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Principality of Salerno

40°41′0″N 14°46′0″E / 40.68333°N 14.76667°E / 40.68333; 14.76667

Principality of Salerno
Principatus Salerni (Latin)
851–1077
Calvary cross potent motif was usually minted on coins by various princes
The Principality of Salerno, in red, during the reign of Peter in the 9th century.
CapitalSalerno
Official languagesLatin
GovernmentMonarchy
Prince 
• 840–851
Siconulf (first)
• 1052–1077
Gisulf II (last)
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Emperor Louis II ends a civil war in Benevento by decreeing that the duchy be split into two distinct principates - Benevento and Salerno
851
• The principality is under the rule of "foreigners"
978-983
• The city and principality
are conquered by the Normans
1077
CurrencyMonetazione di Salerno
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofItaly
Solidus of the Principality in the 9th century.

The Principality of Salerno (Latin: Principatus Salerni) was a medieval Southern Italian state, formed in 851 out of the Principality of Benevento after a decade-long civil war. It was centred on the port city of Salerno. Although it owed allegiance at its foundation to the Carolingian emperor, it was de facto independent throughout its history and alternated its allegiance between the Carolingians and their successors in the West and the Byzantine emperors in the east.[1]

History edit

Formation edit

In 839, the prince of Benevento, Sicard, died. Immediately, his chief army officer, Radelchis, seized power in Benevento and imprisoned Sicard's heir and brother, Siconulf, in Taranto. Amalfitan merchants rescued Siconulf from prison, and he was proclaimed prince in Salerno. A civil war erupted in the Italian Mezzogiorno. In 847, Emperor Lothair I had Guy I of Spoleto and Sergius I of Naples mediate a division of the great Lombard principality. In 851, Louis, King of Italy, divided the principality into two sections: one with its capital at Salerno and another with the original Benevento.[2]

Salerno consisted of Taranto, Cassano, Cosenza, Paestum, Conza, Potenza, Sarno, Cimitile (Nola), Capua, Teano, and Sora. It was a maritime power with numerous seaports, including Salerno itself, and controlled mostly the western half of the old duchy.[2]

The principality did not enjoy stability in its early years. In 851, Siconulf died and his son Sico was still a child. He was deposed and replaced by his regent, Peter, in 853, and Peter was succeeded that year by his son Adhemar. Adhemar's stormy princeship ended violently: a revolt deposed him, and Guaifer, the scion of a local family of note, the Dauferidi, had him blinded and imprisoned. Guaifer succeeded him in the princely office with the support of the people.[1]

Dauferidi edit

Guaifer stabilised the principality during his long reign of nineteen years. His successors reigned for similarly lengthy periods, and in a short time Salerno surpassed Benevento in greatness. During his reign, Capua made itself independent. Salerno was still technically a vassal of the Western emperor, but it was practically independent. The prince even allied himself with the Saracens. In 880, Guaifer was removed in a precedent-setting act by his son: Guaimar I forced him into a monastery and took up the reins of government. The chronicles of his reign describe him in despotic terms, and he does not seem to have been popular. He did reverse the alliance with the Saracens in favour of closer ties to the emperor, then Charles the Bald. In 887, however, he broke with the West and paid homage to the Byzantine Emperor, receiving the title of patricius. In 900 or 901, his son, Guaimar II, forced him into his own monastic foundation of San Massimo and began his reign.[3][4]

Guaimar II raised Salerno to greatness. He was a more religious prince than his father, who had been pious by the standards of the time. He introduced the Cluniac reforms to Salerno. He was also more inclined to war with the Muslims and took part in the famous Battle of the Garigliano in 915. In this he was the ally of the Byzantines, as he was throughout his reign, with the exception of a brief period in the 920s. He increased his prestige and influence through marriage alliances with the Beneventans and Capuans, and even entered into successful schemes against the Byzantine Campania, where he gained much ground. Guaimar further worked to stabilise his dynasty by altering the pattern of succession. He appointed his son Gisulf I as co-prince in 943, and Gisulf succeeded in 946.[5]

