Everything about Norman Conquest Of Southern Italy totally explained
The
Norman conquest of southern Italy took place over a period of several decades spanning most of the eleventh century. Immigrant
Norman brigands acclimatised themselves to the
Mezzogiorno as mercenaries in the service of various
Lombard and
Byzantine factions. Eventually establishing fiefdoms and states of their own, they succeeded in unifying themselves and raising their status to one of
de facto independence within fifty years of their arrival, which can be definitely dated to no later than 1017. The eventual extent of their conquests comprised the
Kingdom of Sicily and included not only the island of
Sicily, but also the entire southern third of the Italian peninsula (save
Benevento, which they did briefly hold on two occasions) and the archipelago of
Malta.
Unlike the
Norman conquest of England, which took place over the course of a few years after one decisive battle, the conquest of the south was the product of decades and many battles, few decisive. Many independent players were involved and conquered territories of their own, which were only later unified into one state. Compared to the conquest of England, it was unplanned and unorganised, but just as permanent.
Arrival of the Normans
The earliest purported date for the arrival of Norman knights in southern Italy is 999. In that year, according to several sources, Norman pilgrims (of which there were presumably many before and after that date) returning from the
Holy Sepulchre in
Jerusalem by way of Apulia stopped at
Salerno, where they were enjoying the hospitality of
Prince Guaimar III when the city and its environs were attacked by
Saracens from Africa demanding the late payment of an annual tribute. While Guaimar began to collect the tribute, the Normans upbraided the Lombards for their lack of bravery and immediately assaulted their besiegers. The Saracens fled, much booty was taken, and a thankful Guaimar pleaded with the Normans to stay. They refused, but promised to bring his rich gifts to their compatriots in Normandy and to tell them of the offer of reward in return for military service in Salerno. Some sources even have Guaimar sending emissaries to Normandy to bring back knights. This account of the arrival of the Normans is sometimes called the "Salerno tradition" (or "Salernitan tradition").
The Salerno tradition was first recorded by
Amatus of Montecassino in his
Ystoire de li Normant between 1071 and 1086. Much information concerning it was borrowed from Amatus by
Peter the Deacon for his continuation of the
Chronicon Monasterii Casinensis of
Leo of Ostia, written in the early twelfth century. Beginning with
Baronius'
Annales Ecclesiastici in the seventeenth century, the Salernitan story became the accepted history. Its factual accuracy was questioned periodically in the following centuries, but it has been accepted with modification by most scholars since.
Another historical account concerning the arrival of the first Normans in Italy appears in primary chronicles without reference to any prior Norman presence. This story has been called the "Gargano tradition." Some scholars have combined the Salerno and Gargano tales,
Lord Norwich even suggesting that the meeting between Melus and the Normans had been arranged prior by Guaimar. Melus had been in Salerno just prior to his being at Monte Gargano.
Another story involves the voluntary exile of a group of brothers of the
Drengot family. One of the brothers,
Osmund according to
Orderic Vitalis and
Gilbert according to Amatus and Peter the Deacon, murdered one William Repostel (Repostellus) in the presence of the
Duke of Normandy, usually cited as
Robert the Magnificent. Repostel allegedly bragged about dishonouring the daughter of his murderer and was consequently killed. Threatened with death himself, the Drengot brother fled the country with his siblings to
Rome, where one of the brothers had an audience with the
Pope, before moving on to join Melus of Bari. Amatus dates the story to after 1027 and doesn't involve a pope. According to him, Gilbert's brothers were Osmund,
Ranulf,
Asclettin, and
Ludolf (Rudolf according to Peter).
