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Norman conquest of southern Italy

The Norman conquest of southern Italy lasted from 999 to 1194, involving many battles and independent conquerors.

The Norman Kingdom of Sicily (in green) in 1154, upon the death of Roger II

In 1130, the territories in southern Italy united as the Kingdom of Sicily, which included the island of Sicily, the southern third of the Italian Peninsula (except Benevento, which was briefly held twice), the archipelago of Malta, and parts of North Africa.

Itinerant Norman forces arrived in southern Italy as mercenaries in the service of Lombard and Byzantine factions, communicating swiftly back home news about opportunities in the Mediterranean.[1][2] These groups gathered in several places, establishing fiefdoms and states of their own, uniting and elevating their status to de facto independence within 50 years of their arrival.[2]

Unlike the Norman Conquest of England (1066), which took a few years after one decisive battle, the conquest of southern Italy was the product of decades and a number of battles, few decisive. Many territories were conquered independently, and only later were unified into a single state. Compared to the conquest of England, it was unplanned and disorganised, but equally complete.

Pre-Norman Viking activity in Italy edit

There is little evidence for Viking activity in Italy as a precursor to the arrival of the Normans in 999, but some raiding is recorded. Ermentarius of Noirmoutier and the Annales Bertiniani provide contemporary evidence for Vikings based in Frankia (France) proceeding to Iberia and then to Sicily around 860.[3] In 860, according to an account by the Norman monk Dudo of Saint-Quentin, a Viking fleet, probably under Björn Ironside and Hastein, landed in Sicily, conquering it.[4]

Many Norsemen fought as mercenaries in Southern Italy, including the Varangian Guard led by Harald Hardrada, who later became king of Norway, who conquered Sicily between 1038 and 1040, with the help of Norman mercenaries, under William de Hauteville, who won his nickname Iron Arm by defeating the emir of Syracuse in single combat, and a Lombard contingent, led by Arduin.[5][6] The Varangians were first used as mercenaries in Italy against the Arabs in 936.[7] Runestones were raised in Sweden in memory of warriors who died in Langbarðaland (Land of the Lombards), the Old Norse name for southern Italy.[8]

Later, several Anglo-Danish and Norwegian nobles participated in the Norman conquest of southern Italy, like Edgar the Ætheling, who left England in 1086,[9] and Jarl Erling Skakke, who won his nickname ("Skakke", meaning bent head) after a battle against Arabs in Sicily.[10] On the other hand, many Anglo-Danish rebels fleeing William the Conqueror joined the Byzantines in their struggle against the Robert Guiscard, duke of Apulia, in Southern Italy.[11]

Arrival of the Normans in Italy edit

 
Map of Italy at the arrival of the Normans, who eventually conquered Sicily and all the territory on the mainland south of the Holy Roman Empire (the bold line), as well as the southern regions of the Papal States and the Duchy of Spoleto

The earliest reported date of the arrival of Norman knights in southern Italy is 999, although it may be assumed that they had visited before then. In that year, according to some traditional sources of uncertain origin, Norman pilgrims returning from the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem via Apulia stayed with Prince Guaimar III in Salerno. The city and its environs were attacked by Saracens from Africa demanding payment of an overdue annual tribute. While Guaimar began to collect the tribute, the Normans ridiculed him and his Lombard subjects for cowardice, and they assaulted their besiegers. The Saracens fled. Booty was confiscated and a grateful Guaimar asked the Normans to stay. They refused, but promised to bring his rich gifts to their compatriots in Normandy and tell them about possibly lucrative military service in Salerno. Some sources have Guaimar sending emissaries to Normandy to bring back knights, and this account of the arrival of the Normans is sometimes known as the "Salerno (or Salernitan) tradition".[12][13]

The Salerno tradition was first recorded by Amatus of Montecassino in his Ystoire de li Normant between 1071 and 1086.[13] Much of this information was borrowed from Amatus by Peter the Deacon for his continuation of the Chronicon Monasterii Casinensis of Leo of Ostia, written during the early 12th century. Beginning with the Annales Ecclesiastici of Baronius in the 17th century, the Salernitan story became the accepted history.[14] Although its factual accuracy was questioned periodically during the following centuries, it has been accepted (with some modifications) by most scholars since.[15]

Another historical account of the arrival of the first Normans in Italy, the "Gargano tradition", appears in primary chronicles without reference to any previous Norman presence.[12] According to this account Norman pilgrims at the shrine to Michael the Archangel at Monte Gargano in 1016 met the Lombard Melus of Bari, who persuaded them to join him in an attack on the Byzantine government of Apulia.

As with the Salerno tradition, there are two primary sources for the Gargano story: the Gesta Roberti Wiscardi of William of Apulia (dated 1088–1110) and the Chronica monasterii S. Bartholomaei de Carpineto of a monk named Alexander, written about a century later and based on William's work.[16] Some scholars have combined the Salerno and Gargano tales, and John Julius Norwich suggested that the meeting between Melus and the Normans had been arranged by Guaimar.[17] Melus had been in Salerno just before his visit to Monte Gargano.

Another story involves the exile of a group of brothers from the Drengot family. One of the brothers, Osmund (according to Orderic Vitalis) or Gilbert (according to Amatus and Peter the Deacon), murdered William Repostel (Repostellus) in the presence of Robert I, Duke of Normandy after Repostel allegedly boasted about dishonouring his murderer's daughter. Threatened with death, the Drengot brother fled with his siblings to Rome and one of the brothers had an audience with the pope before joining Melus (Melo) of Bari. Amatus dates the story to after 1027, and does not mention the pope. According to him, Gilbert's brothers were Osmund, Ranulf, Asclettin and Ludolf (Rudolf, according to Peter).[18] Between 1016 and 1024, in a fragmented political context, the Lombard County of Ariano [it] was usurped by a group of Norman knights headed by Gilbert and hired by Melus. The County, which replaced the pre-existing chamberlainship, is considered to be the first political body established by the Normans in the South of Italy.[19][20]

Repostel's murder is dated by all the chronicles to the reign of Robert the Magnificent and after 1027, although some scholars believe "Robert" was a scribal error for "Richard" (Richard II of Normandy, who was duke in 1017).[21] The earlier date is necessary if the emigration of the first Normans was connected to the Drengots and the murder of William Repostel. In the Histories of Ralph Glaber, "Rodulfus" leaves Normandy after displeasing Count Richard (Richard II).[22] The sources disagree about which brother was the leader on the southern trip. Orderic and William of Jumièges, in the latter's Gesta Normannorum Ducum, name Osmund; Glaber names Rudolph, and Leo, Amatus and Adhemar of Chabannes name Gilbert. According to most southern-Italian sources, the leader of the Norman contingent at the Battle of Cannae in 1018 was Gilbert.[23] If Rudolf is identified with the Rudolf of Amatus' history as a Drengot brother, he may have been the leader at Cannae.[24]

A modern hypothesis concerning the Norman arrival in the Mezzogiorno concerns the chronicles of Glaber, Adhemar and Leo (not Peter's continuation). All three chronicles indicate that Normans (either a group of 40 or a much-larger force of around 250) under "Rodulfus" (Rudolf), fleeing Richard II, came to Pope Benedict VIII of Rome. The pope sent them to Salerno (or Capua) to seek mercenary employment against the Byzantines because of the latter's invasion of papal Beneventan territory.[25] There, they met the Beneventan primates (leading men): Landulf V of Benevento, Pandulf IV of Capua, (possibly) Guaimar III of Salerno and Melus of Bari. According to Leo's chronicle, "Rudolf" was Ralph of Tosni.[18][26] If the first confirmed Norman military actions in the south involved Melus' mercenaries against the Byzantines in May 1017, the Normans probably left Normandy between January and April.[27]

Lombard revolt, 1009–1022 edit

 
The imprisonment of Pandulf IV of Capua, after Emperor Henry II's 1022 campaign

On 9 May 1009, an insurrection erupted in Bari against the Catapanate of Italy, the regional Byzantine authority based there. Led by Melus, a local Lombard, the revolt quickly spread to other cities. Late that year (or early in 1010) the katepano, John Curcuas, was killed in battle. In March 1010 his successor, Basil Mesardonites, disembarked with reinforcements and besieged the rebels in the city. The Byzantine citizens negotiated with Basil and forced the Lombard leaders, Melus and his brother-in-law Dattus, to flee. Basil entered the city on 11 June 1011, reestablishing Byzantine authority. He did not follow his victory with severe sanctions, only sending Melus' family (including his son, Argyrus) to Constantinople. Basil died in 1016, after years of peace in southern Italy.

Leo Tornikios Kontoleon arrived as Basil's successor in May of that year. After Basil's death, Melus revolted again; this time, he used a newly arrived band of Normans, sent by Pope Benedict, who met him (with or without Guaimar's aid) at Monte Gargano. Tornikios sent an army, led by Leo Passianos, against the Lombard-Norman coalition. Passianos and Melus met on the Fortore at Arenula; the battle was either indecisive (William of Apulia) or a victory for Melus (Leo of Ostia and Amatus). Tornikios then took command, leading his forces into a second encounter near Civita.[28] This second battle was a victory for Melus, although Lupus Protospatharius and the anonymous chronicler of Bari recorded a defeat.[28] A third battle (a decisive victory for Melus) took place at Vaccaricia;[28] the region from the Fortore to Trani was in his hands, and in September Tornikios was replaced by Basil Boioannes (who arrived in December). According to Amatus, there were five consecutive Lombard and Norman victories by October 1018.[28]

At Boioannes' request, a detachment of the elite Varangian Guard was sent to Italy to fight the Normans. The armies met at the Ofanto near Cannae, the site of Hannibal's victory over the Romans in 216 BC, and the Battle of Cannae was a decisive Byzantine victory;[28] Amatus wrote that only ten Normans survived from a contingent of 250.[28] After the battle, Ranulf Drengot (one of the Norman survivors) was elected leader of their company.[28] Boioannes protected his gains by building a fortress at the Apennine pass, guarding the entrance to the Apulian plain. In 1019 Troia (as the fortress was known) was garrisoned by Boioannes' Norman troops, an indication of Norman willingness to fight on either side. With Norman mercenaries on both sides, they would obtain good terms for the release of their brethren from their captors regardless of outcome.[28]

Alarmed by the shift in momentum in the south, Pope Benedict (who may have initiated Norman involvement in the war) went north in 1020 to Bamberg to confer with Holy Roman Emperor Henry II. Although the emperor took no immediate action, events the following year persuaded him to intervene. Boioannes (allied with Pandulf of Capua) marched on Dattus, who was garrisoning a tower in the territory of the Duchy of Gaeta with papal troops. Dattus was captured and, on 15 June 1021, received the traditional Roman poena cullei: he was tied up in a sack with a monkey, a rooster and a snake and thrown into the sea.[contradictory] In 1022, a large imperial army marched south in three detachments under Henry II, Pilgrim of Cologne and Poppo of Aquileia to attack Troia. Although Troia did not fall, the Lombard princes were allied with the Empire and Pandulf removed to a German prison; this ended the Lombard revolt.

Mercenary service, 1022–1046 edit

In 1024, Norman mercenaries under Ranulf Drengot were in the service of Guaimar III when he and Pandulf IV besieged Pandulf V in Capua. In 1026, after an 18-month siege, Capua surrendered and Pandulf IV was reinstated as prince. During the next few years Ranulf would attach himself to Pandulf, but in 1029 he joined Sergius IV of Naples (whom Pandulf expelled from Naples in 1027, probably with Ranulf's assistance).

In 1029, Ranulf and Sergius recaptured Naples. In early 1030 Sergius gave Ranulf the County of Aversa as a fief;[28] that seigniory was long considered to be the first Norman lordship in southern Italy, although this primacy is currently attributed to the county of Ariano [it] which was officially recognized by the Emperor Henry II since 1022.[20] Sergius also gave his sister, the widow of the duke of Gaeta, in marriage to Ranulf.[28] In 1034, however, Sergius' sister died and Ranulf returned to Pandulf. According to Amatus:

For the Normans never desired any of the Lombards to win a decisive victory, in case this should be to their disadvantage. But now supporting the one and then aiding the other, they prevented anyone being completely ruined.