The succession was not uncontested from without. The allied forces of John III of Naples and Landulf II of Benevento invaded, but an alliance with the Amalfitans saved Gisulf's reign. Gisulf like his father remained with the Greeks, even warring with the pope. He concluded a treaty with the latter and came to the defence of Pandulf Ironhead, the prince of Benevento and Capua. Though his neighbours constantly seemed to be opposing him, the Ironhead reinstalled him after an insurrection of 974, which had been supported by his brother and the neighbouring Greek cities. Gisulf did not have any children at his death, and Salerno passed into the wider realm of the Ironhead, who bestowed it on his son Pandulf II.[3]

Foreign rule edit

From 978, the year of Prince Gisulf's death, to 983, when the Salernitans reinstated a dynasty of their choosing, the principality was under the rule of "foreigners": either of the Capuan princely house or the dukes of Amalfi. The Amalfitans took advantage of the Ironhead's death in 981 to seize it from Pandulf II, and Manso I of Amalfi was made prince. He was unpopular, and a Spoletan, John, son of Lambert, was elected after the expulsion of the Amalfitans. Discordant relations prevailed with Amalfi until the end of the principality a century later.[6]

Zenith and decline edit

John established his own dynasty, which was to usher in Salerno's final period of greatness as an independent Lombard entity. He tried to increase control of the church in his region, but failed. He followed the principle of co-regency of sons, to stabilise the succession. His son, Guaimar III, had to deal with Saracen attacks, but was aided by the Norman mercenaries he had helped to recruit to the south. He moved away from Byzantium throughout his reign and supported the Lombard rebels of Melus of Bari. He also supported his neighbour, Pandulf IV of Capua, despite the latter's unpopularity. Under Guaimar III, the Schola Medica Salernitana first began to flourish, and he was capable of striking Opulenta Salernitanum on his coins as a sign of the trading wealth of his city.[4][7]

 
Guaimar IV enlarged his Principate of Salerno -between 1038 and 1047- to include all continental southern Italy

Guaimar IV brought Salerno to its greatest heights, but it did not survive him. He, too, used the Normans for mutual gain. He can be considered chiefly responsible for the rise of the Hautevilles in the Mezzogiorno. He opposed Pandulf of Capua, unlike his father, and he united his principality with that one for the first time since Pandulf Ironhead.[6]

In 1038, he sought the arbitration of both emperors over matters concerning Pandulf, but only the Holy Roman Emperor, Conrad II, responded, and Salerno became fully Western in allegiance. Conrad made Guaimar a powerful prince, and he extended his authority militarily over the coastal city-states of Gaeta, Naples, and Amalfi. He opened up the Campania, Apulia, and Calabria to conquest and between 1038 and 1047 he was in control of all the continental southern Italy. But his successes were reversed by Conrad's son, Henry III, who in 1047 removed Guaimar from Capua and restructured the nature of his suzerain-vassal relationships to limit his power.[8]

In 1052, Guaimar was assassinated, and his son and successor, Gisulf II, showed none of his political acumen.[7]

Under Gisulf, Salerno declined. He made useless war on Amalfi and on his Norman neighbours, finally on Robert Guiscard, the duke of Apulia, himself. Though Salerno remained wealthy and opulent to the end of his reign, he misused this wealth during the siege of 1077 and lost his city and his principality to the Guiscard.[9]

With Gisulf's defeat, Salerno ceased to be the capital of a large principality, and its once vast domain was completely merged into the Duchy of Apulia and Calabria, the peninsular possession of the Hauteville family.

