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Kingdom of Sicily

The Kingdom of Sicily (Latin: Regnum Siciliae; Italian: Regno di Sicilia; Sicilian: Regnu di Sicilia[4][5][6][7]) was a state that existed in the south of the Italian Peninsula and for a time the region of Ifriqiya from its founding by Roger II of Sicily in 1130 until 1816. It was a successor state of the County of Sicily, which had been founded in 1071 during the Norman conquest of the southern peninsula. The island was divided into three regions: Val di Mazara, Val Demone and Val di Noto.

Kingdom of Sicily
1130–1816
Flag
(from 14th century)
Coat of arms
(from 14th century)
Motto: Animus Tuus Dominus "ANTUDO"
The Kingdom of Sicily in 1190.
StatusPersonal unions with:
CapitalPalermo
Coordinates: 40°21′16″N 16°06′27″E / 40.3544°N 16.1076°E / 40.3544; 16.1076
Official languages
Religion
GovernmentFeudal monarchy
King 
• 1130–1154
Roger II (first)
• 1266–1282
Charles I of Anjou
• 1759–1816
Ferdinand III (last)
LegislatureParliament
History 
1130
1282
1816
Today part ofItaly Malta

In 1282, a revolt against Angevin rule, known as the Sicilian Vespers, threw off Charles of Anjou's rule of the island of Sicily. The Angevins managed to maintain control in the mainland part of the kingdom, which became a separate entity also styled Kingdom of Sicily, although it is commonly referred to as the Kingdom of Naples, after its capital. From 1282 to 1409 the island was ruled by the Spanish Crown of Aragon as an independent kingdom, then it was added permanently to the Crown.[8]

After 1302, the island kingdom was sometimes called the Kingdom of Trinacria.[9] In 1816, the island Kingdom of Sicily merged with the Kingdom of Naples to form the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. In 1861, the Two Sicilies were invaded and conquered by an Expedition Corps (Expedition of the Thousand) led by Giuseppe Garibaldi, who later transferred them to the House of Savoy, to form, after a referendum, with the Kingdom of Sardinia itself (i.e. Savoy, Piedmont and Sardinia) and several northern city-states and duchies, the new Kingdom of Italy.

History

Norman conquest

By the 11th century, mainland southern Lombard and Byzantine powers were hiring Norman mercenaries, who were descendants of Vikings in Northern France; it was the Normans under Roger I who conquered Sicily, taking it away from the Amazigh Muslims. After taking Apulia and Calabria, Roger occupied Messina with an army of 700 knights. In 1068, Roger I of Sicily and his men defeated the Muslims at Misilmeri but the most crucial battle was the siege of Palermo, which led to Sicily being completely under Norman control by 1091.[10]

Norman kingdom

 
Roger II, the first King of Sicily.
 
The royal mantle.
 
Scribes of and for the various populations of the Kingdom of Sicily: Greeks, Saracens, Latins.

The Norman Kingdom was created on Christmas Day, 1130, by Roger II of Sicily, with the agreement of Pope Innocent II. Roger II united the lands he had inherited from his father, Roger I of Sicily.[11] These areas included the Maltese Archipelago, which was conquered from the Arabs of the Emirates of Sicily; the Duchy of Apulia and the County of Sicily, which had belonged to his cousin William II, Duke of Apulia, until William's death in 1127; and the other Norman vassals. Roger declared his support for the Antipope Anacletus II, who enthroned him as King of Sicily on Christmas Day 1130.[12]

In 1136, the rival of Anacletus, Pope Innocent II, convinced Lothair III, Holy Roman Emperor to attack the Kingdom of Sicily with help from the Byzantine Emperor John II Comnenus. Two main armies, one led by Lothair, the other by Duke of Bavaria Henry the Proud, invaded Sicily. On the river Tronto, William of Loritello surrendered to Lothair and opened the gates of Termoli to him.[13] This was followed by Count Hugh II of Molise. The two armies were united at Bari, from where in 1137 they continued their campaign. Roger offered to give Apulia as a fief to the Empire, which Lothair refused after being pressured by Innocent. At the same period, the army of Lothair revolted.[12][14]

Lothair, who had hoped for the complete conquest of Sicily, then gave Capua and Apulia from the Kingdom of Sicily to Roger's enemies. Innocent protested, claiming that Apulia fell under papal claims. Lothair turned north, but died while crossing the Alps on 4 December 1137. At the Second Council of the Lateran in April 1139, Innocent excommunicated Roger for maintaining a schismatic attitude. On 22 March 1139, at Galluccio, Roger's son Roger III, Duke of Apulia, ambushed the papal troops with a thousand knights and captured the pope.[14] On 25 March 1139, Innocent was forced to acknowledge the kingship and possessions of Roger with the Treaty of Mignano.[12][14]

Roger spent most of the decade, beginning with his coronation and ending with the Assizes of Ariano, enacting a series of laws with which Roger intended to centralise the government. He also fended off several invasions and quelled rebellions by his premier vassals: Grimoald of Bari, Robert II of Capua, Ranulf of Alife, Sergius VII of Naples and others.

It was through his admiral George of Antioch that Roger then conquered the littoral of Ifriqiya from the Zirids, taking the unofficial title "King of Africa" and marking the foundation of the Norman Kingdom of Africa. At the same time, Roger's fleet also attacked the Byzantine Empire, making Sicily a leading maritime power in the Mediterranean Sea for almost a century.[12]

Roger's son and successor was William I of Sicily, known as "William the Bad", though his nickname derived primarily from his lack of popularity with the chroniclers, who supported the baronial revolts which William suppressed. In the mid-1150s, William lost the majority of his African possessions to a series of revolts by local North African lords. Then, in 1160, the final Norman African stronghold of Mahdia was taken by Almohads. His reign ended in peace in 1166. His elder son Roger had been killed in previous revolts, and his son, William II, was a minor. Until the end of the boy's regency by his mother Margaret of Navarre in 1172, turmoil in the kingdom almost brought the ruling family down. The reign of William II is remembered as two decades of almost continual peace and prosperity. For this more than anything, he is nicknamed "the Good". However, he had no issue, which led to a succession crisis: his aunt Constance, the sole heir to the throne as the daughter of Roger II, was long confined in a monastery as a nun, with her marriage beyond consideration due to a prediction that "her marriage would destroy Sicily". Nevertheless, in 1184, she was betrothed to Henry, the eldest son of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I and the future Emperor Henry VI. William named Constance and Henry the heirs to the throne and had the noblemen swear oath, but the officials did not want to be ruled by a German, so the death of William in 1189 led the kingdom to decline.[13]

With the support of the officials, Tancred of Lecce seized the throne. In the same year, he had to contend with the revolt of his distant cousin Roger of Andria, a former contender who supported Henry and Constance but was tricked to execution in 1190, as well as the invasion of Henry, King of Germany and Holy Roman Emperor since 1191, who invaded on behalf of his wife. Henry had to retreat after his attack failed, with Empress Constance captured and only released under the pressure of the Pope. Tancred died in 1194, and Constance and Henry prevailed: the kingdom fell in 1194 to the House of Hohenstaufen. William III of Sicily, the young son of Tancred, was deposed, and Henry and Constance were crowned as king and queen. Through Constance, the Hauteville blood was passed to Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor.[13]

Hohenstaufen kingdom

 
Imperial troops storming Salerno in 1194
 
Triumph march of Henry VI into Palermo
 
Woodcut illustration of Constance of Sicily, her husband Emperor Henry VI and her son Frederick II

In 1197, the accession of Frederick, a child who would also become Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II in 1220, greatly affected the immediate future of Sicily. For a land so used to centralised royal authority, the king's young age caused a serious power vacuum. His uncle Philip of Swabia moved to secure Frederick's inheritance by appointing Markward von Anweiler, margrave of Ancona, regent in 1198. Meanwhile, Pope Innocent III had reasserted papal authority in Sicily, but recognised Frederick's rights. The pope was to see papal power decrease steadily over the next decade and was unsure about which side to back at many junctures.[15]

The Hohenstaufen's grip on power, however, was not secure. Walter III of Brienne had married the daughter of Tancred of Sicily. She was sister and heiress of the deposed King William III of Sicily. In 1201, William decided to claim the kingdom. In 1202, an army led by the chancellor Walter of Palearia and Dipold of Vohburg was defeated by Walter III of Brienne. Markward was killed, and Frederick fell under the control of William of Capparone, an ally of the Pisans. Dipold continued the war against Walter on the mainland until the claimant's death in 1205. Dipold finally wrested Frederick from Capparone in 1206 and gave him over to the guardianship of the chancellor, Walter of Palearia. Walter and Dipold then had a falling out, and the latter captured the royal palace, where he was besieged and captured by Walter in 1207. After a decade, the wars over the regency and the throne itself had ceased.[13]