Norman reinforcements and local miscreants, who found a welcome in Ranulf's camp with no questions asked, swelled Ranulf's numbers.[28] There, Amatus observed that the Norman language and customs welded a disparate group into the semblance of a nation. In 1035, the same year William the Conqueror would become Duke of Normandy, Tancred of Hauteville's three eldest sons (William "Iron Arm", Drogo and Humphrey) arrived in Aversa from Normandy.[29]

In 1037, or the summer of 1038[28] (sources differ), Norman influence was further solidified when Emperor Conrad II deposed Pandulf and invested Ranulf as Count of Aversa. In 1038 Ranulf invaded Capua, expanding his polity into one of the largest in southern Italy.[28]

In 1038 Byzantine Emperor Michael IV launched a military campaign into Muslim Sicily, with General George Maniaches leading the Christian army against the Saracens. The future king of Norway, Harald Hardrada, commanded the Varangian Guard in the expedition and Michael called on Guaimar IV of Salerno and other Lombard lords to provide additional troops for the campaign. Guiamar sent 300 Norman knights from Aversa, including the three Hauteville brothers (who would achieve renown for their prowess in battle). William of Hauteville became known as William Bras-de-Fer ("William Iron Arm") for single-handedly killing the emir of Syracuse during that city's siege. The Norman contingent would leave before the campaign's end due to the inadequate distribution of Saracen loot.[29]

After the assassination of Catapan Nikephoros Dokeianos at Ascoli in 1040 the Normans elected Atenulf, brother of Pandulf III of Benevento, their leader. On 16 March 1041, near Venosa on the Olivento, the Norman army tried to negotiate with Catapan Michael Dokeianos; although they failed, they still defeated the Byzantine army in the Battle of Olivento. On 4 May 1041 the Norman army, led by William Iron Arm, defeated the Byzantines again in the Battle of Montemaggiore near Cannae (avenging the Norman defeat in the 1018 Battle of Cannae[29]). Although the catapan summoned a large Varangian force from Bari, the battle was a rout; many of Michael's soldiers drowned in the Ofanto while retreating.[30]

On 3 September 1041 at the Battle of Montepeloso, the Normans (nominally under Arduin and Atenulf) defeated Byzantine catepan Exaugustus Boioannes and brought him to Benevento. Around that time, Guaimar IV of Salerno began to attract the Normans. In February 1042, Atenulf negotiated the ransom of Exaugustus and then fled with the ransom money to Byzantine territory. He was replaced by Argyrus, who was bribed to defect to the Byzantines after a few early victories.

The revolt, originally Lombard, had become Norman in character and leadership. In September 1042, the three principal Norman groups held a council in Melfi which included Ranulf Drengot, Guaimar IV and William Iron Arm. William and the other leaders petitioned Guaimar to recognize their conquests, and William was acknowledged as the Norman leader in Apula (which included Melfi and the Norman garrison at Troia). He received the title of Count of Apulia from Guiamar, and (like Ranulf) was his vassal. Guaimar proclaimed himself Duke of Apulia and Calabria, although he was never formally invested as such by the Holy Roman Emperor. William was married to Guida (daughter of Guy, Duke of Sorrento and Guaimar's niece), strengthening the alliance between the Normans and Guaimar.[31]

At Melfi in 1043, Guaimar divided the region (except for Melfi itself, which was to be governed on a republican model) into twelve baronies for the Norman leaders. William received Ascoli, Asclettin Drengot received Acerenza, Tristan received Montepeloso, Hugh Tubœuf received Monopoli, Peter received Trani, Drogo of Hauteville received Venosa and Ranulf Drengot (now the independent Duke of Gaeta) received Siponto and Monte Gargano.[31]

During their reign William and Guaimar began the conquest of Calabria in 1044, and built the castle of Stridula (near Squillace). William was less successful in Apulia, where he was defeated in 1045 near Taranto by Argyrus (although his brother, Drogo, conquered Bovino). At William's death, the period of Norman mercenary service ended with the rise of two Norman principalities owing nominal allegiance to the Holy Roman Empire: the County of Aversa (later the Principality of Capua) and the County of Apulia (later the Duchy of Apulia).

County of Melfi, 1046–1059 edit

 
The stone castle at Melfi was constructed by the Normans where no fortress had previously stood. The present castle includes additions to a simple, rectangular Norman keep.

In 1046 Drogo entered Apulia and defeated the catepan, Eustathios Palatinos, near Taranto while his brother Humphrey forced Bari to conclude a treaty with the Normans. Also that year, Richard Drengot arrived with 40 knights from Normandy and Robert "Guiscard" Hauteville arrived with other Norman immigrants.[32]

In 1047 Guaimar (who had supported Drogo's succession and the establishment of a Norman dynasty in the south) gave him his daughter, Gaitelgrima, in marriage. Emperor Henry III confirmed the county of Aversa in its fidelity to him and made Drogo his vassal, granting him the title dux et magister Italiae comesque Normannorum totius Apuliae et Calabriae (duke and master of Italy and count of the Normans of all Apulia and Calabria, the first legitimate title for the Normans of Melfi).[32] Henry did not confirm the other titles given during the 1042 council; he demoted Guiamar to "prince of Salerno", and Capua was bestowed upon Pandulf IV for the third (and final) time.[32] Henry, whose wife Agnes had been mistreated by the Beneventans, authorised Drogo to conquer Benevento for the imperial crown; he did so in 1053.

In 1048 Drogo commanded an expedition into Calabria via the valley of Crati, near Cosenza. He distributed the conquered territories in Calabria and gave his brother, Robert Guiscard, a castle at Scribla to guard the entrance to the recently conquered territory; Guiscard would later abandon it for a castle at San Marco Argentano.[32] Shortly thereafter he married the daughter of another Norman lord, who gave him 200 knights (furthering his military campaign in Calabria).[33] In 1051 Drogo was assassinated by Byzantine conspirators[33] and was succeeded by his brother, Humphrey.[34] Humphrey's first challenge was to deal with papal opposition to the Normans.[34] The Norman knights' treatment of the Lombards during Drogo's reign triggered more revolts.[34] During the unrest, the Italo-Norman John, Abbot of Fécamp was accosted on his return trip from Rome;[34] he wrote to Pope Leo IX:

The hatred of the Italians for the Normans has now reached such a pitch that it is almost impossible for any Norman, albeit a pilgrim, to journey in the towns of Italy, without being assailed, abducted, robbed, beaten, thrown in irons, even if fortunate enough not to die in a prison.[35]

The pope and his supporters, including the future Gregory VII, called for an army to oust the Normans from Italy.[34]

 
Battle plan of Civitate: Normans in red, papal coalition in blue

On 18 June 1053, Humphrey led the Norman armies against the combined forces of the pope and the Holy Roman Empire. At the Battle of Civitate the Normans destroyed the papal army and captured Leo IX, imprisoning him in Benevento (which had surrendered). In 1054 Peter II, who succeeded Peter I in the region of Trani, captured the city from the Byzantines. Humphrey died in 1057; he was succeeded by Guiscard, who ended his loyalty to the Empire and made himself a papal vassal in return for the title of duke.[34]

County of Aversa, 1049–1098 edit

During the 1050s and 1060s, there were two centres of Norman power in southern Italy: one at Melfi (under the Hautevilles) and another at Aversa (under the Drengots). Richard Drengot became ruler of the County of Aversa in 1049, beginning a policy of territorial aggrandisement to compete with his Hauteville rivals. At first he warred with his Lombard neighbours, who included Pandulf VI of Capua, Atenulf I of Gaeta and Gisulf II of Salerno. Richard pushed back the borders of Salerno until there was little left of the once-great principality but the city of Salerno itself. Although he tried to extend his influence peacefully by betrothing his daughter to the oldest son of Atenulf of Gaeta, when the boy died before the marriage he still demanded the Lombard dower from the boy's parents. When the duke refused, Richard seized Aquino (one of Gaeta's few remaining fiefs) in 1058. However, the chronology of his conquest of Gaeta is confusing. Documents from 1058 and 1060 refer to Jordan (Richard's oldest son) as Duke of Gaeta, but these have been disputed as forgeries (since Atenulf was still duke when he died in 1062).[36] After Atenulf's death, Richard and Jordan took over the rule of the duchy and allowed Atenulf's heir—Atenulf II—to rule as their subject until 1064 (when Gaeta was fully incorporated into the Drengot principality). Richard and Jordan appointed puppet, usually Norman, dukes.[37]

When the prince of Capua died in 1057, Richard immediately besieged the comune. This chronology is also unclear. Pandulf was succeeded at Capua by his brother, Landulf VIII, who is recorded as prince until 12 May 1062. Richard and Jordan took the princely title in 1058, but apparently allowed Landulf to continue ruling beneath them for at least four years more. In 1059 Pope Nicholas II convened a synod at Melfi confirming Richard as Count of Aversa and Prince of Capua, and Richard swore allegiance to the papacy for his holdings. The Drengots then made Capua their headquarters for ruling Aversa and Gaeta.

Richard and Jordan expanded their new Gaetan and Capuan territories northwards toward Latium, into the Papal States. In 1066 Richard marched on Rome, but was easily repelled. Jordan's tenure as Richard's successor marked an alliance with the papacy (which Richard had attempted), and the conquests of Capua ceased. When Jordan died in 1090, his young son Richard II and his regents were unable to hold Capua. They were forced to flee the city by a Lombard, Lando, who ruled it with popular support until he was forced out by the combined Hauteville forces in the siege of Capua in 1098; this ended Lombard rule in Italy.

Conquest of the Abruzzo, 1053–1105 edit

In 1077 the last Lombard prince of Benevento died, and in 1078 the pope appointed Robert Guiscard to succeed him. In 1081, however, Guiscard relinquished Benevento. By then, the principality comprised little more than Benevento and its environs; it had been reduced in size by Norman conquests during the previous decades, especially after the Battle of Civitate and after 1078.[38] At Ceprano in June 1080 the pope again gave Guiscard control of Benevento, an attempt to halt Norman incursions into it and associated territory in the Abruzzi (which Guiscard's relatives had been appropriating).

After the Battle of Civitate, the Normans began the conquest of the Adriatic coast of Benevento. Geoffrey of Hauteville, a brother of the Hauteville counts of Melfi, conquered the Lombard county of Larino and stormed the castle Morrone in the region of Samnium-Guillamatum. Geoffrey's son, Robert, united these conquests into a county, Loritello, in 1061 and continued his expansion into Lombard Abruzzo. He conquered the Lombard county of Teate (modern Chieti) and besieged Ortona, which became the goal of Norman efforts in that region. Loritello soon reached as far north as the Pescara and the Papal States. In 1078 Robert allied with Jordan of Capua to ravage the Papal Abruzzo, but after a 1080 treaty with Pope Gregory VII they were obligated to respect papal territory. In 1100 Robert of Loritello extended his principality across the Fortore, taking Bovino and Dragonara.[39]

The conquest of the Molise is poorly documented. Boiano (the principal town) may have been conquered the year before the Battle of Civitate by Robert Guiscard, who had encircled the Matese massif. The county of Boiano was bestowed on Rudolf of Moulins. His grandson, Hugh, expanded it eastward (occupying Toro and San Giovanni in Galdo) and westward (annexing the Capuan counties of Venafro, Pietrabbondante and Trivento in 1105).

Conquest of Sicily, 1061–1091 edit

 
Roger I of Sicily at the 1063 Battle of Cerami, where he was victorious over 35,000 Saracens according to Goffredo Malaterra.