The murder of Repostel is dated by all the chronicles to the reign of Robert the Magnificent and thus after 1027, though some scholars believe Robert to be a scribal error for Richard, indicating
Richard II of Normandy, who was duke in 1017. The earlier date is necessary if the emigration of the first Normans is to have any connection with the Drengots and the murder of William Repostel. In the
Histories of
Ralph Glaber, one "Rodulfus" leaves Normandy after displeasing Count Richard (ie Richard II). Sources diverge as to just who among the brothers was leader on the trip to the south. Orderic and
William of Jumièges in his
Gesta Normannorum Ducum name Osmund. Glaber names Rudolph. Leo, Amatus, and
Adhemar of Chabannes name Gilbert. According to most south Italian sources, the leader of the Norman contingent at the
Battle of Cannae in 1018 was Gilbert. If Rudolf is identified with the Rudolf of Amatus' history as a Drengot brother, then perhaps Rudolf was the leader at Cannae.
In yet another, modern, hypothesis concerning the Norman advent in the Mezzogiorno concerns the chronicles of Glaber, Adhemar, and Leo (not Peter's continuation). All three chronicles indicate that Normans (either forty or a multitude circa 250), under "Rodulfus" (Rudolf), fleeing the rage of Richard II, came to
Pope Benedict VIII of Rome, who sent them on to
Salerno or
Capua to seek employment of their military capacities against the Greeks, at whom Benedict was then angered for their invasion of Beneventan territory (then under papal suzerainty). There they met the Beneventan
primates (leading men):
Landulf V of Benevento,
Pandulf IV of Capua, possibly the aforementiond Guaimar III of Salerno, and Melus of Bari. On the basis of Leo's chronicle, Rudolf is supposed to have been the same person as
Ralph of Tosni.
If the first confirmed Norman military actions in the south involved mercenaries in the employ of Melus in battle against the Greeks in May 1017, then the Normans probably left Normandy between January and April.
Lombard revolt, 1017–1022
On
9 May 1009, an insurrection erupted in
Bari against the
Catapanate of Italy, the regional Byzantine authority which was based at Bari. Led by one
Melus, a local Lombard of high standing, it quickly spread to other cities. Late that year or early the next (1010), the catapan,
John Curcuas, was killed in battle. In March 1010, his successor,
Basil Mesardonites, disembarked with reinforcements and immediately besieged the rebels in the city. The Greek citizens of the city 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 and reestablished Byzantine authority. He didn't follow his victory up with any severe reactions. He simply sent the family of Melus, 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 that year. On Basil's death, Melus had revolted again, but this time he employed a newly-arrived a band of Normans, which had either been sent him by Pope Benedict or which he'd met, with or withour Guaimar's assistance, at Monte Gargano. Leo sent
Leo Passianos with an army against the Lombard-Norman assemblage. 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). Tornikios then took command himself and led them into a second encounter near
Civita. This second battle was a victory for Melus, though
Lupus Protospatharius and the anonymous chronicler of Bari record a defeat. A third battle, a decisive victory for Melus, occurred at
Vaccaricia. The entire region from the Fortore to
Trani had fallen to Melus and in September, Tornikios was relieved of his duties in favour of
Basil Boiannes, who arrived in December.
At Boiannes' request, a detachment of the elite
Varangian Guard was sent to Italy to combat the Normans. The two forces met on the river
Ofanto near
Cannae, the site of
Hannibal's victory over the Romans in
216 BC. The result was a decisive Greek victory. Boioannes protected his gains by immediately building a great fortress at the
Apennine pass guarding the entrance to the Apulian plain. In 1019,
Troia, as it was called, was garrisoned by Boioannes' own contingent of Norman troops, a sign of the true mercenary tendencies of the Normans.
Frightened by the shift in momentum in the south, Pope Benedict, who, as noted above, may have given the initially impetus to Norman involvement in the war, went north in 1020 to
Bamberg to confer with the
Holy Roman Emperor, then
Henry II. The Emperor took no immediate action, but events of the next year convinced him to intervene. Boioannes had allied with Pandulf of Capua and marched on Dattus, who was then garrisoning a tower in territory of the
Duchy of Gaeta with papal troops. He was captured, and, on
15 June 1021, was tied up in a sack with a monkey, a rooster, and a snake and thrown into the sea. In 1022, a large imperial army marched south to attack Troia. While Troia didn't fall, all the Lombard princes were brought over to the Holy Roman side and Pandulf was carted off to a German prison. The period of the Lombard revolt, however, was closed.