The reform of the laws began with the Assizes of Ariano in 1140 by Roger II. Frederick continued the reformation with the Assizes of Capua (1220) and the promulgation of the Constitutions of Melfi (1231, also known as Liber Augustalis), a collection of laws for his realm that was remarkable for its time.[15] The Constitutions of Melfi were created in order to establish a centralized state. For example, citizens were not allowed to carry weapons or wear armour in public unless they were under royal command.[15] As a result, rebellions were reduced. The Constitutions made the Kingdom of Sicily an absolute monarchy, the first centralized state in Europe to emerge from feudalism; it also set a precedent for the primacy of written law.[14] With relatively small modifications, the Liber Augustalis remained the basis of Sicilian law until 1819.[16] During this period, he also built the Castel del Monte, and in 1224, he founded the University of Naples, now called Università Federico II.[17]

Frederick had to beat off a papal invasion of Sicily in the War of the Keys (1228–1230).[18] After his death, the kingdom was ruled by Conrad IV of Germany. The next legitimate heir was Conrad II, who was too young at the period to rule. Manfred of Sicily, the illegitimate son of Frederick, took power and ruled the kingdom for fifteen years while other Hohenstaufen heirs were ruling various areas in Germany.[15] After long wars against the Papal States, the Kingdom managed to defend its possessions, but the Papacy declared the Kingdom escheated because of disloyalty of the Hohenstaufen.[19] Under this pretext, he came to an agreement with Louis IX, King of France. Louis's brother, Charles of Anjou, would become king of Sicily. In exchange, Charles recognized the overlordship of the Pope in the Kingdom, paid a portion of the papal debt, and agreed to pay annual tribute to the Papal States.[19][20] The Hohenstaufen rule in Sicily ended after the 1266 Angevin invasion and the death of Conradin, the last male heir of Hohenstaufen, in 1268.[20]

Angevin Sicily

In 1266, conflict between the Hohenstaufen house and the Papacy led to Sicily's conquest by Charles I, Duke of Anjou. With the usurpation of the Sicilian throne from Conradin by Manfred of Sicily in 1258, the relationship between the Papacy and the Hohenstaufen had changed again. Instead of the boy Conradin, safely sequestered across the Alps, the Papacy now faced an able military leader who had greatly supported the Ghibelline cause at the battle of Montaperti in 1260. Accordingly, when negotiations broke down with Manfred in 1262, Pope Urban IV again took up the scheme of disseising the Hohenstaufen from the kingdom, and offered the crown to Charles of Anjou again. With Papal and Guelph support Charles descended into Italy and defeated Manfred at the battle of Benevento in 1266 and in 1268 Conradin at the battle of Taglicozzo.

Opposition to French officialdom and taxation combined with incitement of rebellion by agents from the Crown of Aragon and the Byzantine Empire led to the successful insurrection of the Sicilian Vespers followed by the invitation and intervention by king Peter III of Aragon in 1282. The resulting War of the Sicilian Vespers lasted until the Peace of Caltabellotta in 1302, dividing the old Kingdom of Sicily in two. The island of Sicily, called the "Kingdom of Sicily beyond the Lighthouse" or the Kingdom of Trinacria, went to Frederick III of the House of Barcelona, who had been ruling it. The peninsular territories (the Mezzogiorno), contemporaneously called the Kingdom of Sicily but called the Kingdom of Naples by modern scholarship, went to Charles II of the house of Anjou, who had likewise been ruling it. Thus, the peace was formal recognition of an uneasy status quo.[20] The division in the kingdom became permanent in 1372, with the Treaty of Villeneuve. Though the king of Spain was able to seize both crowns in the 16th century, the administrations of the two halves of the Kingdom of Sicily remained separated until 1816, when they were reunited in the Kingdom of Two Sicilies.

The insular Kingdom of Sicily under the Crown of Aragon and Spain

 
Martin I, King of Sicily in 1390–1409.

Sicily was ruled as an independent kingdom by relatives or cadet branch of the house of Aragon until 1409 and thence as part of the Crown of Aragon. The Kingdom of Naples was ruled by the Angevin ruler René of Anjou until the two thrones were reunited by Alfonso V of Aragon, after the successful siege of Naples and the defeat of René on 6 June 1443.[21] Alfonso of Aragon divided the two kingdoms during his rule. He gave the rule of Naples to his illegitimate son Ferdinand I of Naples, who ruled from 1458 to 1494, and the rest of the Crown of Aragon and Sicily to his brother John II of Aragon. From 1494 to 1503, successive kings of France Charles VIII and Louis XII, who were heirs of Angevins, tried to conquer Naples (see Italian Wars) but failed. Eventually, the Kingdom of Naples was reunited with the Crown of Aragon. The titles were held by the Aragonese kings of the Crown of Aragon and Kingdom of Spain until the end of the Spanish branch of the House of Habsburg in 1700.

Malta under the Knights

 
Philippe de Villiers de l'Isle Adam takes possession of the island of Malta, 26 October 1530 by René Théodore Berthon.

In 1530, in an effort to protect Rome from Ottoman invasion from the south, Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, as Charles I of Spain, gave the Islands of Malta and Gozo to the Knights Hospitaller in perpetual fiefdom, in exchange for an annual fee of two Maltese falcons, which they were to send on All Souls' Day to the Viceroy of Sicily.[22] The Maltese Islands had formed part of the county, and later the Kingdom of Sicily, since 1091. The feudal relationship between Malta and the Kingdom of Sicily was continued throughout the rule of the Knights, until the French occupation of Malta in 1798.[22]

The occupation was not recognized, and Malta was de jure part of the Kingdom of Sicily from 1798 to 1814. After the Maltese rebellion against the French, Malta was under British protection until it became a British crown colony in 1813. This was officially recognized by the Treaty of Paris of 1814, which marked the end of Malta's 700-year relationship with Sicily.

After the War of the Spanish Succession (Savoy and Habsburg rule)

From 1713 until 1720, the Kingdom of Sicily was ruled briefly by the House of Savoy, which had received it by the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht, which brought an end to the War of the Spanish Succession. The kingdom was a reward to the Savoyards, who were thus elevated to royal rank. The new king, Victor Amadeus II, travelled to Sicily in 1713 and remained a year before returning to his mainland capital, Turin, where his son the Prince of Piedmont had been acting as regent. In Spain, the results of the war had not been truly accepted, and the War of the Quadruple Alliance was the result. Sicily was occupied by Spain in 1718. When it became evident that Savoy had not the strength to defend as remote a country as Sicily, Austria stepped in and exchanged its Kingdom of Sardinia for Sicily. Victor Amadeus protested this exchange, Sicily being a rich country of over one million inhabitants and Sardinia a poor country of a few hundred thousand, but he was unable to resist his "allies". Spain was finally defeated in 1720, and the Treaty of the Hague ratified the changeover. Sicily belonged to the Austrian Habsburgs, who already ruled Naples.[23] Victor Amadeus, for his part, continued to protest for three years, and only in 1723 decided to recognize the exchange and desist from using the Sicilian royal title and its subsidiary titles (such as King of Cyprus and Jerusalem).

The two kingdoms under the House of Bourbon of Spain

In 1734, in the aftermath of the War of the Polish Succession, Naples was reconquered by King Philip V of Spain, a Bourbon, who installed his younger son, Duke Charles of Parma, as King Charles VII of Naples, starting a cadet branch of the house of Bourbon. Adding to his Neapolitan possessions, he became also King of Sicily with the name of Charles V of Sicily the next year after Austria gave up Sicily and her pretensions to Naples in exchange for the Duchy of Parma and the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. This change of hands opened up a period of economic flourishing and social and political reforms, with many public projects and cultural initiatives directly started or inspired by the king. He remained King of Sicily until his accession to the Spanish throne as Charles III of Spain in 1759, the treaties with Austria forbidding a union of the Italian domains with the Crown of Spain.

Charles III abdicated in favour of Ferdinand, his third son, who acceded to the thrones with the names of Ferdinand IV of Naples and III of Sicily. Still a minor, Ferdinand grew up amongst pleasures and leisure while the real power was safely held by Bernardo Tanucci, the president of the regency council. During this period most of the reform process initiated by Charles came to a halt, with the king mostly absent or uninterested in the matters of state and the political helm steered by Queen Maria Carolina and prime ministers Tanucci (until 1777) and John Acton. The latter tried to distance Naples and Sicily from the influence of Spain and Austria and to place them nearer to Great Britain, then represented by ambassador William Hamilton. This is the period of the Grand Tour, and Sicily with its many natural and historical attractions is visited by a score of intellectuals from all over Europe that on one side bring to the island the winds of the Enlightenment, and on the other side will spread the fame of its beauty in the continent.

In 1799, Napoleon conquered Naples, forcing king Ferdinand and the court to flee to Sicily under the protection of the British fleet under the command of Horatio Nelson. While Naples was formed into the Parthenopean Republic with French support and later again a kingdom under French protection and influence, Sicily became the British base of operation in the Mediterranean in the long struggle against Napoleon. Under British guidance, especially from Lord William Bentinck who was commander of British troops in Sicily, Sicily tried to modernise its constitutional apparatus, forcing the King to ratify a Constitution modeled after the British system.[23] The island was under British occupation from 1806 to 1814.[24] The main feature of the new system was that a two-chamber parliament was formed (instead of the three of the existing one). The formation of the parliament brought the end of feudalism in the Kingdom.