After roughly a century of Arab control (following the Saracen defeat of Byzantine forces in 965), Sicily was inhabited by a mix of Christians, Arab Muslims, and Muslim converts at the time of its conquest by the Normans. It had originally been under the rule of the Aghlabids and then the Fatimids, but in 948 the Kalbids wrested control of the island and held it until 1053. During the 1010s and 1020s, a series of succession crises paved the way for interference by the Zirids of Ifriqiya. Sicily was wracked by turmoil as petty fiefdoms battled each other for supremacy. Into this, the Normans under Robert Guiscard and his younger brother Roger Bosso came intending to conquer; the pope had conferred on Robert the title of "Duke of Sicily".[40]

Robert and Roger first invaded Sicily in May 1061, crossing from Reggio di Calabria and besieging Messina for control of the strategically vital Strait of Messina. Roger crossed the strait first, landing unseen overnight and surprising the Saracen army in the morning. When Robert's troops landed later that day, they found themselves unopposed and Messina abandoned. Robert immediately fortified the city and allied himself with the emir, Ibn al-Timnah, against his rival Ibn al-Hawas. Robert, Roger, and at-Timnah then marched into the centre of the island by way of Rometta, which had remained loyal to at-Timnah. They passed through Frazzanò and the Pianura di Maniace (Plain of Maniakes), encountering resistance to their assault of Centuripe. Paternò fell quickly, and Robert brought his army to Castrogiovanni (modern Enna, the strongest fortress in central Sicily). Although the garrison was defeated the citadel did not fall, and with winter approaching Robert returned to Apulia. Before leaving, he built a fortress at San Marco d'Alunzio.[41] Roger returned in late 1061 and captured Troina. In June 1063 he defeated a Muslim army at the Battle of Cerami, securing the Norman foothold on the island.

 
Roger I receiving the keys of Palermo in 1071

Robert returned in 1064, bypassing Castrogiovanni on his way to Palermo; this campaign was eventually called off. In 1068 Roger struck another defeat against the Muslims at the Battle of Misilmeri. In August 1071, the Normans began a second and successful siege of Palermo. The city of Palermo was entered by the Normans on 7 January 1072 and three days later the defenders of the inner-city surrendered.[42] Robert invested Roger as Count of Sicily under the suzerainty of the Duke of Apulia. In a partition of the island with his brother Robert retained Palermo, half of Messina, and the largely Christian Val Demone (leaving the rest, including what was not yet conquered, to Roger).

In 1077 Roger besieged Trapani, one of the two remaining Saracen strongholds in the west of the island.[43] His son, Jordan, led a sortie which surprised guards of the garrison's livestock. With its food supply cut off, the city soon surrendered. In 1079 Taormina was besieged, and in 1081 Jordan, Robert de Sourval and Elias Cartomi conquered Catania (a holding of the emir of Syracuse) in another surprise attack.

Roger left Sicily in the summer of 1083 to assist his brother on the mainland; Jordan (whom he had left in charge) revolted, forcing him to return to Sicily and subjugate his son. In 1085, he was finally able to undertake a systematic campaign. On 22 May Roger approached Syracuse by sea, while Jordan led a small cavalry detachment 25 kilometres (15 miles) north of the city. On 25 May, the navies of the count and the emir engaged in the harbour – where the latter was killed – while Jordan's forces besieged the city. The siege lasted throughout the summer, but when the city capitulated in March 1086 only Noto was still under Saracen dominion. In February 1091 Noto yielded as well, and the conquest of Sicily was complete.[44]

 
The Palazzo dei Normanni was a 9th-century Arab palace in Sicily, converted by the Normans into their governing castle.

In 1091, Roger invaded Malta and subdued the walled city of Mdina. He imposed taxes on the islands, but allowed the Arab governors to continue their rule. In 1127 Roger II abolished the Muslim government, replacing it with Norman officials. Under Norman rule, the Arabic spoken by the Greek Christian islanders for centuries of Muslim domination became Maltese.[45]

Conquest of Amalfi and Salerno, 1073–1077 edit

The fall of Amalfi and Salerno to Robert Guiscard were influenced by his wife, Sichelgaita. Amalfi probably surrendered as a result of her negotiations,[46] and Salerno fell when she stopped petitioning her husband on behalf of her brother (the prince of Salerno). The Amalfitans unsuccessfully subjected themselves to Prince Gisulf to avoid Norman suzerainty, but the states (whose histories had been joined since the 9th century) ultimately came under Norman control.

By summer 1076, through piracy and raids Gisulf II of Salerno incited the Normans to destroy him; that season, under Richard of Capua and Robert Guiscard the Normans united to besiege Salerno. Although Gisulf ordered his citizens to store two years' worth of food, he confiscated enough of it to starve his subjects. On 13 December 1076, the city submitted; the prince and his retainers retreated to the citadel, which fell in May 1077. Although Gisulf's lands and relics were confiscated, he remained at liberty. The Principality of Salerno had already been reduced to little more than the capital city and its environs by previous wars with William of the Principate, Roger of Sicily and Robert Guiscard.[47] However, the city was the most important in southern Italy and its capture was essential to the creation of a kingdom fifty years later.

In 1073 Sergius III of Amalfi died, leaving the infant John III as his successor. Desiring protection in unstable times, the Amalfitans exiled the young duke and summoned Robert Guiscard that year.[48] Amalfi, however, remained restless under Norman control. Robert's successor, Roger Borsa, took control of Amalfi in 1089 after expelling Gisulf (the deposed Prince of Salerno, whom the citizens had installed with papal aid). From 1092 to 1097 Amalfi did not recognise its Norman suzerain, apparently seeking Byzantine help;[46] Marinus Sebaste was installed as ruler in 1096.

Robert's son Bohemond and his brother Roger of Sicily attacked Amalfi in 1097, but were repulsed. During this siege, the Normans began to be drawn by the First Crusade. Marinus was defeated after Amalfitan noblemen defected to the Norman side and betrayed him in 1101. Amalfi revolted again in 1130, when Roger II of Sicily demanded its loyalty. It was finally subdued in 1131 when Admiral John marched on it by land and George of Antioch blockaded it by sea, establishing a base on Capri.

Byzantine–Norman wars, 1059–1085 edit

 
Norman progress in Sicily during Robert's expeditions to the Balkans: Capua, Apulia, Calabria, and the County of Sicily are Norman. The Emirate of Sicily, the Duchy of Naples and lands in the Abruzzo (in the southern Duchy of Spoleto) are not yet conquered.

The Normans' initial military involvement in southern Italy was on the side of the Lombards against the Byzantines. Eventually, some Normans, including the powerful de Hauteville brothers, served in the army of George Maniakes during the attempted Byzantine reconquest of Sicily, only to turn against their employers when the emirs proved difficult to conquer.[49][50] By 1030, Rainulf became count of Aversa, marking the start of permanent Norman settlement in Italy.[49] In 1042, William de Hauteville was made a count, taking Lombard prince Guaimar IV of Salerno as his liege.[49] To further strengthen ties and legitimacy, Robert Guiscard also married Lombard Princess Sikelgaita in 1058.[49] Following the death of Guaimar, the Normans were increasingly independent actors on the south Italian scene, which brought them into direct conflict with Byzantium.

During the time that the Normans had conquered southern Italy, the Byzantine Empire was in a state of internal decay; the administration of the Empire had been wrecked, the efficient government institutions that provided Basil II with a quarter of a million troops and adequate resources by taxation had collapsed within a period of three decades. Attempts by Isaac I Komnenos and Romanos IV Diogenes to reverse the situation proved unfruitful. The premature death of the former and the overthrow of the latter led to further collapse as the Normans consolidated their conquest of Sicily and Italy.

Reggio Calabria, the capital of the tagma of Calabria, was captured by Robert Guiscard in 1060. At the time, the Byzantines held a few coastal towns in Apulia, including Bari, the capital of the catepanate of Italy. In 1067–68, they gave financial support to a rebellion against Guiscard. In 1068, the Normans besieged Otranto; in the same year, they began the siege of Bari itself. After defeating the Byzantines in a series of battles in Apulia, and after two major attempts to relieve the city had failed, the city Bari surrendered in April 1071, ending the Byzantine presence in southern Italy.[51]

In 1079–80, the Byzantines again gave their support to a rebellion against Guiscard. This support came largely in the form of financing smaller Norman mercenary groups to assist in the rebellion[51]

Over a thirty-year period (1061–1091), Norman factions also completed the initial Byzantine attempt to retake Sicily. However, it would not be until 1130 that both Sicily and southern Italy were united into one kingdom, formalized by Roger II of Sicily.[52]

Conquest of Naples, 1077–1139 edit

The Duchy of Naples, nominally a Byzantine possession, was one of the last southern Italian states to be attacked by the Normans. Since Sergius IV asked for Ranulf Drengot's help during the 1020s, with brief exceptions the dukes of Naples were allied with the Normans of Aversa and Capua. Beginning in 1077, the incorporation of Naples into the Hauteville state took sixty years to complete.

In summer 1074, hostilities flared up between Richard of Capua and Robert Guiscard. Sergius V of Naples allied with the latter, making his city a supply centre for Guiscard's troops. This pitted him against Richard, who was supported by Gregory VII. In June Richard briefly besieged Naples; Richard, Robert and Sergius soon began negotiations with Gregory, mediated by Desiderius of Montecassino.

In 1077 Naples was again besieged by Richard of Capua, with a naval blockade by Robert Guiscard. Richard died during the siege in 1078, after the deathbed lifting of his excommunication. The siege was ended by his successor, Jordan, to insinuate himself with the papacy (which had made peace with Duke Sergius).

In 1130, the Antipope Anacletus II crowned Roger II of Sicily king and declared the fief of Naples part of his kingdom.[53] In 1131, Roger demanded from the citizens of Amalfi the defences of their city and the keys to their castle. When they refused, Sergius VII of Naples initially prepared to aid them with a fleet; George of Antioch blockaded Naples' port with a large armada and Sergius, cowed by the suppression of the Amalfitans, submitted to Roger. According to the chronicler Alexander of Telese, Naples "which, since Roman times, had hardly ever been conquered by the sword now submitted to Roger on the strength of a mere report (i.e. Amalfi's fall)."

In 1134 Sergius supported the rebellion of Robert II of Capua and Ranulf II of Alife, but avoided direct confrontation with Roger and paid homage to the king after the fall of Capua. On 24 April 1135 a Pisan fleet with 8,000 reinforcements, captained by Robert of Capua, anchored in Naples and the duchy was the centre of the revolt against Roger II for the next two years. Sergius, Robert and Ranulf were besieged in Naples until the spring of 1136, by which time starvation was widespread. According to historian (and rebel sympathiser) Falco of Benevento Sergius and the Neapolitans did not relent, "preferring to die of hunger than to bare their necks to the power of an evil king." The naval blockade's failure to prevent Sergius and Robert from twice bringing supplies from Pisa exemplified Roger's inadequacy. When a relief army commanded by Emperor Lothair II marched to Naples, the siege was lifted. Although the emperor left the following year, in return for a pardon Sergius re-submitted to Roger in Norman feudal homage. On 30 October 1137, the last Duke of Naples died in the king's service at the Battle of Rignano.

The defeat at Rignano enabled the Norman conquest of Naples, since Sergius died without heir and the Neapolitan nobility could not reach a succession agreement. However, it was two years between Sergius' death and Naples' incorporation by Sicily. The nobility apparently ruled during the interim, which may have been the final period of Neapolitan independence from Norman rule.[53] During this period Norman landowners first appear in Naples, although the Pisans (enemies of Roger II) retained their alliance with the duchy and Pisa may have sustained its independence until 1139. That year, Roger absorbed Naples into his kingdom; Pope Innocent II and the Neapolitan nobility acknowledged Roger's young son, Alfonso of Hauteville, as duke.

Kingdom of Sicily, 1130–1198 edit

 
Woodcut illustration of Constance of Sicily, her husband Emperor Henry VI and her son Frederick II

Although the conquest of Sicily was primarily military, Robert and Roger also signed treaties with the Muslims to obtain land. Hindered by Sicily's hilly terrain and a relatively small army, the brothers sought influential, worn-down Muslim leaders to sign the treaties (offering peace and protection for land and titles). Because Sicily was conquered by a unified command, Roger's authority was not challenged by other conquerors and he maintained power over his Greek, Arab, Lombard and Norman subjects. Latin Christianity was introduced to the island, and its ecclesiastical organisation was overseen by Roger with papal approval. Sees were established at Palermo (with metropolitan authority), Syracuse and Agrigento. After its elevation to a Kingdom of Sicily in 1130, Sicily became the centre of Norman power with Palermo as capital. The Kingdom was created on Christmas Day, 1130, by Roger II of Sicily, with the agreement of Pope Innocent II, who united the lands Roger had inherited from his father Roger I of Sicily.[54]

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.[55]

With the invasion of Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor on behalf of his wife, Constance, the daughter of Roger II, eventually prevailed, the kingdom fell in 1194 to the House of Hohenstaufen. Through Constance, the Hauteville blood was passed to Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, who succeeded as King of Sicily in 1198.