Salerno did continue as the most important city of southern Italy until the end of Hauteville rule in 1194, before being punished for its former rebellion against the Hohenstaufen dynasty in 1191, during which its populace handed over the entrusted Empress Constance to Tancred, King of Sicily, leading to her effective captivity until May 1192. As a consequence, Emperor Henry VI destroyed Salerno and, since then, the city never recovered its former importance, being overtaken in southern mainland Italy by Naples.[10]

The Schola Medica Salernitana of Guaimar III survived until Napoleonic times, and it is considered the world's first university of medicine.[5]

Aftermath edit

Following the foundation of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1139 by Roger II of Sicily, the Principality of Salerno was reconstituted as a fief subject to the crown and was governed, among others, by exponents of great Italian aristocratic families such as the Colonnas, the Orsinis and in particular the Sanseverinos. Ferrante Sanseverino was the last of the actual Princes of Salerno and hosted Renaissance personalities in Salerno such as Bernardo Tasso, the father of Torquato Tasso.[11][12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "SALERNO in "Enciclopedia Italiana"". www.treccani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  2. ^ a b "Storia del Principato di Salerno". www.qdnapoli.it. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  3. ^ a b Salerno, Live. "Storia e Tradizioni della Provincia di Salerno". livesalerno. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  4. ^ a b historiaregni (2019-08-06). "I longobardi sul mare: il Principato di Salerno". HistoriaRegni (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  5. ^ a b "salerno". www.ilportaledelsud.org. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  6. ^ a b "Salerno longobarda". cultura.comune.salerno.it. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  7. ^ a b Quagliuolo, di Federico (2021-03-28). "Salerno fu la prima capitale del Sud Italia" (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  8. ^ "Storia di Salerno : dal castrum romano ad oggi". Life in Salerno (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  9. ^ "Salerno, la storia di Salerno". Luci d'Artista Salerno luci di Natale Salerno 2015 (in Italian). 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  10. ^ "La storia di Salerno – Radio Taxi Salerno – Servizio Taxi" (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  11. ^ "Salerno | Facts, History, & Points of Interest | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
  12. ^ BBCC. "Salerno". www.culturalheritageonline.com. Retrieved 2022-12-28.