After the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, Ferdinand repealed all reforms and even erased the Kingdom of Sicily from the map (after a history of 800 years) by creating the brand-new Kingdom of the Two Sicilies with Naples as its capital in 1816. The people of Sicily rebelled to this violation of its centuries-old statutes (which every king, including Ferdinand, had sworn to respect) but were defeated by the Neapolitan and Austrian forces in 1820. In 1848–49, another Sicilian revolution of independence occurred, which was put down by the new king Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies, who was nicknamed Re Bomba after his 5-day bombardment of Messina. The increased hostility of the peoples and the elites of Sicily towards Naples and the Bourbon dynasty created a very unstable equilibrium, kept under control only by an increasingly oppressive police-state, political executions and exiles.

Unification with the Kingdom of Italy

 
The beginning of the Expedition of the Thousand at Quarto.

On 4 April 1860, the latest revolt against the Bourbon regime broke out. Giuseppe Garibaldi, funded and directed by the Piedmontese prime minister Cavour, assisted the revolt with his forces, launching the so-called Expedition of the Thousand. He arrived at Marsala on 11 May 1860 with ca. 1,000 Redshirts. Garibaldi announced that he was assuming dictatorship over Sicily in the name of King Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia. On 15 May, the Redshirts fought the Battle of Calatafimi and within weeks Palermo was freed from the troops of general Lanza, who even being superior in number, inexplicably retreated. Francis II of the Two Sicilies tried to regain control of the Kingdom. On 25 June 1860, he restored the constitution of the Kingdom, adopted the Italian tricolour as the national flag, and promised special institutions for the Kingdom.[25]

On 21 October 1860, a plebiscite regarding the unification with Italy was conducted. The outcome of the referendum was 432,053 (99%) in favour and only 667 in opposition to the unification. With three separate armies still fighting within the Kingdom, this outcome was far from an accurate depiction of public opinion. Substantial inconsistencies as well as the absence of secret ballot further complicate the interpretation of the referendum, which Denis Mack Smith describes as being "obviously rigged".[26][27][28][29][30][31][32] Most Sicilians viewed the unification as acceptance of the House of Savoy, to which belonged Victor Emmanuel II, the first King of Italy.[23]

Society

During the Norman Kingdom of Sicily, the local communities maintained their privileges. The rulers of the Hohenstaufen kingdom replaced the local nobility with lords from northern Italy, leading to clashes and rebellions against the new nobility in many cities and rural communities. These revolts resulted in the destruction of many agrarian areas and the rise of middle class nationalism, which eventually led to urban dwellers becoming allies of the Aragonese.[15] This situation was continued during the short rule of the Angevin until their overthrowing during the Sicilian Vespers. The Angevin began feudalising the country, increasing the power of the nobility by granting them jurisdiction over high justice.[33]

At the same period, the feudalisation of the Kingdom of Sicily was intensified, through the enforcement of feudal bonds and relations among its subjects. The 1669 Etna eruption destroyed Catania. In 1693, 5% of the Kingdom's population was killed because of earthquakes. During that period, there were also plague outbreaks. The 17th and 18th century were an era of decline of the Kingdom. Corruption was prevalent among the upper and middle classes of the society. Widespread corruption and mistreatment of the lower classes by the feudal lords led to the creation of groups of brigands, attacking the nobility and destroying their fiefs.[23] These groups, which were self-named "mafia", were the foundation of the modern Sicilian Mafia. The escalation of revolts against the monarchy eventually led to the unification with Italy.[34]

Demographics

During the reign of Frederick II (1198-1250), the kingdom had a population of about 2.5 million.[35] During the Hohenstaufen era, the Kingdom had 3 towns with a population of over 20,000 each.[36] After the loss of the northern provinces in 1282 during the Sicilian Vespers and several natural disasters like the 1669 Etna eruption, the population of the Kingdom of Sicily was reduced.[23] In 1803, the population of the Kingdom was 1,656,000.[37] The main cities of the Kingdom at that time were Palermo, Catania, Messina, Modica, Syracuse.[37]

Population of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1803[37]
Division Population
Val di Mazzara 643,000
Val di Demona 521,000
Val di Noto 459,000
Lipari Islands 18,000
Aegadian Islands 12,000
Pantelleria Island 3,000
Total Population 1,656,000
Population of the main cities of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1803[37]
City Population
Palermo 120,000
Catania 40,000
Messina 36,000
Modica 23,500
Syracuse 17,000

Economy

The high fertility of the land led the Norman kings to bring settlers from neighbouring regions or to resettle farmers to areas where cultivation of land was needed. This led to an increase in agricultural production. The main sources of wealth for the Kingdom of Sicily in that time were its maritime cities, most important of which were the ancient port cities of Naples and its nearby counterpart Amalfi, from which local products were exported. The main export was durum wheat, with other exports including nuts, timber, oil, bacon, cheese, furs, hides, hemp and cloth.[13] Grain and other dry products were measured in salme, which was equivalent to 275.08 litres in the western part of the Kingdom, and 300.3 litres in the eastern part. The salma was divided in 16 tumoli. One tumolo was equivalent to 17,193 litres. Weight was measured in cantari. One cantaro was equivalent to 79.35 kilograms (174.9 lb) and was divided in one hundred rottoli. Cloth was measured in canne. One canna was 2.06 meters long.[9] By the end of the 12th century, Messina had become one of the leading commercial cities of the kingdom.

Under the Kingdom, Sicily's products went to many different lands. Among these were Genoa, Pisa, the Byzantine Empire, and Egypt. Over the course of the 12th century, Sicily became an important source of raw materials for north Italian cities such as Genoa. As the centuries went on, however, this economic relationship became less advantageous to Sicily, and some modern scholars see the relationship as definitely exploitative.[38] Furthermore, many scholars believe that Sicily went into decline in the Late Middle Ages, though they do not agree about when this decline occurred. Clifford Backman argues that it is a mistake to see the economic history of Sicily in terms of victimization, and contends that the decline really began in the second part of the reign of Frederick III, in contrast to earlier scholars who believed that Sicilian decline had set in earlier.[39] Where earlier scholars saw late medieval Sicily in continuous decline, Stephen Epstein argued that Sicilian society experienced something of a revival in the 15th century.[40]

Various treaties with Genoa secured and strengthened the commercial power of Sicily.[13]

The feudalisation of society during the Angevin rule reduced royal wealth and treasury. The dependence of the Angevin on north Italian commerce and financing by Florentine bankers were the main factors which led to the decline of the Kingdom's economy.[33] The continuation of the economic decline combined with the increased population and urbanization led to decrease of agrarian production.

In 1800, one-third of the available crops was cultivated with obsolete methods, exacerbating the problem. In the later period of Spanish rule, the trading system was also inefficient compared with previous periods because of high taxes on exports and monopolising corporations which had total control of prices.[41]

Coinage

 
Example of a Messinese augustale.

The Norman kings in the 12th century used the tari, which had been used in Sicily from 913 as the basic coin. One tari weighed about one gram and was 16+13 carats of gold. The Arab dinar was worth four tari, and the Byzantine solidus six tari.[13] In the kingdom, one onza was equivalent to thirty tari or five florins. One tari was worth twenty grani. One grana was equivalent to six denari. After 1140, the circulation of the copper coin romesina stopped and it was replaced by the follaris. Twenty-four follari were equivalent to one Byzantine miliaresion.

After defeating the Tunisians in 1231, king Frederick II minted the augustalis. It was minted in 21+12 carats and weighed 5.28 grams.[42] In 1490, the triumphi were minted in Sicily. They were equivalent to the Venetian ducat. One triumpho was worth 11+12 aquilae. One aquila was worth twenty grani. In transactions tari and pichuli were mainly used.[9]

Religion

During the Norman reign, several different religious communities coexisted in the Kingdom of Sicily. These included Latin Catholics (Roman Catholics), Greek-rite Catholics (Greek Catholic), Muslims and Jews. Although local religious practices were not interrupted, the fact that Latin Catholics were in power tended to favor Latin Catholicism (Roman Catholicism). Bishops of the Greek rite were obliged to recognize the claims of the Latin Church in Sicily, while Muslim communities were no longer ruled by local emirs. Greek-speaking Christians, Latin Christians, and Muslims interacted on a regular basis, and were involved in each other's lives, economically, linguistically, and culturally. Some intermarried. Catholics living in an Arabic-speaking area might adopt Arabic or even Muslim names.[43] In many cities, each religious community had its own administrative and judicial order. In Palermo, Muslims were allowed to publicly call for prayer in mosques, and their legal issues were settled by qadis, judges who ruled in accordance with Islamic law.[13] Since the 12th century, the Kingdom of Sicily recognized Christianity as the state religion.[44]

