 170 Dunbabin 1998 pp 138 139 Runciman 1958 pp 171 172 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 172 Runciman 1958 pp 172 173 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 173 a b c d e Lock 2006 p 119 Runciman 1958 p 178 a b c Runciman 1958 p 179 Dunbabin 1998 p 97 Runciman 1958 pp 181 182 Runciman 1958 p 182 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 139 a b c Runciman 1958 p 183 Runciman 1958 pp 183 184 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 185 Runciman 1958 p 186 Runciman 1958 pp 192 193 a b c Nicol 1984 p 23 a b c Lock 1995 p 93 a b Runciman 1958 p 196 a b c Runciman 1958 p 190 Runciman 1958 pp 190 191 a b Runciman 1958 p 191 Dunbabin 1998 p 141 Runciman 1958 p 192 a b c Fine 2009 p 193 Nicol 1984 p 26 Nicol 1984 p 27 Runciman 1958 p 194 a b c Runciman 1958 p 193 Dunbabin 1998 p 36 Runciman 1958 p 212 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 102 Dunbabin 1998 p 103 Abulafia 2000 p 103 Dunbabin 1998 pp 103 104 a b c d Dunbabin 1998 p 104 Dunbabin 1998 p 161 a b Abulafia 2000 p 109 Dunbabin 1998 p 157 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 105 Abulafia 2000 p 108 Dunbabin 1998 p 101 Abulafia 2000 p 106 a b Runciman 1958 p 206 Harris 2014 p 203 Runciman 1958 p 207 Runciman 1958 p 210 Lock 2006 p 120 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 107 Runciman 1958 pp 214 215 a b Lock 1995 p 94 a b c d Dunbabin 1998 p 109 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 254 Runciman 1958 p 220 a b Abulafia 2000 p 107 Runciman 1958 p 221 a b Runciman 1958 p 226 Runciman 1958 pp 226 227 Runciman 1958 p 227 Takayama 2004 p 80 a b Abulafia 2000 p 97 Dunbabin 1998 pp 109 110 Runciman 1958 pp 229 230 a b Runciman 1958 p 232 a b Barany 2010 p 67 Runciman 1958 pp 235 236 a b c d e Runciman 1958 p 236 Barany 2010 p 68 Housley 1982 p 20 Runciman 1958 pp 236 237 Runciman 1958 p 241 Runciman 1958 p 238 Runciman 1958 pp 238 244 Runciman 1958 p 245 Runciman 1958 p 243 Runciman 1958 p 246 a b Runciman 1958 p 247 a b c d Runciman 1958 p 248 a b c Runciman 1958 p 249 a b c Runciman 1958 p 250 Runciman 1958 p 253 Runciman 1958 pp 254 255 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 232 a b c Runciman 1958 p 255 Dunbabin 1998 pp 9 232 Dunbabin 1998 p 183 Dunbabin 1998 pp 181 182 Dunbabin 1998 p 184 Dunbabin 1998 pp 183 184 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 185 Engel 2001 pp 107 109 a b Runciman 1958 p 155 Engel 2001 p 97 Dunbabin 1998 p 186 Dunbabin 1998 pp 70 233 234 Dunbabin 1998 p 70 Abulafia 2000 pp 96 97 102 103 a b Abulafia 2000 p 104 Dunbabin 1998 p 59 Dunbabin 1998 pp 21 22 a b c Dunbabin 1998 p 116 Dunbabin 1998 pp 114 116 Takayama 2004 p 79 Dunbabin 1998 p 119 Dunbabin 1998 pp 119 120 Dunbabin 1998 p 121 Dunbabin 1998 p 125 Dunbabin 1998 pp 114 115 Dunbabin 1998 pp 219 220 Dunbabin 1998 p 215 Dunbabin 1998 pp 215 217 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 222 Patai 1977 p 156 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 203 Dunbabin 1998 pp 203 204 Dunbabin 1998 pp 205 207 Dunbabin 1998 pp 205 208 Hollander 2004 p 159 Dunbabin 1998 pp 210 211 a b Dunbabin 1998 p 211 Dunbabin 1998 p 212 Sources EditAbulafia David 2000 Charles of Anjou reassessed Journal of Medieval History 26 1 93 114 doi 10 1016 s0304 4181 99 00012 3 ISSN 0304 4181 S2CID 159990935 Asbridge Thomas 2012 The Crusades The War for the Holy Land Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 84983 688 3 Barany Attila 2010 The English relations of Charles II of Sicily and Maria of Hungary In Korde Zoltan Petrovics Istvan eds Diplomacy in the Countries of the Angevin Dynasty in the Thirteenth Fourteenth Centuries Accademia d Ungheria