Sources edit

External links edit

    principality, salerno, 68333, 76667, 68333, 76667, principatus, salerni, latin, 1077calvary, cross, potent, motif, usually, minted, coins, various, princesthe, during, reign, peter, century, capitalsalernoofficial, languageslatingovernmentmonarchyprince, 851si. 40 41 0 N 14 46 0 E 40 68333 N 14 76667 E 40 68333 14 76667 Principality of SalernoPrincipatus Salerni Latin 851 1077Calvary cross potent motif was usually minted on coins by various princesThe Principality of Salerno in red during the reign of Peter in the 9th century CapitalSalernoOfficial languagesLatinGovernmentMonarchyPrince 840 851Siconulf first 1052 1077Gisulf II last Historical eraMiddle Ages Emperor Louis II ends a civil war in Benevento by decreeing that the duchy be split into two distinct principates Benevento and Salerno851 The principality is under the rule of foreigners 978 983 The city and principality are conquered by the Normans1077CurrencyMonetazione di SalernoPreceded by Succeeded byPrincipality of Benevento Kingdom of SicilyToday part ofItalySolidus of the Principality in the 9th century The Principality of Salerno Latin Principatus Salerni was a medieval Southern Italian state formed in 851 out of the Principality of Benevento after a decade long civil war It was centred on the port city of Salerno Although it owed allegiance at its foundation to the Carolingian emperor it was de facto independent throughout its history and alternated its allegiance between the Carolingians and their successors in the West and the Byzantine emperors in the east 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Dauferidi 1 3 Foreign rule 1 4 Zenith and decline 2 Aftermath 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksHistory editSee also List of Princes of Salerno Formation edit See also Chronicon Salernitanum In 839 the prince of Benevento Sicard died Immediately his chief army officer Radelchis seized power in Benevento and imprisoned Sicard s heir and brother Siconulf in Taranto Amalfitan merchants rescued Siconulf from prison and he was proclaimed prince in Salerno A civil war erupted in the Italian Mezzogiorno In 847 Emperor Lothair I had Guy I of Spoleto and Sergius I of Naples mediate a division of the great Lombard principality In 851 Louis King of Italy divided the principality into two sections one with its capital at Salerno and another with the original Benevento 2 Salerno consisted of Taranto Cassano Cosenza Paestum Conza Potenza Sarno Cimitile Nola Capua Teano and Sora It was a maritime power with numerous seaports including Salerno itself and controlled mostly the western half of the old duchy 2 The principality did not enjoy stability in its early years In 851 Siconulf died and his son Sico was still a child He was deposed and replaced by his regent Peter in 853 and Peter was succeeded that year by his son Adhemar Adhemar s stormy princeship ended violently a revolt deposed him and Guaifer the scion of a local family of note the Dauferidi had him blinded and imprisoned Guaifer succeeded him in the princely office with the support of the people 1 Dauferidi edit Guaifer stabilised the principality during his long reign of nineteen years His successors reigned for similarly lengthy periods and in a short time Salerno surpassed Benevento in greatness During his reign Capua made itself independent Salerno was still technically a vassal of the Western emperor but it was practically independent The prince even allied himself with the Saracens In 880 Guaifer was removed in a precedent setting act by his son Guaimar I forced him into a monastery and took up the reins of government The chronicles of his reign describe him in despotic terms and he does not seem to have been popular He did reverse the alliance with the Saracens in favour of closer ties to the emperor then Charles the Bald In 887 however he broke with the West and paid homage to the Byzantine Emperor receiving the title of patricius In 900 or 901 his son Guaimar II forced him into his own monastic foundation of San Massimo and began his reign 3 4 Guaimar II raised Salerno to greatness He was a more religious prince than his father who had been pious by the standards of the time He introduced the Cluniac reforms to Salerno He was also more inclined to war with the Muslims and took part in the famous Battle of the Garigliano in 915 In this he was the ally of the Byzantines as he was throughout his reign with the exception of a brief period in the 920s He increased his prestige and influence through marriage alliances with the Beneventans and Capuans and even entered into successful schemes against the Byzantine Campania where he gained much ground Guaimar further worked to stabilise his dynasty by altering the pattern of succession He appointed his son Gisulf I as co prince in 943 and Gisulf succeeded in 946 5 The succession was not uncontested from without The allied forces of John III of Naples and Landulf II of Benevento invaded but an alliance with the Amalfitans saved Gisulf s reign Gisulf like his father remained with the Greeks even warring with the pope He concluded a treaty with the latter and came to the defence of Pandulf Ironhead the prince of Benevento and Capua Though his neighbours constantly seemed to be opposing him the Ironhead reinstalled him after an insurrection of 974 which had been supported by his brother and the neighbouring Greek cities Gisulf did not have any children at his death and Salerno passed into the wider realm of the Ironhead who bestowed it on his son Pandulf II 3 Foreign rule edit From 978 the year of Prince Gisulf s death to 983 when the Salernitans reinstated a dynasty of their choosing the principality was under the rule of foreigners either of the Capuan princely house or the dukes of Amalfi The Amalfitans took advantage of the Ironhead s death in 981 to seize it from Pandulf II and Manso I of Amalfi was made