After the establishment of Hohenstaufen authority, Latin- and Greek-speaking Catholics maintained their privileges, but the Muslim population was increasingly oppressed. The settlements of Italians brought from northern Italy (who wanted Muslim property for their own) led many Muslim communities to revolt or resettle in mountainous areas of Sicily.[45] These revolts resulted in some acts of violence, and the eventual deportation of Muslims, which began under Frederick II. Eventually, the government removed the entire Muslim population to Lucera in Apulia and Girifalco in Calabria, where they paid taxes and served as agricultural laborers, craftsmen, and crossbowmen for the benefit of the king. The colony at Lucera was finally disbanded in 1300 under Charles II of Naples, and many of its inhabitants sold into slavery.[45] The Jewish community was expelled after the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition from 1493 to 1513 in Sicily. The remaining Jews were gradually assimilated, and most of them converted to Roman Catholicism.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Mallette 2011, p. 5.
  2. ^ Mallette 2011, p. 2,4,5.
  3. ^ Gwynne-Timothy, John (1970). People and power in an age of upheavel, 1919 to the present. University of California Press. p. 41. ISBN 9789733203162.
  4. ^ Documenti per servire alla storia di Sicilia: Diplomatica, Volumes 14-16 (in Italian). U. Manfredi Editori. 1891-01-01. p. XXXII.
  5. ^ Vio, Michele Del (1706-01-01). Felicis, et fidelissimæ urbis Panormitanæ selecta aliquot ad civitatis decus, et commodum spectantia privilegia per instrumenta varia Siciliæ ... opera don Michaelis De Vio . (in Italian). in palatio senatorio per Dominicum Cortese. p. 314.
  6. ^ Gregorio, Rosario (1833-01-01). Considerazioni sopra la storia di Sicilia dai tempi normanni sino al presenti, Volume 3 (in Italian). dalla Reale Stamperia. p. 303.
  7. ^ Mongitore, Antonino; Mongitore, Francesco Serio e (1749-01-01). Parlamenti generali del regno di Sicilia dall' anno 1446 sino al 1748: con le memorie istoriche dell' antico, e moderno uso del parlamento appresso varie nazioni, ed in particolare della sua origine in Sicilia, e del modo di celebrarsi, Volume 1 (in Italian). Presso P. Bentivenga. p. 109.
  8. ^ "Italy to c. 1380 - The southern kingdoms". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-03-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ a b c d N. Zeldes (2003). The Former Jews of This Kingdom: Sicilian Converts After the Expulsion, 1492–1516. BRILL. pp. 5, 69, 296–97. ISBN 90-04-12898-0.
  10. ^ . In Italy Magazine. 7 October 2007. Archived from the original on 27 July 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  11. ^ Douglas, David. The Norman Fate, 1100-1154. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.
  12. ^ a b c d Houben, Hubert (2002). Roger II of Sicily: A Ruler between East and West. Cambridge University Press. pp. 7, 148. ISBN 0-521-65573-0.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Donald Matthew (1992). The Norman Kingdom of Sicily. Cambridge University Press. pp. 4–6, 71–74, 86–92, 285, 286, 304. ISBN 0-521-26911-3.
  14. ^ a b c d Malcolm Barber (2004). The Two Cities: Medieval Europe, 1050–1320. Routledge. p. 211. ISBN 0-415-17414-7.
  15. ^ a b c d e David Nicolle (2002). Italian Medieval Armies 1000–1300. Osprey Publishing. pp. 5–10, 18–19, 34. ISBN 1-84176-322-5.
  16. ^ James Ross Sweeney, Stanley Chodorow (1989). Popes, Teachers, and Canon Law in the Middle Ages. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-2264-7.
  17. ^ Hunt Janin (2008). The University in Medieval Life, 1179–1499. McFarland. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-7864-3462-6.
  18. ^ Loud, G. A. (2016) [2011]. "The Papal 'Crusade' against Frederick II in 1228–1230". In Michel Balard (ed.). La Papauté et les croisades / The Papacy and the Crusades. Routledge. pp. 91–103.
  19. ^ a b Katherine Fisher (2004). Magna Carta. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 53, 84–85. ISBN 0-313-32590-1.
  20. ^ a b c Steve Runciman (1958). The Sicilian Vespers: A History of the Mediterranean World in the Later Thirteenth Century. Cambridge University Press. pp. 32–34, 209, 274. ISBN 0-521-43774-1.
  21. ^ Allan W. Atlas (1985). Music at the Aragonese court of Naples. Cambridge University Press. p. 1. ISBN 0-521-24828-0.
  22. ^ a b Carolyn Bain (2004). Malta & Gozo. Lonely Planet. p. 23. ISBN 1-74059-178-X.
  23. ^ a b c d e Danforth Prince (2007). Frommer's Sicily. Frommer's. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-470-10056-1.
  24. ^ W. H. Clements, "The Defences of Sicily, 1806-1815," Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, Autumn 2009, Vol. 87 Issue 351, pp 256-272
  25. ^ Alfonso Scirocco (2007). Garibaldi: Citizen of the World. Princeton University Press. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-691-11540-5.
  26. ^ Smith, Denis Mack (1992-03-01). Italy and Its Monarchy. Yale University Press. p. 17. ISBN 0300051328.
  27. ^ Smith, Denis Mack (1985-04-18). Cavour and Garibaldi 1860: A Study in Political Conflict. Cambridge University Press. p. 389. ISBN 9780521316378.
  28. ^ Finkelstein, Monte S. (1998-01-01). Separatism, the Allies and the Mafia: The Struggle for Sicilian Independence, 1943-1948. Lehigh University Press. p. 14. ISBN 9780934223515.
  29. ^ Hess, Henner (1998-01-01). Mafia & Mafiosi: Origin, Power and Myth. NYU Press. p. 155. ISBN 9781863331432.
  30. ^ Lukacs, John (1968-01-01). Historical Consciousness: The Remembered Past. Transaction Publishers. p. 116. ISBN 9781412825146.
  31. ^ Ziblatt, Daniel (2006-01-01). Structuring the State: The Formation of Italy and Germany and the Puzzle of Federalism. Princeton University Press. p. 102. ISBN 0691121672.
  32. ^ Noble, Thomas F. X. (1994). Western Civilization. Houghton Mifflin. p. 895.
  33. ^ a b Samantha Kelly (2003). The New Solomon: Robert of Naples (1309–1343) and Fourteenth-Century Kingship. BRILL. p. 134. ISBN 90-04-12945-6.
  34. ^ Lucy Riall (1998). Sicily and the Unification of Italy: Liberal Policy and Local Power, 1859–1866. Oxford University Press. p. 206. ISBN 0-19-820680-1.
  35. ^ Kenneth M. Setton (1985). A History of the Crusades, Volume V: The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 313. ISBN 0-299-09144-9.
  36. ^ Perry Anderson (1984). Lineages of the Absolutist State. Verso. p. 146. ISBN 0-86091-710-X.
  37. ^ a b c d Jedidiah Morse. A Compendious and Complete System of Modern Geography: or, A View of the Present State of the World. Thomas and Andrews. p. 503.
  38. ^ Henri Bresc (in Un monde mediteranéen) claims that Sicily was relegated to being an agricultural satellite for wealthier northern Italian cities, and sees the Sicilian people as an early proletariat
  39. ^ Backman, The Decline and Fall of Medieval Sicily, 1995.
  40. ^ Epstein, An Island for Itself: Economic Development and Social Change in Late Medieval Sicily, (2003).
  41. ^ Desmond Gregory (1988). Sicily: The Insecure Base: A History of the British Occupation of Sicily, 1806–1815. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-8386-3306-4.
  42. ^ Peter L. Bernstein (2000). The power of gold: the history of an obsession. John Wiley and Sons. p. 90. ISBN 0-471-25210-7.
  43. ^ Metcalfe, Alex. Muslims and Christians in Norman Sicily: Arabic Speakers and the End of Islam (2003).
  44. ^ Gwynne-Timothy, John (1970). People and power in an age of upheavel, 1919 to the present. University of California Press. p. 41. ISBN 9789733203162.
  45. ^ a b The best discussion of the fate of Sicilian Muslims can be found in Julie Taylor, Muslims in Medieval Italy: The Colony at Lucera (2003), but is also discussed in Alex Metcalfe, The Muslims of Medieval Italy (2009).