Encastellation edit

 
The early Norman castle at Adrano

The Norman conquest of southern Italy began an infusion of Romanesque (specifically Norman) architecture. Some castles were expanded on existing Lombard, Byzantine or Arab structures, while others were original constructions. Latin cathedrals were built in lands recently converted from Byzantine Christianity or Islam, in a Romanesque style influenced by Byzantine and Islamic designs. Public buildings, such as palaces, were common in larger cities (notably Palermo); these structures, in particular, demonstrate the influence of Siculo-Norman culture.

The Normans rapidly began the construction, expansion and renovation of castles in southern Italy. By the end of the Norman period, most wooden castles were converted to stone.

After the Lombard castle at Melfi, which was conquered by the Normans early and augmented with a surviving, rectangular donjon late in the 11th century, Calabria was the first province affected by Norman encastellation. In 1046 William Iron Arm began construction of Stridula (a large castle near Squillace), and by 1055 Robert Guiscard built three castles: at Rossano, on the site of a Byzantine fortress; at Scribla, the seat of his fief guarding the pass of the Val di Crati, and at San Marco Argentano (donjon built in 1051) near Cosenza.[56] In 1058, Scalea was built on a seaside cliff.

Guiscard was a major castle-builder after his accession to the Apulian countship, building a castle at Gargano with pentagonal towers known as the Towers of Giants. Later, Henry, Count of Monte Sant'Angelo built a castle at nearby Castelpagano. In the Molise the Normans built many fortresses into the naturally defensible terrain, such as Santa Croce and Ferrante. The region of a line running from Terracina to Termoli has the greatest density of Norman castles in Italy.[57] Many sites were originally Samnite strongholds reused by the Romans and their successors; the Normans called such a fortress a castellum vetus (old castle). Many Molisian castles have walls integrated into the mountains and ridges, and much of the quickly erected masonry demonstrates that the Normans introduced the opus gallicum into the Molise.[58]

The encastellation of Sicily was begun at the behest of the native Greek inhabitants.[59] In 1060, they asked Guiscard to construct a castle at Aluntium. The first Norman building on Sicily, San Marco d'Alunzio (named after Guiscard's first castle at Argentano in Calabria), was erected; its ruins survive. Petralia Soprana was then built near Cefalù, followed by a castle at Troina in 1071; in 1073 a castle was built at Mazara and another at Paternò .[59] At Adrano (or Aderno) the Normans built a plain, rectangular tower whose floor plan illustrates 11th-century Norman design. An outside stairway leads to the first-storey entrance, and the interior is divided lengthwise down the middle into a great hall on one side and two rooms (a chapel and chamber) on the other.[60]

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Brown, Gordon S. (2015) [2003]. "Sicily". The Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. pp. 103–113. ISBN 978-0-7864-5127-2. LCCN 2002153822.
  2. ^ a b Matthew, Donald (2012) [1992]. "Part I: The Normans and the monarchy – Southern Italy and the Normans before the creation of the monarchy". The Norman Kingdom of Sicily. Cambridge Medieval Textbooks. Cambridge and New York City: Cambridge University Press. pp. 9–19. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139167741.004. ISBN 9781139167741.
  3. ^ Ann Christys, Vikings in the South (London: Bloomsbury, 2015), pp. 59–60.
  4. ^ Haywood, John. Northmen. Head of Zeus.
  5. ^ Carr, John. Fighting Emperors of Byzantium. Pen and Sword. p. 177.
  6. ^ Hill, Paul. The Norman Commanders: Masters of Warfare 911–1135. Pen and Sword. p. 18.
  7. ^ Ullidtz, Per. 1016 The Danish Conquest of England. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 936.
  8. ^ 2. Runriket – Täby Kyrka Archived 2008-06-04 at archive.today, an online article at Stockholm County Museum, retrieved July 1, 2007.
  9. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, p. 217; Florence of Worcester, p. 145
  10. ^ Orkneyinga Saga, Anderson, Joseph, (Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas, 1873), FHL microfilm 253063., p. 134, 139, 144–145, 149–151, 163, 193.
  11. ^ Translation based on Chibnall (ed.), Ecclesiastical History, vol. ii, pp. 203, 205
  12. ^ a b Joranson, 355 and n 19.
  13. ^ a b Brown, R. Allen (1984). The Normans. Woodsbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer. p. 97. ISBN 0-85115-359-3.
  14. ^ Joranson, 356.
  15. ^ Both Chalandon and Norwich provide a combined story based on the Salerno and Gargano traditions. Houben, p. 8, presents the Salerno tradition as fact.
  16. ^ Joranson, 358.
  17. ^ Chalandon makes a similar connection between the traditions. Joranson, 367, finds such hypotheses "unworkable."
  18. ^ a b Brown, R. Allen (1984). The Normans. Woodsbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer. pp. 97–98. ISBN 0-85115-359-3.
  19. ^ [Southern Italy at the beginning of 11th century]. European Center for Norman Studies (in Italian). Archived from the original on 2019-01-15. Retrieved 2017-10-14.
  20. ^ a b Raffaele D'Amato & Andrea Salimbeti (2020). The Normans in Italy 1016–1194. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 9781472839442.
  21. ^ Joranson, 369.
  22. ^ Joranson, 371.
  23. ^ Chalandon, 52. Norwich.
  24. ^ Joranson, 371, disputes the identification of the two Rudolfs.
  25. ^ Joranson, 371–373.
  26. ^ Joranson, 373. Leo calls him "Rodulfus Todinensis."
  27. ^ Joranson, 372.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Brown, R. Allen (1984). The Normans. Woodsbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer. pp. 102–103. ISBN 0-85115-359-3.
  29. ^ a b c The Normans p. 104
  30. ^ Brown, Gordon S. (2003) p. 42
  31. ^ a b The Normans pp. 104–106
  32. ^ a b c d The Normans p. 106
  33. ^ a b The Normans p. 108
  34. ^ a b c d e f The Normans p. 109
  35. ^ Chalandon, i, 124; Migne Pat. Lat., t. 143, p. 798
  36. ^ Skinner, 156 and n32. Both documents are preserved in the Codex Cajetanus [es]. Both have been ruled forgeries on the basis of erroneous dating clauses and the absence of Richard. Also, Jordan's reputed wife, Rapizza, appears to be make-believe.
  37. ^ Skinner, 156 and n32.
  38. ^ "La battaglia di Civitate" (in Italian). 19 June 2018. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  39. ^ "Il Molise in epoca normanna" (in Italian). Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  40. ^ "ROBERTO d'Altavilla, detto il Guiscardo, duca di Puglia, di Calabria e di Sicilia" (in Italian). Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  41. ^ "San Marco d'Alunzio" (in Italian). Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  42. ^ Rogers, p. 98.
  43. ^ "Comune di Trapani" (in Italian). Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  44. ^ "Ruggèro I conte di Sicilia" (in Italian). Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  45. ^ So who are the 'real' Maltese. September 13, 2014. from the original on 2016-03-12. The kind of Arabic used in the Maltese language is most likely derived from the language spoken by those that repopulated the island from Sicily in the early second millennium; it is known as Siculo-Arab. The Maltese are mostly descendants of these people.
  46. ^ a b Skinner, 203.
  47. ^ "L'EREDITA' NORMANNA" (in Italian). Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  48. ^ Skinner, 202.
  49. ^ a b c d Holmes 1988, p. 210
  50. ^ Shepard 1973, p.86.
  51. ^ a b McQueen, William (1986). "Relations Between the Normans and Byzantium 1071–1112". Byzantion. 56: 427–490. JSTOR 44161007.
  52. ^ Davis-Secord 2017, p. 214.
  53. ^ a b Skinner, 206–207.
  54. ^ Douglas, David. The Norman Fate, 1100–1154. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1976.
  55. ^ Houben, Hubert (2002). Roger II of Sicily: A Ruler between East and West. Cambridge University Press. pp. 7, 148. ISBN 0-521-65573-0.
  56. ^ Gravett and Nicolle, 132.
  57. ^ Gravett and Nicolle, 134, based on map.
  58. ^ Gravett and Nicolle, 135.
  59. ^ a b Gravett and Nicolle, 136.
  60. ^ Gravett and Nicolle, 137.

References edit

Primary edit

  • Leeds University Medieval History Texts Centre, with primary sources available in translation under the heading "The Norman Kingdom of Sicily"
  • Gaufredo Malaterra, De rebus gestis Rogerii Calabriae et Siciliae comitis et Roberti Guiscardi ducis fratris eius at The Latin Library
  • Gaufredo Malaterra (Geoffroi Malaterra), Histoire du Grand Comte Roger et de son frère Robert Guiscard, édité par Marie-Agnès Lucas-Avenel, Caen, Presses universitaires de Caen, 2016 (coll. Fontes et paginae). ISBN 9782841337439. Texte latin et traduction française consultable en ligne : Malaterra
  • William of Apulia, Gesta Roberti Wiscardi at The Latin Library
  • Lupus Protospatarius Barensis, Rerum in regno Neapolitano gestarum breve chronicon, ab anno sal. 860 vsque ad 1102 at The Latin Library
  • Van Houts, Elizabeth. The Normans in Europe. Manchester, 2000.
  • Amatus of Montecassino, L'Ystoire de li Normant

Secondary edit

  • Bachrach, Bernard S. "On the Origins of William the Conqueror's Horse Transports." Technology and Culture, Vol. 26, No. 3. (Jul., 1985), pp. 505–531.
  • Brown, Gordon S. (2003). The Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily. McFarland & Company Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-1472-7.
  • Brown, Paul. (2016). Mercenaries To Conquerors: Norman Warfare in the Eleventh and Twelfth-Century Mediterranean, Pen & Sword.
  • Chalandon, Ferdinand. Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie. Paris: 1907.
  • Davis-Secord, Sarah. (2017). "Sicily at the Center of the Mediterranean". Where Three Worlds Met: Sicily in the Early Medieval Mediterranean. Cornell University Press. ISBN 1501712594.
  • Loud, Graham Alexander. "Coinage, Wealth and Plunder in the Age of Robert Guiscard." English Historical Review, Vol. 114, No. 458. (Sep., 1999), pp. 815–843.
  • Loud, Graham Alexander. "Continuity and change in Norman Italy: the Campania during the eleventh and twelfth centuries." Journal of Medieval History, Vol. 22, No. 4 (December, 1996), pp. 313–343.
  • Loud, Graham Alexander. "How 'Norman' was the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy?" Nottingham Medieval Studies, Vol. 25 (1981), pp. 13–34.
  • Loud, Graham Alexander. The Age of Robert Guiscard: Southern Italy and the Norman Conquest. Essex, 2000.
  • France, John. "The Occasion of the Coming of the Normans to Italy." Journal of Medieval History, Vol. 17 (1991), pp. 185–205.
  • Gay, Jules. L'Italie méridionale et l'empire Byzantin: Livre II. Burt Franklin: New York, 1904.
  • Gravett, Christopher, and Nicolle, David. The Normans: Warrior Knights and their Castles. Osprey Publishing: Oxford, 2006.
  • Holmes, George. (1988). The Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval Europe. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192854356.
  • Richard Holmes (1988). The World Atlas of Warfare: Military Innovations That Changed the Course of History. Middlesex: Penguin. ISBN 0-670-81967-0.
  • Houben, Hubert (translated by Graham A. Loud and Diane Milburn). Roger II of Sicily: Ruler between East and West. Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  • Jamison, Evelyn. "The Norman Administration of Apulia and Capua, more especially under Roger II and William I". Papers of the British School at Rome, VI (1917), pp. 265–270.
  • Joranson, Einar. "The Inception of the Career of the Normans in Italy: Legend and History." Speculum, Vol. 23, No. 3. (Jul., 1948), pp. 353–396.
  • Matthew, Donald. The Norman Kingdom of Sicily. Cambridge University Press, 1992.
  • Norwich, John Julius. The Normans in the South 1016–1130. London: Longman, 1967.
  • Norwich, John Julius. The Kingdom in the Sun 1130–1194. London: Longman, 1970.
  • Rogers, Randall (1997). Latin Siege Warfare in the Twelfth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820689-5.
  • Shepard, Jonathan. (1973). "The English and Byzantium: A Study of Their Role in the Byzantine Army in the Later Eleventh Century". Traditio, Vol. 29. pp. 53–92.
  • Skinner, Patricia. Family Power in Southern Italy: The Duchy of Gaeta and its Neighbours, 850-1139. Cambridge University Press: 1995.
  • Theotokis, Georgios. (2014). The Norman Campaigns in the Balkans, 1081-1108, Boydell & Brewer.
  • Theotokis, Georgios, ed. (2020). Warfare in the Norman Mediterranean. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell and Brewer. ISBN 9781783275212.