in Roma pp 57 77 ISBN 978 963 315 046 7 Cox Eugene L 1974 The Eagles of Savoy The House of Savoy in Thirteenth Century Europe Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05216 8 Dunbabin Jean 1998 Charles I of Anjou Power Kingship and State Making in Thirteenth Century Europe Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 78093 767 0 Engel Pal 2001 The Realm of St Stephen A History of Medieval Hungary 895 1526 I B Tauris Publishers ISBN 978 1 86064 061 2 Fine John V A 2009 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest The University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08260 5 Harris Jonathan 2014 Byzantium and the Crusades Longman ISBN 978 0 582 25370 4 Hollander Robert 2004 Notes In Hollander Jean Hollander Robert eds Purgatorio Dante A verse translation First Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 385 49700 8 Housley Norman 1982 The Italian Crusades The Papal Angevin Alliance and the Crusades against Christian Lay Powers 1254 1343 Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 821925 5 Lock Peter 1995 The Franks in the Aegean 1204 1500 Longman ISBN 978 0 582 05139 3 Lock Peter 2006 The Routledge Companion to the Crusades Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 39312 6 Metcalfe Alex 2009 The Muslims of Medieval Italy Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2007 4 Nicol Donald M 1984 The Despotate of Epirus 1267 1479 A Contribution to the History of Greece in the Middle Ages Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 13089 9 Nicholas David 1992 Medieval Flanders Longman ISBN 978 0 582 01678 1 Partner Peter 1972 The Lands of St Peter The Papal State in the Middle Ages and the Early Renaissance University of California Press ISBN 0 520 02181 9 Patai Raphael 1977 The Jewish Mind Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 2651 0 Runciman Steven 1958 The Sicilian Vespers A History of the Mediterranean World in the Later Thirteenth Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 60474 2 Takayama Hiroshi 2004 Law and monarchy in the south In Abulafia David ed Italy in the Central Middle Ages 1000 1300 Oxford University Press pp 58 81 ISBN 978 0 19 924704 2 Further reading EditFischer Klaus Dietrich 1982 Moses of Palermo Translator from the Arabic at the Court of Charles of Anjou Histoires des Sciences Medicales 17 Special 17 278 281 ISSN 0440 8888 Holloway Julia Bolton 1993 Twice Told Tales Brunetto Latino and Dante Aligheri Peter Lang Inc ISBN 978 0 82041 954 1 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles I of Anjou Charles of Anjou New International Encyclopedia 1905 Charles I of AnjouCapetian House of AnjouCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 1226 1227 Died 7 January 1285Regnal titlesPreceded byManfred King of Sicily1266 1282 1285 Succeeded byPeter Ias king on Sicily from 1282Succeeded byCharles IIas king in Southern Italy from 1285New title King of Albania1272 1285 Succeeded byCharles IIPreceded byWilliam II Prince of Achaea1278 1285Preceded byBeatrice Count of Provence1246 1285VacantTitle last held byJohn Count of Anjou and Maine1246 1285Preceded byBeatrice I Count of Forcalquier1246 1248 Succeeded byBeatrice IIPreceded byBeatrice II Count of Forcalquier1256 1285 Succeeded byCharles IIPreceded by Senator of Rome1263 1266 Succeeded byConrad MonaldeschiLuca SavelliPreceded byHenry of Castile Senator of Rome1268 1278 Succeeded byMatteo OrsiniPreceded byMatteo Orsini Senator of Rome1281 1285 Succeeded by Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles I of Anjou amp oldid 1172192876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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