Sources

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  • Alio, Jacqueline. Queens of Sicily 1061-1266: The Queens Consort, Regent and Regnant of the Norman-Swabian Era of the Kingdom of Sicily, Trinacria, 2018.
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  • Aubé, Pierre. « Roger II de Sicile. Un Normand en Méditerranée », Paris 2001, rééd. Perrin, 2006.
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  • Norwich, John Julius. Sicily: An Island at the Crossroads of History, 2015.
  • Runciman, Steven. The Sicilian Vespers: A History of the Mediterranean World in the Late 13th Century, Cambridge University Press, 1958.

kingdom, sicily, this, article, about, norman, kingdom, founded, 1130, successors, based, island, sicily, mainland, south, italian, kingdom, after, 1282, kingdom, naples, ancient, greek, kingdom, agathocles, syracuse, latin, regnum, siciliae, italian, regno, s. This article is about the Norman kingdom founded in 1130 and its successors based on the island of Sicily For the mainland south Italian kingdom after 1282 see Kingdom of Naples For the ancient Greek kingdom see Agathocles of Syracuse The Kingdom of Sicily Latin Regnum Siciliae Italian Regno di Sicilia Sicilian Regnu di Sicilia 4 5 6 7 was a state that existed in the south of the Italian Peninsula and for a time the region of Ifriqiya from its founding by Roger II of Sicily in 1130 until 1816 It was a successor state of the County of Sicily which had been founded in 1071 during the Norman conquest of the southern peninsula The island was divided into three regions Val di Mazara Val Demone and Val di Noto Kingdom of SicilyRegnum Siciliae Latin Regnu di Sicilia Sicilian Regno di Sicilia Italian 1130 1816Flag from 14th century Coat of arms from 14th century Motto Animus Tuus Dominus ANTUDO The Kingdom of Sicily in 1190 StatusPersonal unions with Holy Roman Empire 1194 1254 Kingdom of Jerusalem 1225 1228 Crown of Aragon 1412 1516 Kingdom of Spain 1516 1713 Duchy of Savoy 1713 1720 Habsburg monarchy 1720 1735 Kingdom of Naples 1735 1806 CapitalPalermoCoordinates 40 21 16 N 16 06 27 E 40 3544 N 16 1076 E 40 3544 16 1076Official languagesItalianSicilianLatin bureaucracy 1 Greek bureaucracy 1 Arabic numismatics court poetry bureaucracy 2 ReligionRoman Catholicism official 3 Minority religions Italo Greek Catholic Judaism and IslamGovernmentFeudal monarchyKing 1130 1154Roger II first 1266 1282Charles I of Anjou 1759 1816Ferdinand III last LegislatureParliamentHistory Coronation of Roger1130 Sicilian Vespers1282 Two Sicilies1816Preceded by Succeeded byCounty of SicilyCounty of Apulia and CalabriaDuchy of AmalfiZirid dynasty Kingdom of the Two SiciliesToday part ofItaly MaltaIn 1282 a revolt against Angevin rule known as the Sicilian Vespers threw off Charles of Anjou s rule of the island of Sicily The Angevins managed to maintain control in the mainland part of the kingdom which became a separate entity also styled Kingdom of Sicily although it is commonly referred to as the Kingdom of Naples after its capital From 1282 to 1409 the island was ruled by the Spanish Crown of Aragon as an independent kingdom then it was added permanently to the Crown 8 After 1302 the island kingdom was sometimes called the Kingdom of Trinacria 9 In 1816 the island Kingdom of Sicily merged with the Kingdom of Naples to form the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies In 1861 the Two Sicilies were invaded and conquered by an Expedition Corps Expedition of the Thousand led by Giuseppe Garibaldi who later transferred them to the House of Savoy to form after a referendum with the Kingdom of Sardinia itself i e Savoy Piedmont and Sardinia and several northern city states and duchies the new Kingdom of Italy Contents 1 History 1 1 Norman conquest 1 2 Norman kingdom 1 3 Hohenstaufen kingdom 1 4 Angevin Sicily 1 5 The insular Kingdom of Sicily under the Crown of Aragon and Spain 1 6 Malta under the Knights 1 7 After the War of the Spanish Succession Savoy and Habsburg rule 1 8 The two kingdoms under the House of Bourbon of Spain 1 9 Unification with the Kingdom of Italy 2 Society 3 Demographics 4 Economy 5 Coinage 6 Religion 7 See also 8 References 9 SourcesHistory EditNorman conquest Edit Main articles Emirate of Sicily and Norman conquest of southern Italy By the 11th century mainland southern Lombard and Byzantine powers were hiring Norman mercenaries who were descendants of Vikings in Northern France it was the Normans under Roger I who conquered Sicily taking it away from the Amazigh Muslims After taking Apulia and Calabria Roger occupied Messina with an army of 700 knights In 1068 Roger I of Sicily and his men defeated the Muslims at Misilmeri but the most crucial battle was the siege of Palermo which led to Sicily being completely under Norman control by 1091 10 Norman kingdom Edit See also Kingdom of Africa Roger II the first King of Sicily The royal mantle Scribes of and for the various populations of the Kingdom of Sicily Greeks Saracens Latins The Norman Kingdom was created on Christmas Day 1130 by Roger II of Sicily with the agreement of Pope Innocent II Roger II united the lands he had inherited from his father Roger I of Sicily 11 These areas included the Maltese Archipelago which was conquered from the Arabs of the Emirates of Sicily the Duchy of Apulia and the County of Sicily which had belonged to his cousin William II Duke of Apulia until William s death in 1127 and the other Norman vassals Roger declared his support for the Antipope Anacletus II who enthroned him as King of Sicily on Christmas Day 1130 12 In 1136 the rival of Anacletus Pope Innocent II convinced Lothair III Holy Roman Emperor to attack the Kingdom of Sicily with help from the Byzantine Emperor John II Comnenus Two main armies one led by Lothair the other by Duke of Bavaria Henry the Proud invaded Sicily On the river Tronto William of Loritello surrendered to Lothair and opened the gates of Termoli to him 13 This was followed by Count Hugh II of Molise The two armies were united at Bari from where in 1137 they continued their campaign Roger offered to give Apulia as a fief to the Empire which Lothair refused after being pressured by Innocent At the same period the army of Lothair revolted 12 14 Lothair who had hoped for the complete conquest of Sicily then gave Capua and Apulia from the Kingdom of Sicily to Roger s enemies Innocent protested claiming that Apulia fell under papal claims Lothair turned north but died while crossing the Alps on 4 December 1137 At the Second Council of the Lateran in April 1139 Innocent excommunicated Roger for maintaining a schismatic attitude On 22 March 1139 at Galluccio Roger s son Roger III Duke of Apulia ambushed the papal troops with a thousand knights and captured the pope 14 On 25 March 1139 Innocent was forced to acknowledge the kingship and possessions of Roger with the Treaty of Mignano 12 14 Roger spent most of the decade beginning with his coronation and ending with the Assizes of Ariano enacting a series of laws with which Roger intended to centralise the government He also fended off several invasions and quelled rebellions by his premier vassals Grimoald of Bari Robert II of Capua Ranulf of Alife Sergius VII of Naples and others It was through his admiral George of Antioch that Roger then conquered the littoral of Ifriqiya from the Zirids taking the unofficial title King of Africa and marking the foundation of the Norman Kingdom of Africa At the same time Roger s fleet also attacked the Byzantine Empire making Sicily a leading maritime power in the Mediterranean Sea for almost a century 12 Roger s son and successor was William I of Sicily known as William the Bad though his nickname derived primarily from his lack of popularity with the chroniclers who supported the baronial revolts which William suppressed In the mid 1150s William lost the majority of his African possessions to a series of revolts by local North African lords Then in 1160 the final Norman African stronghold of Mahdia was taken by Almohads His reign ended in peace in 1166 His elder son Roger had been killed in previous revolts and his son William II was a minor Until the end of the boy s regency by his mother Margaret of Navarre in 1172 turmoil in the kingdom almost brought the ruling family down The reign of William II is remembered as two decades of almost continual peace and prosperity For this more than anything he is nicknamed the Good However he had no issue which led to a succession crisis his aunt Constance the sole heir to the throne as the daughter of Roger II was long confined in a monastery as a nun with her marriage beyond consideration due to a prediction that her marriage would destroy Sicily Nevertheless in 1184 she was betrothed to Henry the eldest son of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I and the future Emperor Henry VI William named Constance and Henry the heirs to the throne and had the noblemen swear oath but the officials did not want to be ruled by a German so the death of William in 1189 led the kingdom to decline 13 With the support of the officials Tancred of Lecce seized the throne In the same year he had to contend with the revolt of his distant cousin Roger of Andria a former contender who supported Henry and Constance but was tricked to execution in 1190 as well as the invasion of Henry King of Germany and Holy Roman Emperor since 1191 who invaded on behalf of his wife Henry had to retreat after his attack failed with Empress Constance captured and only released under the pressure of the Pope Tancred died in 1194 and Constance and Henry prevailed the kingdom fell in 1194 to the House of Hohenstaufen William III of Sicily the young son of Tancred was deposed and Henry and Constance were crowned as king and queen Through Constance the Hauteville blood was passed to Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor 13 Hohenstaufen kingdom Edit Imperial troops storming Salerno in 1194 Triumph march of Henry VI into Palermo Woodcut illustration of Constance of Sicily her husband Emperor Henry VI and her son Frederick II In 1197 the accession of Frederick a child who would also become Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II in 1220 greatly affected the immediate future of Sicily For a land so used to