External links edit

  • , by the European Commission
  • Norman mercenaries invaded Croatia and captured King Petar Krešimir IV (the book "Western Balkans – History and Movements of People", published by Marshall Cavendish Corporation, Tarrytown, NY)

norman, conquest, southern, italy, lasted, from, 1194, involving, many, battles, independent, conquerors, norman, kingdom, sicily, green, 1154, upon, death, roger, 1130, territories, southern, italy, united, kingdom, sicily, which, included, island, sicily, so. The Norman conquest of southern Italy lasted from 999 to 1194 involving many battles and independent conquerors The Norman Kingdom of Sicily in green in 1154 upon the death of Roger II In 1130 the territories in southern Italy united as the Kingdom of Sicily which included the island of Sicily the southern third of the Italian Peninsula except Benevento which was briefly held twice the archipelago of Malta and parts of North Africa Itinerant Norman forces arrived in southern Italy as mercenaries in the service of Lombard and Byzantine factions communicating swiftly back home news about opportunities in the Mediterranean 1 2 These groups gathered in several places establishing fiefdoms and states of their own uniting and elevating their status to de facto independence within 50 years of their arrival 2 Unlike the Norman Conquest of England 1066 which took a few years after one decisive battle the conquest of southern Italy was the product of decades and a number of battles few decisive Many territories were conquered independently and only later were unified into a single state Compared to the conquest of England it was unplanned and disorganised but equally complete Contents 1 Pre Norman Viking activity in Italy 2 Arrival of the Normans in Italy 3 Lombard revolt 1009 1022 4 Mercenary service 1022 1046 5 County of Melfi 1046 1059 6 County of Aversa 1049 1098 7 Conquest of the Abruzzo 1053 1105 8 Conquest of Sicily 1061 1091 9 Conquest of Amalfi and Salerno 1073 1077 10 Byzantine Norman wars 1059 1085 11 Conquest of Naples 1077 1139 12 Kingdom of Sicily 1130 1198 13 Encastellation 14 See also 15 Citations 16 References 16 1 Primary 16 2 Secondary 17 External linksPre Norman Viking activity in Italy editThere is little evidence for Viking activity in Italy as a precursor to the arrival of the Normans in 999 but some raiding is recorded Ermentarius of Noirmoutier and the Annales Bertiniani provide contemporary evidence for Vikings based in Frankia France proceeding to Iberia and then to Sicily around 860 3 In 860 according to an account by the Norman monk Dudo of Saint Quentin a Viking fleet probably under Bjorn Ironside and Hastein landed in Sicily conquering it 4 Many Norsemen fought as mercenaries in Southern Italy including the Varangian Guard led by Harald Hardrada who later became king of Norway who conquered Sicily between 1038 and 1040 with the help of Norman mercenaries under William de Hauteville who won his nickname Iron Arm by defeating the emir of Syracuse in single combat and a Lombard contingent led by Arduin 5 6 The Varangians were first used as mercenaries in Italy against the Arabs in 936 7 Runestones were raised in Sweden in memory of warriors who died in Langbardaland Land of the Lombards the Old Norse name for southern Italy 8 Later several Anglo Danish and Norwegian nobles participated in the Norman conquest of southern Italy like Edgar the AEtheling who left England in 1086 9 and Jarl Erling Skakke who won his nickname Skakke meaning bent head after a battle against Arabs in Sicily 10 On the other hand many Anglo Danish rebels fleeing William the Conqueror joined the Byzantines in their struggle against the Robert Guiscard duke of Apulia in Southern Italy 11 Arrival of the Normans in Italy edit nbsp Map of Italy at the arrival of the Normans who eventually conquered Sicily and all the territory on the mainland south of the Holy Roman Empire the bold line as well as the southern regions of the Papal States and the Duchy of Spoleto The earliest reported date of the arrival of Norman knights in southern Italy is 999 although it may be assumed that they had visited before then In that year according to some traditional sources of uncertain origin Norman pilgrims returning from the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem via Apulia stayed with Prince Guaimar III in Salerno The city and its environs were attacked by Saracens from Africa demanding payment of an overdue annual tribute While Guaimar began to collect the tribute the Normans ridiculed him and his Lombard subjects for cowardice and they assaulted their besiegers The Saracens fled Booty was confiscated and a grateful Guaimar asked the Normans to stay They refused but promised to bring his rich gifts to their compatriots in Normandy and tell them about possibly lucrative military service in Salerno Some sources have Guaimar sending emissaries to Normandy to bring back knights and this account of the arrival of the Normans is sometimes known as the Salerno or Salernitan tradition 12 13 The Salerno tradition was first recorded by Amatus of Montecassino in his Ystoire de li Normant between 1071 and 1086 13 Much of this information was borrowed from Amatus by Peter the Deacon for his continuation of the Chronicon Monasterii Casinensis of Leo of Ostia written during the early 12th century Beginning with the Annales Ecclesiastici of Baronius in the 17th century the Salernitan story became the accepted history 14 Although its factual accuracy was questioned periodically during the following centuries it has been accepted with some modifications by most scholars since 15 Another historical account of the arrival of the first Normans in Italy the Gargano tradition appears in primary chronicles without reference to any previous Norman presence 12 According to this account Norman pilgrims at the shrine to Michael the Archangel at Monte Gargano in 1016 met the Lombard Melus of Bari who persuaded them to join him in an attack on the Byzantine government of Apulia As with the Salerno tradition there are two primary sources for the Gargano story the Gesta Roberti Wiscardi of William of Apulia dated 1088 1110 and the Chronica monasterii S Bartholomaei de Carpineto of a monk named Alexander written about a century later and based on William s work 16 Some scholars have combined the Salerno and Gargano tales and John Julius Norwich suggested that the meeting between Melus and the Normans had been arranged by Guaimar 17 Melus had been in Salerno just before his visit to Monte Gargano Another story involves the exile of a group of brothers from the Drengot family One of the brothers Osmund according to Orderic Vitalis or Gilbert according to Amatus and Peter the Deacon murdered William Repostel Repostellus in the presence of Robert I Duke of Normandy after Repostel allegedly boasted about dishonouring his murderer s daughter Threatened with death the Drengot brother fled with his siblings to Rome and one of the brothers had an audience with the pope before joining Melus Melo of Bari Amatus dates the story to after 1027 and does not mention the pope According to him Gilbert s brothers were Osmund Ranulf Asclettin and Ludolf Rudolf according to Peter 18 Between 1016 and 1024 in a fragmented political context the Lombard County of Ariano it was usurped by a group of Norman knights headed by Gilbert and hired by Melus The County which replaced the pre existing chamberlainship is considered to be the first political body established by the Normans in the South of Italy 19 20 Repostel s murder is dated by all the chronicles to the reign of Robert the Magnificent and after 1027 although some scholars believe Robert was a scribal error for Richard Richard II of Normandy who was duke in 1017 21 The earlier date is necessary if the emigration of the first Normans was connected to the Drengots and the murder of William Repostel In the Histories of Ralph Glaber Rodulfus leaves Normandy after displeasing Count Richard Richard II 22 The sources disagree about which brother was the leader on the southern trip Orderic and William of Jumieges in the latter s Gesta Normannorum Ducum name Osmund Glaber names Rudolph and Leo Amatus and Adhemar of Chabannes name Gilbert According to most southern Italian sources the leader of the Norman contingent at the Battle of Cannae in 1018 was Gilbert 23 If Rudolf is identified with the Rudolf of Amatus history as a Drengot brother he may have been the leader at Cannae 24 A modern hypothesis concerning the Norman arrival in the Mezzogiorno concerns the chronicles of Glaber Adhemar and Leo not Peter s continuation All three chronicles indicate that Normans either a group of 40 or a much larger force of around 250 under Rodulfus Rudolf fleeing Richard II came to Pope Benedict VIII of Rome The pope sent them to Salerno or Capua to seek mercenary employment against the Byzantines because of the latter s invasion of papal Beneventan territory 25 There they met the Beneventan primates leading men Landulf V of Benevento Pandulf IV of Capua possibly Guaimar III of Salerno and Melus of Bari According to Leo s chronicle Rudolf was Ralph of Tosni 18 26 If the first confirmed Norman military actions in the south involved Melus mercenaries against the Byzantines in May 1017 the Normans probably left Normandy between January and April 27 Lombard revolt 1009 1022 edit nbsp The imprisonment of Pandulf IV of Capua after Emperor Henry II s 1022 campaign On 9 May 1009 an insurrection erupted in Bari against the Catapanate of Italy the regional Byzantine authority based there Led by Melus a local Lombard the revolt quickly spread to other cities Late that year or early in 1010 the katepano John Curcuas was killed in battle In March 1010 his successor Basil Mesardonites disembarked with reinforcements and besieged the rebels in the city The Byzantine citizens negotiated with Basil and forced the Lombard leaders Melus and his brother in law Dattus to flee Basil entered the city on 11 June 1011 reestablishing Byzantine authority He did not follow his victory with severe sanctions only sending Melus family including his son Argyrus to Constantinople Basil died in 1016 after years of peace in southern Italy Leo Tornikios Kontoleon arrived as Basil s successor in May of that year After Basil s death Melus revolted again this time he used a newly arrived band of Normans sent by Pope Benedict who met him with or without Guaimar s aid at Monte Gargano Tornikios sent an army led by Leo Passianos against the Lombard Norman coalition Passianos and Melus met on the Fortore at Arenula the battle was either indecisive William of Apulia or a victory for Melus Leo of Ostia and Amatus Tornikios then took command leading his forces into a second encounter near Civita 28 This second battle was a victory for Melus although Lupus Protospatharius and the anonymous chronicler of Bari recorded a defeat 28 A third battle a decisive victory for Melus took place at Vaccaricia 28 the region from the Fortore to Trani was in his hands and in September Tornikios was replaced by Basil Boioannes who arrived in December According to Amatus there were five consecutive Lombard and Norman victories by October 1018 28 At Boioannes request a detachment of the elite Varangian Guard was sent to Italy to fight the Normans The armies met at the Ofanto near Cannae the site of Hannibal s victory over the Romans in 216 BC and the Battle of Cannae was a decisive Byzantine victory 28 Amatus wrote that only ten Normans survived from a contingent of 250 28 After the battle Ranulf Drengot one of the Norman survivors was elected leader of their company 28 Boioannes protected his gains by building a fortress at the Apennine pass guarding the entrance to the Apulian plain In 1019 Troia as the fortress was known was garrisoned by Boioannes Norman troops an indication of Norman willingness to fight on either side With Norman mercenaries on both sides they would obtain good terms for the release of their brethren from their captors regardless of outcome 28 Alarmed by the shift in momentum in the south Pope Benedict who may have initiated Norman involvement in the war went north in 1020 to Bamberg to confer with Holy Roman Emperor Henry II Although the emperor took no immediate action events the following year persuaded him to intervene Boioannes allied with Pandulf of Capua marched on Dattus who was garrisoning a tower in the territory of the Duchy of Gaeta with papal troops Dattus was captured and on 15 June 1021 received the traditional Roman poena cullei he was tied up in a sack with a monkey a rooster and a snake and thrown into the sea contradictory In 1022 a large imperial army marched south in three detachments under Henry II Pilgrim of Cologne and Poppo of Aquileia to attack Troia Although Troia did not fall the Lombard princes were allied with the Empire and Pandulf removed to a German prison this ended the Lombard revolt Mercenary service 1022 1046 editIn 1024 Norman mercenaries under Ranulf Drengot were in the service of Guaimar III when he and Pandulf IV besieged Pandulf V in Capua In 1026 after an 