prince He was unpopular and a Spoletan John son of Lambert was elected after the expulsion of the Amalfitans Discordant relations prevailed with Amalfi until the end of the principality a century later 6 Zenith and decline edit See also Norman conquest of southern Italy John established his own dynasty which was to usher in Salerno s final period of greatness as an independent Lombard entity He tried to increase control of the church in his region but failed He followed the principle of co regency of sons to stabilise the succession His son Guaimar III had to deal with Saracen attacks but was aided by the Norman mercenaries he had helped to recruit to the south He moved away from Byzantium throughout his reign and supported the Lombard rebels of Melus of Bari He also supported his neighbour Pandulf IV of Capua despite the latter s unpopularity Under Guaimar III the Schola Medica Salernitana first began to flourish and he was capable of striking Opulenta Salernitanum on his coins as a sign of the trading wealth of his city 4 7 nbsp Guaimar IV enlarged his Principate of Salerno between 1038 and 1047 to include all continental southern ItalyGuaimar IV brought Salerno to its greatest heights but it did not survive him He too used the Normans for mutual gain He can be considered chiefly responsible for the rise of the Hautevilles in the Mezzogiorno He opposed Pandulf of Capua unlike his father and he united his principality with that one for the first time since Pandulf Ironhead 6 In 1038 he sought the arbitration of both emperors over matters concerning Pandulf but only the Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II responded and Salerno became fully Western in allegiance Conrad made Guaimar a powerful prince and he extended his authority militarily over the coastal city states of Gaeta Naples and Amalfi He opened up the Campania Apulia and Calabria to conquest and between 1038 and 1047 he was in control of all the continental southern Italy But his successes were reversed by Conrad s son Henry III who in 1047 removed Guaimar from Capua and restructured the nature of his suzerain vassal relationships to limit his power 8 In 1052 Guaimar was assassinated and his son and successor Gisulf II showed none of his political acumen 7 Under Gisulf Salerno declined He made useless war on Amalfi and on his Norman neighbours finally on Robert Guiscard the duke of Apulia himself Though Salerno remained wealthy and opulent to the end of his reign he misused this wealth during the siege of 1077 and lost his city and his principality to the Guiscard 9 With Gisulf s defeat Salerno ceased to be the capital of a large principality and its once vast domain was completely merged into the Duchy of Apulia and Calabria the peninsular possession of the Hauteville family Salerno did continue as the most important city of southern Italy until the end of Hauteville rule in 1194 before being punished for its former rebellion against the Hohenstaufen dynasty in 1191 during which its populace handed over the entrusted Empress Constance to Tancred King of Sicily leading to her effective captivity until May 1192 As a consequence Emperor Henry VI destroyed Salerno and since then the city never recovered its former importance being overtaken in southern mainland Italy by Naples 10 The Schola Medica Salernitana of Guaimar III survived until Napoleonic times and it is considered the world s first university of medicine 5 Aftermath editFollowing the foundation of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1139 by Roger II of Sicily the Principality of Salerno was reconstituted as a fief subject to the crown and was governed among others by exponents of great Italian aristocratic families such as the Colonnas the Orsinis and in particular the Sanseverinos Ferrante Sanseverino was the last of the actual Princes of Salerno and hosted Renaissance personalities in Salerno such as Bernardo Tasso the father of Torquato Tasso 11 12 References edit a b SALERNO in Enciclopedia Italiana www treccani it in Italian Retrieved 2022 12 22 a b Storia del Principato di Salerno www qdnapoli it Retrieved 2022 12 22 a b Salerno Live Storia e Tradizioni della Provincia di Salerno livesalerno Retrieved 2022 12 22 a b historiaregni 2019 08 06 I longobardi sul mare il Principato di Salerno HistoriaRegni in Italian Retrieved 2022 12 22 a b salerno www ilportaledelsud org Retrieved 2022 12 22 a b Salerno longobarda cultura comune salerno it Retrieved 2022 12 22 a b Quagliuolo di Federico 2021 03 28 Salerno fu la prima capitale del Sud Italia in Italian Retrieved 2022 12 22 Storia di Salerno dal castrum romano ad oggi Life in Salerno in Italian Retrieved 2022 12 22 Salerno la storia di Salerno Luci d Artista Salerno luci di Natale Salerno 2015 in Italian 2013 09 27 Retrieved 2022 12 22 La storia di Salerno Radio Taxi Salerno Servizio Taxi in Italian Retrieved 2022 12 22 Salerno Facts History amp Points of Interest Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 12 28 BBCC Salerno www culturalheritageonline com Retrieved 2022 12 28 Sources editChalandon Ferdinand Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie Paris 1907 D Ambrosio A Storia di Napoli dalle origini ad oggi Ed Nuova E V Napoli 2002 Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Rome 1960 Present Gwatkin H M Whitney J P ed et al The Cambridge Medieval History Volume III Cambridge University Press 1926 Iannizzaro Vincenzo Salerno La Cinta Muraria dai Romani agli Spagnoli Editore Elea Press Salerno 1999 Norwich John Julius The Normans in the South 1016 1130 Longmans London 1967 Oman Charles The Dark Ages 476 918 Rivingtons London 1914 External links editExtracts from the Chronicon Salernitanum about Gisulf I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Principality of Salerno amp oldid 1181041334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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