centralised royal authority the king s young age caused a serious power vacuum His uncle Philip of Swabia moved to secure Frederick s inheritance by appointing Markward von Anweiler margrave of Ancona regent in 1198 Meanwhile Pope Innocent III had reasserted papal authority in Sicily but recognised Frederick s rights The pope was to see papal power decrease steadily over the next decade and was unsure about which side to back at many junctures 15 The Hohenstaufen s grip on power however was not secure Walter III of Brienne had married the daughter of Tancred of Sicily She was sister and heiress of the deposed King William III of Sicily In 1201 William decided to claim the kingdom In 1202 an army led by the chancellor Walter of Palearia and Dipold of Vohburg was defeated by Walter III of Brienne Markward was killed and Frederick fell under the control of William of Capparone an ally of the Pisans Dipold continued the war against Walter on the mainland until the claimant s death in 1205 Dipold finally wrested Frederick from Capparone in 1206 and gave him over to the guardianship of the chancellor Walter of Palearia Walter and Dipold then had a falling out and the latter captured the royal palace where he was besieged and captured by Walter in 1207 After a decade the wars over the regency and the throne itself had ceased 13 The reform of the laws began with the Assizes of Ariano in 1140 by Roger II Frederick continued the reformation with the Assizes of Capua 1220 and the promulgation of the Constitutions of Melfi 1231 also known as Liber Augustalis a collection of laws for his realm that was remarkable for its time 15 The Constitutions of Melfi were created in order to establish a centralized state For example citizens were not allowed to carry weapons or wear armour in public unless they were under royal command 15 As a result rebellions were reduced The Constitutions made the Kingdom of Sicily an absolute monarchy the first centralized state in Europe to emerge from feudalism it also set a precedent for the primacy of written law 14 With relatively small modifications the Liber Augustalis remained the basis of Sicilian law until 1819 16 During this period he also built the Castel del Monte and in 1224 he founded the University of Naples now called Universita Federico II 17 Frederick had to beat off a papal invasion of Sicily in the War of the Keys 1228 1230 18 After his death the kingdom was ruled by Conrad IV of Germany The next legitimate heir was Conrad II who was too young at the period to rule Manfred of Sicily the illegitimate son of Frederick took power and ruled the kingdom for fifteen years while other Hohenstaufen heirs were ruling various areas in Germany 15 After long wars against the Papal States the Kingdom managed to defend its possessions but the Papacy declared the Kingdom escheated because of disloyalty of the Hohenstaufen 19 Under this pretext he came to an agreement with Louis IX King of France Louis s brother Charles of Anjou would become king of Sicily In exchange Charles recognized the overlordship of the Pope in the Kingdom paid a portion of the papal debt and agreed to pay annual tribute to the Papal States 19 20 The Hohenstaufen rule in Sicily ended after the 1266 Angevin invasion and the death of Conradin the last male heir of Hohenstaufen in 1268 20 Angevin Sicily Edit Church of the Holy Spirit in Palermo In 1266 conflict between the Hohenstaufen house and the Papacy led to Sicily s conquest by Charles I Duke of Anjou With the usurpation of the Sicilian throne from Conradin by Manfred of Sicily in 1258 the relationship between the Papacy and the Hohenstaufen had changed again Instead of the boy Conradin safely sequestered across the Alps the Papacy now faced an able military leader who had greatly supported the Ghibelline cause at the battle of Montaperti in 1260 Accordingly when negotiations broke down with Manfred in 1262 Pope Urban IV again took up the scheme of disseising the Hohenstaufen from the kingdom and offered the crown to Charles of Anjou again With Papal and Guelph support Charles descended into Italy and defeated Manfred at the battle of Benevento in 1266 and in 1268 Conradin at the battle of Taglicozzo Opposition to French officialdom and taxation combined with incitement of rebellion by agents from the Crown of Aragon and the Byzantine Empire led to the successful insurrection of the Sicilian Vespers followed by the invitation and intervention by king Peter III of Aragon in 1282 The resulting War of the Sicilian Vespers lasted until the Peace of Caltabellotta in 1302 dividing the old Kingdom of Sicily in two The island of Sicily called the Kingdom of Sicily beyond the Lighthouse or the Kingdom of Trinacria went to Frederick III of the House of Barcelona who had been ruling it The peninsular territories the Mezzogiorno contemporaneously called the Kingdom of Sicily but called the Kingdom of Naples by modern scholarship went to Charles II of the house of Anjou who had likewise been ruling it Thus the peace was formal recognition of an uneasy status quo 20 The division in the kingdom became permanent in 1372 with the Treaty of Villeneuve Though the king of Spain was able to seize both crowns in the 16th century the administrations of the two halves of the Kingdom of Sicily remained separated until 1816 when they were reunited in the Kingdom of Two Sicilies The insular Kingdom of Sicily under the Crown of Aragon and Spain Edit Martin I King of Sicily in 1390 1409 See also Kingdom of Naples Sicily was ruled as an independent kingdom by relatives or cadet branch of the house of Aragon until 1409 and thence as part of the Crown of Aragon The Kingdom of Naples was ruled by the Angevin ruler Rene of Anjou until the two thrones were reunited by Alfonso V of Aragon after the successful siege of Naples and the defeat of Rene on 6 June 1443 21 Alfonso of Aragon divided the two kingdoms during his rule He gave the rule of Naples to his illegitimate son Ferdinand I of Naples who ruled from 1458 to 1494 and the rest of the Crown of Aragon and Sicily to his brother John II of Aragon From 1494 to 1503 successive kings of France Charles VIII and Louis XII who were heirs of Angevins tried to conquer Naples see Italian Wars but failed Eventually the Kingdom of Naples was reunited with the Crown of Aragon The titles were held by the Aragonese kings of the Crown of Aragon and Kingdom of Spain until the end of the Spanish branch of the House of Habsburg in 1700 Malta under the Knights Edit Main article Hospitaller Malta Philippe de Villiers de l Isle Adam takes possession of the island of Malta 26 October 1530 by Rene Theodore Berthon In 1530 in an effort to protect Rome from Ottoman invasion from the south Charles V Holy Roman Emperor as Charles I of Spain gave the Islands of Malta and Gozo to the Knights Hospitaller in perpetual fiefdom in exchange for an annual fee of two Maltese falcons which they were to send on All Souls Day to the Viceroy of Sicily 22 The Maltese Islands had formed part of the county and later the Kingdom of Sicily since 1091 The feudal relationship between Malta and the Kingdom of Sicily was continued throughout the rule of the Knights until the French occupation of Malta in 1798 22 The occupation was not recognized and Malta was de jure part of the Kingdom of Sicily from 1798 to 1814 After the Maltese rebellion against the French Malta was under British protection until it became a British crown colony in 1813 This was officially recognized by the Treaty of Paris of 1814 which marked the end of Malta s 700 year relationship with Sicily After the War of the Spanish Succession Savoy and Habsburg rule Edit Main article Kingdom of Sicily under Savoy From 1713 until 1720 the Kingdom of Sicily was ruled briefly by the House of Savoy which had received it by the terms of the Treaty of Utrecht which brought an end to the War of the Spanish Succession The kingdom was a reward to the Savoyards who were thus elevated to royal rank The new king Victor Amadeus II travelled to Sicily in 1713 and remained a year before returning to his mainland capital Turin where his son the Prince of Piedmont had been acting as regent In Spain the results of the war had not been truly accepted and the War of the Quadruple Alliance was the result Sicily was occupied by Spain in 1718 When it became evident that Savoy had not the strength to defend as remote a country as Sicily Austria stepped in and exchanged its Kingdom of Sardinia for Sicily Victor Amadeus protested this exchange Sicily being a rich country of over one million inhabitants and Sardinia a poor country of a few hundred thousand but he was unable to resist his allies Spain was finally defeated in 1720 and the Treaty of the Hague ratified the changeover Sicily belonged to the Austrian Habsburgs who already ruled Naples 23 Victor Amadeus for his part continued to protest for three years and only in 1723 decided to recognize the exchange and desist from using the Sicilian royal title and its subsidiary titles such as King of Cyprus and Jerusalem The two kingdoms under the House of Bourbon of Spain Edit Royal Palace of Ficuzza La Palazzina Cinese di Palermo built by Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies In 1734 in the aftermath of the War of the Polish Succession Naples was reconquered by King Philip V of Spain a Bourbon who installed his younger son Duke Charles of Parma as King Charles VII of Naples starting a cadet branch of the house of Bourbon Adding to his Neapolitan possessions he became also King of Sicily with the name of Charles V of Sicily the next year after Austria gave up Sicily and her pretensions to Naples in exchange for the Duchy of Parma and the Grand Duchy of Tuscany This change of hands opened up a period of economic flourishing and social and political reforms with many public projects and cultural initiatives directly started or inspired by the king He remained King of Sicily until his accession to the Spanish throne as Charles III of Spain in 1759 the treaties with Austria forbidding a union of the Italian domains with the Crown of Spain Charles III abdicated in favour of Ferdinand his third son who acceded to the thrones with the names of Ferdinand IV of Naples and III of Sicily Still a minor Ferdinand grew up amongst