18 month siege Capua surrendered and Pandulf IV was reinstated as prince During the next few years Ranulf would attach himself to Pandulf but in 1029 he joined Sergius IV of Naples whom Pandulf expelled from Naples in 1027 probably with Ranulf s assistance In 1029 Ranulf and Sergius recaptured Naples In early 1030 Sergius gave Ranulf the County of Aversa as a fief 28 that seigniory was long considered to be the first Norman lordship in southern Italy although this primacy is currently attributed to the county of Ariano it which was officially recognized by the Emperor Henry II since 1022 20 Sergius also gave his sister the widow of the duke of Gaeta in marriage to Ranulf 28 In 1034 however Sergius sister died and Ranulf returned to Pandulf According to Amatus For the Normans never desired any of the Lombards to win a decisive victory in case this should be to their disadvantage But now supporting the one and then aiding the other they prevented anyone being completely ruined Norman reinforcements and local miscreants who found a welcome in Ranulf s camp with no questions asked swelled Ranulf s numbers 28 There Amatus observed that the Norman language and customs welded a disparate group into the semblance of a nation In 1035 the same year William the Conqueror would become Duke of Normandy Tancred of Hauteville s three eldest sons William Iron Arm Drogo and Humphrey arrived in Aversa from Normandy 29 In 1037 or the summer of 1038 28 sources differ Norman influence was further solidified when Emperor Conrad II deposed Pandulf and invested Ranulf as Count of Aversa In 1038 Ranulf invaded Capua expanding his polity into one of the largest in southern Italy 28 In 1038 Byzantine Emperor Michael IV launched a military campaign into Muslim Sicily with General George Maniaches leading the Christian army against the Saracens The future king of Norway Harald Hardrada commanded the Varangian Guard in the expedition and Michael called on Guaimar IV of Salerno and other Lombard lords to provide additional troops for the campaign Guiamar sent 300 Norman knights from Aversa including the three Hauteville brothers who would achieve renown for their prowess in battle William of Hauteville became known as William Bras de Fer William Iron Arm for single handedly killing the emir of Syracuse during that city s siege The Norman contingent would leave before the campaign s end due to the inadequate distribution of Saracen loot 29 After the assassination of Catapan Nikephoros Dokeianos at Ascoli in 1040 the Normans elected Atenulf brother of Pandulf III of Benevento their leader On 16 March 1041 near Venosa on the Olivento the Norman army tried to negotiate with Catapan Michael Dokeianos although they failed they still defeated the Byzantine army in the Battle of Olivento On 4 May 1041 the Norman army led by William Iron Arm defeated the Byzantines again in the Battle of Montemaggiore near Cannae avenging the Norman defeat in the 1018 Battle of Cannae 29 Although the catapan summoned a large Varangian force from Bari the battle was a rout many of Michael s soldiers drowned in the Ofanto while retreating 30 On 3 September 1041 at the Battle of Montepeloso the Normans nominally under Arduin and Atenulf defeated Byzantine catepan Exaugustus Boioannes and brought him to Benevento Around that time Guaimar IV of Salerno began to attract the Normans In February 1042 Atenulf negotiated the ransom of Exaugustus and then fled with the ransom money to Byzantine territory He was replaced by Argyrus who was bribed to defect to the Byzantines after a few early victories The revolt originally Lombard had become Norman in character and leadership In September 1042 the three principal Norman groups held a council in Melfi which included Ranulf Drengot Guaimar IV and William Iron Arm William and the other leaders petitioned Guaimar to recognize their conquests and William was acknowledged as the Norman leader in Apula which included Melfi and the Norman garrison at Troia He received the title of Count of Apulia from Guiamar and like Ranulf was his vassal Guaimar proclaimed himself Duke of Apulia and Calabria although he was never formally invested as such by the Holy Roman Emperor William was married to Guida daughter of Guy Duke of Sorrento and Guaimar s niece strengthening the alliance between the Normans and Guaimar 31 At Melfi in 1043 Guaimar divided the region except for Melfi itself which was to be governed on a republican model into twelve baronies for the Norman leaders William received Ascoli Asclettin Drengot received Acerenza Tristan received Montepeloso Hugh Tubœuf received Monopoli Peter received Trani Drogo of Hauteville received Venosa and Ranulf Drengot now the independent Duke of Gaeta received Siponto and Monte Gargano 31 During their reign William and Guaimar began the conquest of Calabria in 1044 and built the castle of Stridula near Squillace William was less successful in Apulia where he was defeated in 1045 near Taranto by Argyrus although his brother Drogo conquered Bovino At William s death the period of Norman mercenary service ended with the rise of two Norman principalities owing nominal allegiance to the Holy Roman Empire the County of Aversa later the Principality of Capua and the County of Apulia later the Duchy of Apulia County of Melfi 1046 1059 edit nbsp The stone castle at Melfi was constructed by the Normans where no fortress had previously stood The present castle includes additions to a simple rectangular Norman keep In 1046 Drogo entered Apulia and defeated the catepan Eustathios Palatinos near Taranto while his brother Humphrey forced Bari to conclude a treaty with the Normans Also that year Richard Drengot arrived with 40 knights from Normandy and Robert Guiscard Hauteville arrived with other Norman immigrants 32 In 1047 Guaimar who had supported Drogo s succession and the establishment of a Norman dynasty in the south gave him his daughter Gaitelgrima in marriage Emperor Henry III confirmed the county of Aversa in its fidelity to him and made Drogo his vassal granting him the title dux et magister Italiae comesque Normannorum totius Apuliae et Calabriae duke and master of Italy and count of the Normans of all Apulia and Calabria the first legitimate title for the Normans of Melfi 32 Henry did not confirm the other titles given during the 1042 council he demoted Guiamar to prince of Salerno and Capua was bestowed upon Pandulf IV for the third and final time 32 Henry whose wife Agnes had been mistreated by the Beneventans authorised Drogo to conquer Benevento for the imperial crown he did so in 1053 In 1048 Drogo commanded an expedition into Calabria via the valley of Crati near Cosenza He distributed the conquered territories in Calabria and gave his brother Robert Guiscard a castle at Scribla to guard the entrance to the recently conquered territory Guiscard would later abandon it for a castle at San Marco Argentano 32 Shortly thereafter he married the daughter of another Norman lord who gave him 200 knights furthering his military campaign in Calabria 33 In 1051 Drogo was assassinated by Byzantine conspirators 33 and was succeeded by his brother Humphrey 34 Humphrey s first challenge was to deal with papal opposition to the Normans 34 The Norman knights treatment of the Lombards during Drogo s reign triggered more revolts 34 During the unrest the Italo Norman John Abbot of Fecamp was accosted on his return trip from Rome 34 he wrote to Pope Leo IX The hatred of the Italians for the Normans has now reached such a pitch that it is almost impossible for any Norman albeit a pilgrim to journey in the towns of Italy without being assailed abducted robbed beaten thrown in irons even if fortunate enough not to die in a prison 35 The pope and his supporters including the future Gregory VII called for an army to oust the Normans from Italy 34 nbsp Battle plan of Civitate Normans in red papal coalition in blue On 18 June 1053 Humphrey led the Norman armies against the combined forces of the pope and the Holy Roman Empire At the Battle of Civitate the Normans destroyed the papal army and captured Leo IX imprisoning him in Benevento which had surrendered In 1054 Peter II who succeeded Peter I in the region of Trani captured the city from the Byzantines Humphrey died in 1057 he was succeeded by Guiscard who ended his loyalty to the Empire and made himself a papal vassal in return for the title of duke 34 County of Aversa 1049 1098 editDuring the 1050s and 1060s there were two centres of Norman power in southern Italy one at Melfi under the Hautevilles and another at Aversa under the Drengots Richard Drengot became ruler of the County of Aversa in 1049 beginning a policy of territorial aggrandisement to compete with his Hauteville rivals At first he warred with his Lombard neighbours who included Pandulf VI of Capua Atenulf I of Gaeta and Gisulf II of Salerno Richard pushed back the borders of Salerno until there was little left of the once great principality but the city of Salerno itself Although he tried to extend his influence peacefully by betrothing his daughter to the oldest son of Atenulf of Gaeta when the boy died before the marriage he still demanded the Lombard dower from the boy s parents When the duke refused Richard seized Aquino one of Gaeta s few remaining fiefs in 1058 However the chronology of his conquest of Gaeta is confusing Documents from 1058 and 1060 refer to Jordan Richard s oldest son as Duke of Gaeta but these have been disputed as forgeries since Atenulf was still duke when he died in 1062 36 After Atenulf s death Richard and Jordan took over the rule of the duchy and allowed Atenulf s heir Atenulf II to rule as their subject until 1064 when Gaeta was fully incorporated into the Drengot principality Richard and Jordan appointed puppet usually Norman dukes 37 When the prince of Capua died in 1057 Richard immediately besieged the comune This chronology is also unclear Pandulf was succeeded at Capua by his brother Landulf VIII who is recorded as prince until 12 May 1062 Richard and Jordan took the princely title in 1058 but apparently allowed Landulf to continue ruling beneath them for at least four years more In 1059 Pope Nicholas II convened a synod at Melfi confirming Richard as Count of Aversa and Prince of Capua and Richard swore allegiance to the papacy for his holdings The Drengots then made Capua their headquarters for ruling Aversa and Gaeta Richard and Jordan expanded their new Gaetan and Capuan territories northwards toward Latium into the Papal States In 1066 Richard marched on Rome but was easily repelled Jordan s tenure as Richard s successor marked an alliance with the papacy which Richard had attempted and the conquests of Capua ceased When Jordan died in 1090 his young son Richard II and his regents were unable to hold Capua They were forced to flee the city by a Lombard Lando who ruled it with popular support until he was forced out by the combined Hauteville forces in the siege of Capua in 1098 this ended Lombard rule in Italy Conquest of the Abruzzo 1053 1105 editIn 1077 the last Lombard prince of Benevento died and in 1078 the pope appointed Robert Guiscard to succeed him In 1081 however Guiscard relinquished Benevento By then the principality comprised little more than Benevento and its environs it had been reduced in size by Norman conquests during the previous decades especially after the Battle of Civitate and after 1078 38 At Ceprano in June 1080 the pope again gave Guiscard control of Benevento an attempt to halt Norman incursions into it and associated territory in the Abruzzi which Guiscard s relatives had been appropriating After the Battle of Civitate the Normans began the conquest of the Adriatic coast of Benevento Geoffrey of Hauteville a brother of the Hauteville counts of Melfi conquered the Lombard county of Larino and stormed the castle Morrone in the region of Samnium Guillamatum Geoffrey s son Robert united these conquests into a county Loritello in 1061 and continued his expansion into Lombard Abruzzo He conquered the Lombard county of Teate modern Chieti and besieged Ortona which became the goal of Norman efforts in that region Loritello soon reached as far north as the Pescara and the Papal States In 1078 Robert allied with Jordan of Capua to ravage the Papal Abruzzo but after a 1080 treaty with Pope Gregory VII they were obligated to respect papal territory In 1100 Robert of Loritello extended his principality across the Fortore taking Bovino and Dragonara 39 The conquest of the Molise is poorly documented Boiano the principal town may have been conquered the year before the Battle of Civitate by Robert Guiscard who had encircled the Matese massif The county of Boiano was bestowed on Rudolf of Moulins His grandson Hugh expanded it eastward occupying Toro and San Giovanni in Galdo and westward annexing the Capuan counties of Venafro Pietrabbondante and Trivento in 1105 Conquest of Sicily 1061 1091 editSee also Emirate of Sicily County of Sicily and Norman invasion of Malta nbsp Roger I of Sicily at the 1063 Battle of Cerami where he was victorious over 35 000 Saracens according to Goffredo Malaterra After roughly a century of Arab control following the Saracen defeat of Byzantine forces in 965 Sicily was inhabited by a mix of Christians Arab Muslims and Muslim converts at the time of its conquest by the Normans It had originally been under the rule of the Aghlabids and then the Fatimids but in 948 the Kalbids wrested control of the island and held it until 1053 During the 1010s and 1020s a series of succession crises paved the way for interference by the Zirids of Ifriqiya Sicily was wracked by turmoil as petty fiefdoms battled each other for supremacy Into this the Normans under Robert Guiscard and his younger brother Roger Bosso came intending to conquer the pope had conferred on Robert the title of Duke of Sicily 40 Robert and Roger first invaded Sicily in May 1061 crossing from Reggio di Calabria and besieging Messina for control of the strategically vital Strait of Messina Roger crossed the strait first landing unseen overnight and surprising the Saracen army in the morning When Robert s troops landed later that day they found themselves unopposed and Messina abandoned Robert immediately fortified the city and allied himself with the emir Ibn al Timnah against his rival Ibn al Hawas Robert Roger and at Timnah then marched into the centre of the island by way of Rometta which had remained loyal to at Timnah They passed through Frazzano and the Pianura di Maniace Plain of Maniakes encountering resistance to their assault of Centuripe Paterno fell quickly and Robert brought his army to Castrogiovanni modern Enna the strongest fortress in central Sicily Although the garrison was defeated the citadel did not fall and with winter approaching Robert returned to Apulia Before leaving he built a fortress at San Marco d Alunzio 41 Roger returned in late 1061 and captured Troina In June 1063 he defeated a Muslim army at the Battle of Cerami securing the Norman foothold on the island nbsp Roger I receiving the keys of Palermo in 1071 Robert returned in 1064 bypassing Castrogiovanni on his way to Palermo this campaign was eventually called off In 1068 Roger struck another defeat against the Muslims at the Battle of Misilmeri In August 1071 the Normans began a second and successful siege of Palermo The city of Palermo was entered by the Normans on 7 January 1072 and three days later the defenders of the inner city surrendered 42 Robert invested Roger as Count of Sicily under the suzerainty of the Duke of Apulia In a partition of the island with his brother Robert retained Palermo half of Messina and the largely Christian Val Demone leaving the rest including what was not yet conquered to Roger In 1077 Roger besieged Trapani one of the two remaining Saracen strongholds in the west of the island 43 His son Jordan led a sortie which surprised guards of the garrison s livestock With its food supply cut off the city soon surrendered In 1079 Taormina was besieged and in 1081 Jordan Robert de Sourval and Elias Cartomi conquered Catania a holding of the emir of Syracuse in another surprise attack Roger left Sicily in the summer of 1083 to assist his brother on the mainland Jordan whom he had left in charge revolted forcing him to return to Sicily and subjugate his son In 1085 he was finally able to undertake a systematic campaign On 22 May Roger approached Syracuse by sea while Jordan led a small cavalry detachment 25 kilometres 15 miles north of the city On 25 May the navies of the count and the emir engaged in the harbour where the latter was killed while Jordan s forces besieged the city The siege lasted throughout the summer but when the city capitulated in March 1086 only Noto was still under Saracen dominion In February 1091 Noto yielded as well and the conquest of Sicily was complete 44 nbsp The Palazzo dei Normanni was a 9th century Arab palace in Sicily converted by the Normans into their governing castle In 1091 Roger invaded Malta and subdued the walled city of Mdina He imposed taxes on the islands but allowed the Arab governors to continue their rule In 1127 Roger II abolished the Muslim government replacing it with Norman officials Under Norman rule the Arabic spoken by the Greek Christian islanders for centuries of Muslim domination became Maltese 45 Conquest of Amalfi and Salerno 1073 1077 editThe fall of Amalfi and Salerno to Robert Guiscard were influenced by his wife Sichelgaita Amalfi probably surrendered as a result of her negotiations 46 and Salerno fell when she stopped petitioning her husband on behalf of her brother the prince of Salerno The Amalfitans unsuccessfully subjected themselves to Prince Gisulf to avoid Norman suzerainty but the states whose histories had been joined since the 9th century ultimately came under Norman control By summer 1076 through piracy and raids Gisulf II of Salerno incited the Normans to destroy him that season under Richard of Capua and Robert Guiscard the Normans united to besiege Salerno Although Gisulf ordered his citizens to store two years worth of food he confiscated enough of it to starve his subjects On 13 December 1076 the city submitted the prince and his retainers retreated to the citadel which fell in May 1077 Although Gisulf s lands and relics were confiscated he remained at liberty The Principality of Salerno had already been reduced to little more than the capital city and its environs by previous wars with William of the Principate Roger of Sicily and Robert Guiscard 47 However the city was the most important in southern Italy and its capture was essential to the creation of a kingdom fifty years later In 1073 Sergius III of Amalfi died leaving the infant John III as his successor Desiring protection in unstable times the Amalfitans exiled the young duke and summoned Robert Guiscard that year 48 Amalfi however remained restless under Norman control Robert s successor Roger Borsa took control of Amalfi in 1089 after expelling Gisulf the deposed Prince of Salerno whom the citizens had installed with papal aid From 1092 to 1097 Amalfi did not recognise its Norman suzerain apparently seeking Byzantine help 46 Marinus Sebaste was installed as ruler in 1096 Robert s son Bohemond and his brother Roger of Sicily attacked Amalfi in 1097 but were repulsed During this siege the Normans began to be drawn by the First Crusade Marinus was defeated after Amalfitan noblemen defected to the Norman side and betrayed him in 1101 Amalfi revolted again in 1130 when Roger II of Sicily demanded its loyalty It was finally subdued in 1131 when Admiral John marched on it by land and George of Antioch blockaded it by sea establishing a base on Capri Byzantine Norman wars 1059 1085 editMain article Byzantine Norman wars nbsp Norman progress in Sicily during Robert s expeditions to the Balkans Capua Apulia Calabria and the County of Sicily are Norman The Emirate of Sicily the Duchy of Naples and lands in the Abruzzo in the southern Duchy of Spoleto are not yet conquered The Normans initial military involvement in southern Italy was on the side of the Lombards against the Byzantines Eventually some Normans including the powerful de Hauteville brothers served in the army of George Maniakes during the attempted Byzantine reconquest of Sicily only to turn against their employers when the emirs proved difficult to conquer 49 50 By 1030 Rainulf became count of Aversa marking the start of permanent Norman settlement in Italy 49 In 1042 William de Hauteville was made a count taking Lombard prince Guaimar IV of Salerno as his liege 49 To further strengthen ties and legitimacy Robert Guiscard also married Lombard Princess Sikelgaita in 1058 49 Following the death of Guaimar the Normans were increasingly independent actors on the south Italian scene which brought them into direct conflict with Byzantium During the time that the Normans had conquered southern Italy the Byzantine Empire was in a state of internal decay the administration of the Empire had been wrecked the efficient government institutions that provided Basil II with a quarter of a million troops and adequate resources by taxation had collapsed within a period of three decades Attempts by Isaac I Komnenos and Romanos IV Diogenes to reverse the situation proved unfruitful The premature death of the former and the overthrow of the latter led to further collapse as the Normans consolidated their conquest of Sicily and Italy Reggio Calabria the capital of the tagma of Calabria was captured by Robert Guiscard in 1060 At the time the Byzantines held a few coastal towns in Apulia including Bari the capital of the catepanate of Italy In 1067 68 they gave financial support to a rebellion against Guiscard In 1068 the Normans besieged Otranto in the same year they began the siege of Bari itself After defeating the Byzantines in a series of battles in Apulia and after two major attempts to relieve the city had failed the city Bari surrendered in April 1071 ending the Byzantine presence in southern Italy 51 In 1079 80 the Byzantines again gave their support to a rebellion against Guiscard This support came largely in the form of financing smaller Norman mercenary groups to assist in the rebellion 51 Over a thirty year period 1061 1091 Norman factions also completed the initial Byzantine attempt to retake Sicily However it would not be until 1130 that both Sicily and southern Italy were united into one kingdom formalized by Roger II of Sicily 52 Conquest of Naples 1077 1139 editThe Duchy of Naples nominally a Byzantine possession was one of the last southern Italian states to be attacked by the Normans Since Sergius IV asked for Ranulf Drengot s help during the 1020s with brief exceptions the dukes of Naples were allied with the Normans of Aversa and Capua Beginning in 1077 the incorporation of Naples into the Hauteville state took sixty years to complete In summer 1074 hostilities flared up between Richard of Capua and Robert Guiscard Sergius V of Naples allied with the latter making his city a supply centre for Guiscard s troops This pitted him against Richard who was supported by Gregory VII In June Richard briefly besieged Naples Richard Robert and Sergius soon began negotiations with Gregory mediated by Desiderius of Montecassino In 1077 Naples was again besieged by Richard of Capua with a naval blockade by Robert Guiscard Richard died during the siege in 1078 after the deathbed lifting of his excommunication The siege was ended by his successor Jordan to insinuate himself with the papacy which had made peace with Duke Sergius In 1130 the Antipope Anacletus II crowned Roger II of Sicily king and declared the fief of Naples part of his kingdom 53 In 1131 Roger demanded from the citizens of Amalfi the defences of their city and the keys to their castle When they refused Sergius VII of Naples initially prepared to aid them with a fleet George of Antioch blockaded Naples port with a large armada and Sergius cowed by the suppression of the Amalfitans submitted to Roger According to the chronicler Alexander of Telese Naples which since Roman times had hardly ever been conquered by the sword now submitted to Roger on the strength of a mere report i e Amalfi s fall In 1134 Sergius supported the rebellion of Robert II of Capua and Ranulf II of Alife but avoided direct confrontation with Roger and paid homage to the king after the fall of Capua On 24 April 1135 a Pisan fleet with 8 000 reinforcements captained by Robert of Capua anchored in Naples and the duchy was the centre of the revolt against Roger II for the next two years Sergius Robert and Ranulf were besieged in Naples until the spring of 1136 by which time starvation was widespread According to historian and rebel sympathiser Falco of Benevento Sergius and the Neapolitans did not relent preferring to die of hunger than to bare their necks to the power of an evil king The naval blockade s failure to prevent Sergius and Robert from twice bringing supplies from Pisa exemplified Roger s inadequacy When a relief army commanded by Emperor Lothair II marched to Naples the siege was lifted Although the emperor left the following year in return for a pardon Sergius re submitted to Roger in Norman feudal homage On 30 October 1137 the last Duke of Naples died in the king s service at the Battle of Rignano The defeat at Rignano enabled the Norman conquest of Naples since Sergius died without heir and the Neapolitan nobility could not reach a succession agreement However it was two years between Sergius death and Naples incorporation by Sicily The nobility apparently ruled during the interim which may have been the final period of Neapolitan independence from Norman rule 53 During this period Norman landowners first appear in Naples although the Pisans enemies of Roger II retained their alliance with the duchy and Pisa may have sustained its independence until 1139 That year Roger absorbed Naples into his kingdom Pope Innocent II and the Neapolitan nobility acknowledged Roger s young son Alfonso of Hauteville as duke Kingdom of Sicily 1130 1198 editMain article Kingdom of Sicily nbsp Woodcut illustration of Constance of Sicily her husband Emperor Henry VI and her son Frederick II Although