pleasures and leisure while the real power was safely held by Bernardo Tanucci the president of the regency council During this period most of the reform process initiated by Charles came to a halt with the king mostly absent or uninterested in the matters of state and the political helm steered by Queen Maria Carolina and prime ministers Tanucci until 1777 and John Acton The latter tried to distance Naples and Sicily from the influence of Spain and Austria and to place them nearer to Great Britain then represented by ambassador William Hamilton This is the period of the Grand Tour and Sicily with its many natural and historical attractions is visited by a score of intellectuals from all over Europe that on one side bring to the island the winds of the Enlightenment and on the other side will spread the fame of its beauty in the continent In 1799 Napoleon conquered Naples forcing king Ferdinand and the court to flee to Sicily under the protection of the British fleet under the command of Horatio Nelson While Naples was formed into the Parthenopean Republic with French support and later again a kingdom under French protection and influence Sicily became the British base of operation in the Mediterranean in the long struggle against Napoleon Under British guidance especially from Lord William Bentinck who was commander of British troops in Sicily Sicily tried to modernise its constitutional apparatus forcing the King to ratify a Constitution modeled after the British system 23 The island was under British occupation from 1806 to 1814 24 The main feature of the new system was that a two chamber parliament was formed instead of the three of the existing one The formation of the parliament brought the end of feudalism in the Kingdom After the defeat of Napoleon in 1815 Ferdinand repealed all reforms and even erased the Kingdom of Sicily from the map after a history of 800 years by creating the brand new Kingdom of the Two Sicilies with Naples as its capital in 1816 The people of Sicily rebelled to this violation of its centuries old statutes which every king including Ferdinand had sworn to respect but were defeated by the Neapolitan and Austrian forces in 1820 In 1848 49 another Sicilian revolution of independence occurred which was put down by the new king Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies who was nicknamed Re Bomba after his 5 day bombardment of Messina The increased hostility of the peoples and the elites of Sicily towards Naples and the Bourbon dynasty created a very unstable equilibrium kept under control only by an increasingly oppressive police state political executions and exiles Unification with the Kingdom of Italy Edit The beginning of the Expedition of the Thousand at Quarto On 4 April 1860 the latest revolt against the Bourbon regime broke out Giuseppe Garibaldi funded and directed by the Piedmontese prime minister Cavour assisted the revolt with his forces launching the so called Expedition of the Thousand He arrived at Marsala on 11 May 1860 with ca 1 000 Redshirts Garibaldi announced that he was assuming dictatorship over Sicily in the name of King Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia On 15 May the Redshirts fought the Battle of Calatafimi and within weeks Palermo was freed from the troops of general Lanza who even being superior in number inexplicably retreated Francis II of the Two Sicilies tried to regain control of the Kingdom On 25 June 1860 he restored the constitution of the Kingdom adopted the Italian tricolour as the national flag and promised special institutions for the Kingdom 25 On 21 October 1860 a plebiscite regarding the unification with Italy was conducted The outcome of the referendum was 432 053 99 in favour and only 667 in opposition to the unification With three separate armies still fighting within the Kingdom this outcome was far from an accurate depiction of public opinion Substantial inconsistencies as well as the absence of secret ballot further complicate the interpretation of the referendum which Denis Mack Smith describes as being obviously rigged 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Most Sicilians viewed the unification as acceptance of the House of Savoy to which belonged Victor Emmanuel II the first King of Italy 23 Society EditDuring the Norman Kingdom of Sicily the local communities maintained their privileges The rulers of the Hohenstaufen kingdom replaced the local nobility with lords from northern Italy leading to clashes and rebellions against the new nobility in many cities and rural communities These revolts resulted in the destruction of many agrarian areas and the rise of middle class nationalism which eventually led to urban dwellers becoming allies of the Aragonese 15 This situation was continued during the short rule of the Angevin until their overthrowing during the Sicilian Vespers The Angevin began feudalising the country increasing the power of the nobility by granting them jurisdiction over high justice 33 At the same period the feudalisation of the Kingdom of Sicily was intensified through the enforcement of feudal bonds and relations among its subjects The 1669 Etna eruption destroyed Catania In 1693 5 of the Kingdom s population was killed because of earthquakes During that period there were also plague outbreaks The 17th and 18th century were an era of decline of the Kingdom Corruption was prevalent among the upper and middle classes of the society Widespread corruption and mistreatment of the lower classes by the feudal lords led to the creation of groups of brigands attacking the nobility and destroying their fiefs 23 These groups which were self named mafia were the foundation of the modern Sicilian Mafia The escalation of revolts against the monarchy eventually led to the unification with Italy 34 Demographics EditDuring the reign of Frederick II 1198 1250 the kingdom had a population of about 2 5 million 35 During the Hohenstaufen era the Kingdom had 3 towns with a population of over 20 000 each 36 After the loss of the northern provinces in 1282 during the Sicilian Vespers and several natural disasters like the 1669 Etna eruption the population of the Kingdom of Sicily was reduced 23 In 1803 the population of the Kingdom was 1 656 000 37 The main cities of the Kingdom at that time were Palermo Catania Messina Modica Syracuse 37 Population of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1803 37 Division PopulationVal di Mazzara 643 000Val di Demona 521 000Val di Noto 459 000Lipari Islands 18 000Aegadian Islands 12 000Pantelleria Island 3 000Total Population 1 656 000Population of the main cities of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1803 37 City PopulationPalermo 120 000Catania 40 000Messina 36 000Modica 23 500Syracuse 17 000Economy EditSee also Subventio generalis The high fertility of the land led the Norman kings to bring settlers from neighbouring regions or to resettle farmers to areas where cultivation of land was needed This led to an increase in agricultural production The main sources of wealth for the Kingdom of Sicily in that time were its maritime cities most important of which were the ancient port cities of Naples and its nearby counterpart Amalfi from which local products were exported The main export was durum wheat with other exports including nuts timber oil bacon cheese furs hides hemp and cloth 13 Grain and other dry products were measured in salme which was equivalent to 275 08 litres in the western part of the Kingdom and 300 3 litres in the eastern part The salma was divided in 16 tumoli One tumolo was equivalent to 17 193 litres Weight was measured in cantari One cantaro was equivalent to 79 35 kilograms 174 9 lb and was divided in one hundred rottoli Cloth was measured in canne One canna was 2 06 meters long 9 By the end of the 12th century Messina had become one of the leading commercial cities of the kingdom Under the Kingdom Sicily s products went to many different lands Among these were Genoa Pisa the Byzantine Empire and Egypt Over the course of the 12th century Sicily became an important source of raw materials for north Italian cities such as Genoa As the centuries went on however this economic relationship became less advantageous to Sicily and some modern scholars see the relationship as definitely exploitative 38 Furthermore many scholars believe that Sicily went into decline in the Late Middle Ages though they do not agree about when this decline occurred Clifford Backman argues that it is a mistake to see the economic history of Sicily in terms of victimization and contends that the decline really began in the second part of the reign of Frederick III in contrast to earlier scholars who believed that Sicilian decline had set in earlier 39 Where earlier scholars saw late medieval Sicily in continuous decline Stephen Epstein argued that Sicilian society experienced something of a revival in the 15th century 40 Various treaties with Genoa secured and strengthened the commercial power of Sicily 13 The feudalisation of society during the Angevin rule reduced royal wealth and treasury The dependence of the Angevin on north Italian commerce and financing by Florentine bankers were the main factors which led to the decline of the Kingdom s economy 33 The continuation of the economic decline combined with the increased population and urbanization led to decrease of agrarian production In 1800 one third of the available crops was cultivated with obsolete methods exacerbating the problem In the later period of Spanish rule the trading system was also inefficient compared with previous periods because of high taxes on exports and monopolising corporations which had total control of prices 41 Coinage Edit Example of a Messinese augustale The Norman kings in the 12th century used the tari which had been used in Sicily from 913 as the basic coin One tari weighed about one gram and was 16 1 3 carats of gold The Arab dinar was worth four tari and the Byzantine solidus six tari 13 In the kingdom one onza was equivalent to thirty tari or five florins One tari was worth twenty grani One grana was equivalent to six denari After 1140 the circulation of the copper coin romesina stopped and it was replaced by the follaris Twenty four follari were equivalent to one Byzantine