the conquest of Sicily was primarily military Robert and Roger also signed treaties with the Muslims to obtain land Hindered by Sicily s hilly terrain and a relatively small army the brothers sought influential worn down Muslim leaders to sign the treaties offering peace and protection for land and titles Because Sicily was conquered by a unified command Roger s authority was not challenged by other conquerors and he maintained power over his Greek Arab Lombard and Norman subjects Latin Christianity was introduced to the island and its ecclesiastical organisation was overseen by Roger with papal approval Sees were established at Palermo with metropolitan authority Syracuse and Agrigento After its elevation to a Kingdom of Sicily in 1130 Sicily became the centre of Norman power with Palermo as capital The Kingdom was created on Christmas Day 1130 by Roger II of Sicily with the agreement of Pope Innocent II who united the lands Roger had inherited from his father Roger I of Sicily 54 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 55 With the invasion of Henry VI Holy Roman Emperor on behalf of his wife Constance the daughter of Roger II eventually prevailed the kingdom fell in 1194 to the House of Hohenstaufen Through Constance the Hauteville blood was passed to Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor who succeeded as King of Sicily in 1198 Encastellation editSee also Norman Arab Byzantine culture nbsp The early Norman castle at Adrano The Norman conquest of southern Italy began an infusion of Romanesque specifically Norman architecture Some castles were expanded on existing Lombard Byzantine or Arab structures while others were original constructions Latin cathedrals were built in lands recently converted from Byzantine Christianity or Islam in a Romanesque style influenced by Byzantine and Islamic designs Public buildings such as palaces were common in larger cities notably Palermo these structures in particular demonstrate the influence of Siculo Norman culture The Normans rapidly began the construction expansion and renovation of castles in southern Italy By the end of the Norman period most wooden castles were converted to stone After the Lombard castle at Melfi which was conquered by the Normans early and augmented with a surviving rectangular donjon late in the 11th century Calabria was the first province affected by Norman encastellation In 1046 William Iron Arm began construction of Stridula a large castle near Squillace and by 1055 Robert Guiscard built three castles at Rossano on the site of a Byzantine fortress at Scribla the seat of his fief guarding the pass of the Val di Crati and at San Marco Argentano donjon built in 1051 near Cosenza 56 In 1058 Scalea was built on a seaside cliff Guiscard was a major castle builder after his accession to the Apulian countship building a castle at Gargano with pentagonal towers known as the Towers of Giants Later Henry Count of Monte Sant Angelo built a castle at nearby Castelpagano In the Molise the Normans built many fortresses into the naturally defensible terrain such as Santa Croce and Ferrante The region of a line running from Terracina to Termoli has the greatest density of Norman castles in Italy 57 Many sites were originally Samnite strongholds reused by the Romans and their successors the Normans called such a fortress a castellum vetus old castle Many Molisian castles have walls integrated into the mountains and ridges and much of the quickly erected masonry demonstrates that the Normans introduced the opus gallicum into the Molise 58 The encastellation of Sicily was begun at the behest of the native Greek inhabitants 59 In 1060 they asked Guiscard to construct a castle at Aluntium The first Norman building on Sicily San Marco d Alunzio named after Guiscard s first castle at Argentano in Calabria was erected its ruins survive Petralia Soprana was then built near Cefalu followed by a castle at Troina in 1071 in 1073 a castle was built at Mazara and another at Paterno 59 At Adrano or Aderno the Normans built a plain rectangular tower whose floor plan illustrates 11th century Norman design An outside stairway leads to the first storey entrance and the interior is divided lengthwise down the middle into a great hall on one side and two rooms a chapel and chamber on the other 60 See also edit nbsp Byzantine Empire portal Vikings Normans Byzantine Norman Wars First CrusadeCitations edit Brown Gordon S 2015 2003 Sicily The Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily Jefferson North Carolina McFarland pp 103 113 ISBN 978 0 7864 5127 2 LCCN 2002153822 a b Matthew Donald 2012 1992 Part I The Normans and the monarchy Southern Italy and the Normans before the creation of the monarchy The Norman Kingdom of Sicily Cambridge Medieval Textbooks Cambridge and New York City Cambridge University Press pp 9 19 doi 10 1017 CBO9781139167741 004 ISBN 9781139167741 Ann Christys Vikings in the South London Bloomsbury 2015 pp 59 60 Haywood John Northmen Head of Zeus Carr John Fighting Emperors of Byzantium Pen and Sword p 177 Hill Paul The Norman Commanders Masters of Warfare 911 1135 Pen and Sword p 18 Ullidtz Per 1016 The Danish Conquest of England BoD Books on Demand p 936 2 Runriket Taby Kyrka Archived 2008 06 04 at archive today an online article at Stockholm County Museum retrieved July 1 2007 Anglo Saxon Chronicles p 217 Florence of Worcester p 145 Orkneyinga Saga Anderson Joseph Edinburgh Edmonston and Douglas 1873 FHL microfilm 253063 p 134 139 144 145 149 151 163 193 Translation based on Chibnall ed Ecclesiastical History vol ii pp 203 205 a b Joranson 355 and n 19 a b Brown R Allen 1984 The Normans Woodsbridge Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer p 97 ISBN 0 85115 359 3 Joranson 356 Both Chalandon and Norwich provide a combined story based on the Salerno and Gargano traditions Houben p 8 presents the Salerno tradition as fact Joranson 358 Chalandon makes a similar connection between the traditions Joranson 367 finds such hypotheses unworkable a b Brown R Allen 1984 The Normans Woodsbridge Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer pp 97 98 ISBN 0 85115 359 3 Il Mezzogiorno agli inizi dell XI secolo Southern Italy at the beginning of 11th century European Center for Norman Studies in Italian Archived from the original on 2019 01 15 Retrieved 2017 10 14 a b Raffaele D Amato amp Andrea Salimbeti 2020 The Normans in Italy 1016 1194 Bloomsbury Publishing p 7 ISBN 9781472839442 Joranson 369 Joranson 371 Chalandon 52 Norwich Joranson 371 disputes the identification of the two Rudolfs Joranson 371 373 Joranson 373 Leo calls him Rodulfus Todinensis Joranson 372 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Brown R Allen 1984 The Normans Woodsbridge Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer pp 102 103 ISBN 0 85115 359 3 a b c The Normans p 104 Brown Gordon S 2003 p 42 a b The Normans pp 104 106 a b c d The Normans p 106 a b The Normans p 108 a b c d e f The Normans p 109 Chalandon i 124 Migne Pat Lat t 143 p 798 Skinner 156 and n32 Both documents are preserved in the Codex Cajetanus es Both have been ruled forgeries on the basis of erroneous dating clauses and the absence of Richard Also Jordan s reputed wife Rapizza appears to be make believe Skinner 156 and n32 La battaglia di Civitate in Italian 19 June 2018 Retrieved 28 August 2023 Il Molise in epoca normanna in Italian Retrieved 28 August 2023 ROBERTO d Altavilla detto il Guiscardo duca di Puglia di Calabria e di Sicilia in Italian Retrieved 28 August 2023 San Marco d Alunzio in Italian Retrieved 28 August 2023 Rogers p 98 Comune di Trapani in Italian Retrieved 28 August 2023 Ruggero I conte di Sicilia in Italian Retrieved 28 August 2023 So who are the real Maltese September 13 2014 Archived from the original on 2016 03 12 The kind of Arabic used in the Maltese language is most likely derived from the language spoken by those that repopulated the island from Sicily in the early second millennium it is known as Siculo Arab The Maltese are mostly descendants of these people a b Skinner 203 L EREDITA NORMANNA in Italian Retrieved 29 August 2023 Skinner 202 a b c d Holmes 1988 p 210 Shepard 1973 p 86 a b McQueen William 1986 Relations Between the Normans and Byzantium 1071 1112 Byzantion 56 427 490 JSTOR 44161007 Davis Secord 2017 p 214 a b Skinner 206 207 Douglas David The Norman Fate 1100 1154 Los Angeles University of California Press 1976 Houben Hubert 2002 Roger II of Sicily A Ruler between East and West Cambridge University Press pp 7 148 ISBN 0 521 65573 0 Gravett and Nicolle 132 Gravett and Nicolle 134 based on map Gravett and Nicolle 135 a b Gravett and Nicolle 136 Gravett and Nicolle 137 References editPrimary edit Leeds University Medieval History Texts Centre with primary sources available in translation under the heading The Norman Kingdom of Sicily Gaufredo Malaterra De rebus gestis Rogerii Calabriae et Siciliae comitis et Roberti Guiscardi ducis fratris eius at The Latin Library Gaufredo Malaterra Geoffroi Malaterra Histoire du Grand Comte Roger et de son frere Robert Guiscard edite par Marie Agnes Lucas Avenel Caen Presses universitaires de Caen 2016 coll Fontes et paginae ISBN 9782841337439 Texte latin et traduction francaise consultable en ligne Malaterra William of Apulia Gesta Roberti Wiscardi at The Latin Library Lupus Protospatarius Barensis Rerum in regno Neapolitano gestarum breve chronicon ab anno sal 860 vsque ad 1102 at The Latin Library Van Houts Elizabeth The Normans in Europe Manchester 2000 Amatus of Montecassino L Ystoire de li Normant Secondary edit Bachrach Bernard S On the Origins of William the Conqueror s Horse Transports Technology and Culture Vol 26 No 3 Jul 1985 pp 505 531 Brown Gordon S 2003 The Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily McFarland amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 7864 1472 7 Brown Paul 2016 Mercenaries To Conquerors Norman Warfare in the Eleventh and Twelfth Century Mediterranean Pen amp Sword Chalandon Ferdinand Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie Paris 1907 Davis Secord Sarah 2017 Sicily at the Center of the Mediterranean Where Three Worlds Met Sicily in the Early Medieval Mediterranean Cornell University Press ISBN 1501712594 Loud Graham Alexander Coinage Wealth and Plunder in the Age of Robert Guiscard English Historical Review Vol 114 No 458 Sep 1999 pp 815 843 Loud Graham Alexander Continuity and change in Norman Italy the Campania during the eleventh and twelfth centuries Journal of Medieval History Vol 22 No 4 December 1996 pp 313 343 Loud Graham Alexander How Norman was the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy Nottingham Medieval Studies Vol 25 1981 pp 13 34 Loud Graham Alexander The Age of Robert Guiscard Southern Italy and the Norman Conquest Essex 2000 France John The Occasion of the Coming of the Normans to Italy Journal of Medieval History Vol 17 1991 pp 185 205 Gay Jules L Italie meridionale et l empire Byzantin Livre II Burt Franklin New York 1904 Gravett Christopher and Nicolle David The Normans Warrior Knights and their Castles Osprey Publishing Oxford 2006 Holmes George 1988 The Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval Europe Oxford University Press ISBN 0192854356 Richard Holmes 1988 The World Atlas of Warfare Military Innovations That Changed the Course of History Middlesex Penguin ISBN 0 670 81967 0 Houben Hubert translated by Graham A Loud and Diane Milburn Roger II of Sicily Ruler between East and West Cambridge University Press 2002 Jamison Evelyn The Norman Administration of Apulia and Capua more especially under Roger II and William I Papers of the British School at Rome VI 1917 pp 265 270 Joranson Einar The Inception of the Career of the Normans in Italy Legend and History Speculum Vol 23 No 3 Jul 1948 pp 353 396 Matthew Donald The Norman Kingdom of Sicily Cambridge University Press 1992 Norwich John Julius The Normans in the South 1016 1130 London Longman 1967 Norwich John Julius The Kingdom in the Sun 1130 1194 London Longman 1970 Rogers Randall 1997 Latin Siege Warfare in the Twelfth Century Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820689 5 Shepard Jonathan 1973 The English and Byzantium A Study of Their Role in the Byzantine Army in the Later Eleventh Century Traditio Vol 29 pp 53 92 Skinner Patricia Family Power in Southern Italy The Duchy of Gaeta and its Neighbours 850 1139 Cambridge University Press 1995 Theotokis Georgios 2014 The Norman Campaigns in the Balkans 1081 1108 Boydell amp Brewer Theotokis Georgios ed 2020 Warfare in the Norman Mediterranean Woodbridge UK Boydell and Brewer ISBN 9781783275212 External links editThe Normans a European People by the European Commission Norman mercenaries invaded Croatia and captured King Petar Kresimir IV the book Western Balkans History and Movements of People published by Marshall Cavendish Corporation Tarrytown NY Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Norman conquest of southern Italy amp oldid 1218833398, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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