miliaresion After defeating the Tunisians in 1231 king Frederick II minted the augustalis It was minted in 21 1 2 carats and weighed 5 28 grams 42 In 1490 the triumphi were minted in Sicily They were equivalent to the Venetian ducat One triumpho was worth 11 1 2 aquilae One aquila was worth twenty grani In transactions tari and pichuli were mainly used 9 Religion Edit Palermo Cathedral During the Norman reign several different religious communities coexisted in the Kingdom of Sicily These included Latin Catholics Roman Catholics Greek rite Catholics Greek Catholic Muslims and Jews Although local religious practices were not interrupted the fact that Latin Catholics were in power tended to favor Latin Catholicism Roman Catholicism Bishops of the Greek rite were obliged to recognize the claims of the Latin Church in Sicily while Muslim communities were no longer ruled by local emirs Greek speaking Christians Latin Christians and Muslims interacted on a regular basis and were involved in each other s lives economically linguistically and culturally Some intermarried Catholics living in an Arabic speaking area might adopt Arabic or even Muslim names 43 In many cities each religious community had its own administrative and judicial order In Palermo Muslims were allowed to publicly call for prayer in mosques and their legal issues were settled by qadis judges who ruled in accordance with Islamic law 13 Since the 12th century the Kingdom of Sicily recognized Christianity as the state religion 44 After the establishment of Hohenstaufen authority Latin and Greek speaking Catholics maintained their privileges but the Muslim population was increasingly oppressed The settlements of Italians brought from northern Italy who wanted Muslim property for their own led many Muslim communities to revolt or resettle in mountainous areas of Sicily 45 These revolts resulted in some acts of violence and the eventual deportation of Muslims which began under Frederick II Eventually the government removed the entire Muslim population to Lucera in Apulia and Girifalco in Calabria where they paid taxes and served as agricultural laborers craftsmen and crossbowmen for the benefit of the king The colony at Lucera was finally disbanded in 1300 under Charles II of Naples and many of its inhabitants sold into slavery 45 The Jewish community was expelled after the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition from 1493 to 1513 in Sicily The remaining Jews were gradually assimilated and most of them converted to Roman Catholicism 9 See also EditAngelo da Furci Arab Norman culture County palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos Emirate of Sicily Expedition of the Thousand Expulsion of the Jews from Sicily Kingdom of Naples Kingdom of the Two Sicilies Kingdom of Sicily under Savoy List of Sicilian monarchs Norman conquest of southern Italy Redshirts Sicilian Parliament War of the Sicilian VespersReferences Edit a b Mallette 2011 p 5 Mallette 2011 p 2 4 5 Gwynne Timothy John 1970 People and power in an age of upheavel 1919 to the present University of California Press p 41 ISBN 9789733203162 Documenti per servire alla storia di Sicilia Diplomatica Volumes 14 16 in Italian U Manfredi Editori 1891 01 01 p XXXII Vio Michele Del 1706 01 01 Felicis et fidelissimae urbis Panormitanae selecta aliquot ad civitatis decus et commodum spectantia privilegia per instrumenta varia Siciliae opera don Michaelis De Vio in Italian in palatio senatorio per Dominicum Cortese p 314 Gregorio Rosario 1833 01 01 Considerazioni sopra la storia di Sicilia dai tempi normanni sino al presenti Volume 3 in Italian dalla Reale Stamperia p 303 Mongitore Antonino Mongitore Francesco Serio e 1749 01 01 Parlamenti generali del regno di Sicilia dall anno 1446 sino al 1748 con le memorie istoriche dell antico e moderno uso del parlamento appresso varie nazioni ed in particolare della sua origine in Sicilia e del modo di celebrarsi Volume 1 in Italian Presso P Bentivenga p 109 Italy to c 1380 The southern kingdoms Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 03 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d N Zeldes 2003 The Former Jews of This Kingdom Sicilian Converts After the Expulsion 1492 1516 BRILL pp 5 69 296 97 ISBN 90 04 12898 0 Chronological Historical Table Of Sicily In Italy Magazine 7 October 2007 Archived from the original on 27 July 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2011 Douglas David The Norman Fate 1100 1154 Los Angeles University of California Press 1976 a b c d Houben Hubert 2002 Roger II of Sicily A Ruler between East and West Cambridge University Press pp 7 148 ISBN 0 521 65573 0 a b c d e f g h Donald Matthew 1992 The Norman Kingdom of Sicily Cambridge University Press pp 4 6 71 74 86 92 285 286 304 ISBN 0 521 26911 3 a b c d Malcolm Barber 2004 The Two Cities Medieval Europe 1050 1320 Routledge p 211 ISBN 0 415 17414 7 a b c d e David Nicolle 2002 Italian Medieval Armies 1000 1300 Osprey Publishing pp 5 10 18 19 34 ISBN 1 84176 322 5 James Ross Sweeney Stanley Chodorow 1989 Popes Teachers and Canon Law in the Middle Ages Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 2264 7 Hunt Janin 2008 The University in Medieval Life 1179 1499 McFarland p 132 ISBN 978 0 7864 3462 6 Loud G A 2016 2011 The Papal Crusade against Frederick II in 1228 1230 In Michel Balard ed La Papaute et les croisades The Papacy and the Crusades Routledge pp 91 103 a b Katherine Fisher 2004 Magna Carta Greenwood Publishing Group pp 53 84 85 ISBN 0 313 32590 1 a b c Steve Runciman 1958 The Sicilian Vespers A History of the Mediterranean World in the Later Thirteenth Century Cambridge University Press pp 32 34 209 274 ISBN 0 521 43774 1 Allan W Atlas 1985 Music at the Aragonese court of Naples Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 0 521 24828 0 a b Carolyn Bain 2004 Malta amp Gozo Lonely Planet p 23 ISBN 1 74059 178 X a b c d e Danforth Prince 2007 Frommer s Sicily Frommer s p 314 ISBN 978 0 470 10056 1 W H Clements The Defences of Sicily 1806 1815 Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research Autumn 2009 Vol 87 Issue 351 pp 256 272 Alfonso Scirocco 2007 Garibaldi Citizen of the World Princeton University Press p 279 ISBN 978 0 691 11540 5 Smith Denis Mack 1992 03 01 Italy and Its Monarchy Yale University Press p 17 ISBN 0300051328 Smith Denis Mack 1985 04 18 Cavour and Garibaldi 1860 A Study in Political Conflict Cambridge University Press p 389 ISBN 9780521316378 Finkelstein Monte S 1998 01 01 Separatism the Allies and the Mafia The Struggle for Sicilian Independence 1943 1948 Lehigh University Press p 14 ISBN 9780934223515 Hess Henner 1998 01 01 Mafia amp Mafiosi Origin Power and Myth NYU Press p 155 ISBN 9781863331432 Lukacs John 1968 01 01 Historical Consciousness The Remembered Past Transaction Publishers p 116 ISBN 9781412825146 Ziblatt Daniel 2006 01 01 Structuring the State The Formation of Italy and Germany and the Puzzle of Federalism Princeton University Press p 102 ISBN 0691121672 Noble Thomas F X 1994 Western Civilization Houghton Mifflin p 895 a b Samantha Kelly 2003 The New Solomon Robert of Naples 1309 1343 and Fourteenth Century Kingship BRILL p 134 ISBN 90 04 12945 6 Lucy Riall 1998 Sicily and the Unification of Italy Liberal Policy and Local Power 1859 1866 Oxford University Press p 206 ISBN 0 19 820680 1 Kenneth M Setton 1985 A History of the Crusades Volume V The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East University of Wisconsin Press p 313 ISBN 0 299 09144 9 Perry Anderson 1984 Lineages of the Absolutist State Verso p 146 ISBN 0 86091 710 X a b c d Jedidiah Morse A Compendious and Complete System of Modern Geography or A View of the Present State of the World Thomas and Andrews p 503 Henri Bresc in Un monde mediteraneen claims that Sicily was relegated to being an agricultural satellite for wealthier northern Italian cities and sees the Sicilian people as an early proletariat Backman The Decline and Fall of Medieval Sicily 1995 Epstein An Island for Itself Economic Development and Social Change in Late Medieval Sicily 2003 Desmond Gregory 1988 Sicily The Insecure Base A History of the British Occupation of Sicily 1806 1815 Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press p 35 ISBN 0 8386 3306 4 Peter L Bernstein 2000 The power of gold the history of an obsession John Wiley and Sons p 90 ISBN 0 471 25210 7 Metcalfe Alex Muslims and Christians in Norman Sicily Arabic Speakers and the End of Islam 2003 Gwynne Timothy John 1970 People and power in an age of upheavel 1919 to the present University of California Press p 41 ISBN 9789733203162 a b The best discussion of the fate of Sicilian Muslims can be found in Julie Taylor Muslims in Medieval Italy The Colony at Lucera 2003 but is also discussed in Alex Metcalfe The Muslims of Medieval Italy 2009 Sources EditAbulafia David Frederick II A Medieval Emperor 1988 Abulafia David The Two Italies Economic Relations between the Kingdom of Sicily and the Northern Communes Cambridge University Press 1977 Abulafia David The Western Mediterranean Kingdoms 1200 1500 The Struggle for Dominion Longman 1997 a political history Alio Jacqueline Queens of Sicily 1061 1266 The Queens Consort Regent and Regnant of the Norman Swabian Era of the Kingdom of Sicily Trinacria 2018 Aube Pierre Les Empires normands d Orient XIe XIIIe siecles Paris reed Perrin 2006 Aube Pierre Roger II de Sicile Un Normand en Mediterranee Paris 2001 reed Perrin 2006 Johns Jeremy Arabic administration in Norman Sicily the royal diwan Cambridge University Press 2002 Mallette Karla 2011 The Kingdom of Sicily 1100 1250 A Literary History University of Pennsylvania Press Mendola Louis The Kingdom of Sicily 1130 1860 Trinacria Editions New York 2015 Metcalfe Alex Muslims and Christians in Norman Sicily Arabic Speakers and the End of Islam Routledge 2002 Metcalfe Alex The Muslims of Medieval Italy 2009 Norwich John Julius Sicily An Island at the Crossroads of History 2015 Runciman Steven The Sicilian Vespers A History of the Mediterranean World in the Late 13th Century Cambridge University Press 1958 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Sicily amp oldid 1128198448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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