Mercenary service, 1022–1046
In 1024, Norman mercenaries (perhaps under Ranulf Drengot) were in the pay of Guaimar III when he and Pandulf IV besieged
Pandulf V in Capua. In 1026, after and 18-month siege, Capua surrendered and Pandulf IV was reinstated. In the following years, Ranulf would attach himself to Pandulf, but in 1029, he abandoned the prince and joined
Sergius IV of Naples, whom Pandulf had expelled from
Naples in 1027, probably with Ranulf's assistance.
In 1029, Ranulf and Sergius recaptured Naples. Early in 1030, Sergius gave Rainulf the
County of Aversa as a fief, the first Norman principality in the region. Sergius also gave his sister in marriage to the new count. 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 encampment with no questions asked, swelled the numbers at Ranulf's command. There,
Norman language and Norman customs welded a disparate group into the semblance of a nation, as Amatus also observed.
In 1037, the Normans were further entrenched when the
Emperor Conrad II deposed Pandulf and recognised Ranulf as "Count of Aversa" holding directly from the emperor. In 1038, Ranulf invaded Capua and expanded his polity into one of the largest in southern Italy.
Between 1038 and 1040, another band of Normans were sent along with a Lombard contingent by
Guaimar IV of Salerno to fight in Sicily for the Byzantines against the Saracens. The first members of the
Hauteville family won renown in Sicily fighting under
George Maniaches.
William of Hauteville won his nickname "Iron Arm" at the siege of
Syracuse.
After the assassination of the Catapan
Nicephorus Doukeianos at
Ascoli in 1040, the Normans planned to elect a leader from amongst their own, but were instead bribed by
Atenulf, Prince of Benevento, to elect him their leader. On
16 March 1041, near
Venosa, on the
Olivento, the Norman army tried to negotiate with the new catapan,
Michael Doukeianos, but failed and battle was joined at
Montemaggiore, near Cannae. Though the catapan had called up a large Varangian force from Bari, the battle was a rout and many of Michael's soldiers drowned in the
Ofanto on retreat.
On
3 September 1041, the Normans, nominally under the Lombard leadership of Arduin and Atenulf, defeated the new Byzantine catepan,
Exaugustus Boioannes, and took him captive to
Benevento, significant of the remaining Lombard influence over the conquests. Also about that time, Guaimar IV of Salerno began to draw the Normans under his banner with various promises. In February 1042, probably feeling abandoned, and perhaps bribed by the Greeks, Atenulf negotiated the ransom of Exaugustus and then fled with the ransom money to Greek territory. He was replaced by
Argyrus, who won some early victories but then too was bribed to defect to the Greeks.
In September 1042, the Normans finally elected a leader from among their own. The revolt, originally Lombard, had become Norman in character and leadership. William Iron Arm was elected with the title of "count." He and the other leaders petitioned Guaimar for recognition of their conquests. They received the lands around
Melfi as a fief and proclaimed Guaimar "
Duke of Apulia and Calabria." At Melfi in 1043, Guaimar divided the region (except for Melfi itself, which was to be ruled on a republican model) into twelve baronies for the benefit of the Norman leaders: William himself received
Ascoli,
Asclettin received
Acerenza,
Tristan received
Montepeloso,
Hugh Tubœuf received
Monopoli,
Peter received
Trani,
Drogo of Hauteville received
Venosa, and Ranulf Drengot, now independent, received
Monte Gargano. William in turn was married to Guida, daughter of
Guy,
Duke of Sorrento, and niece of Guaimar. The alliance between the Normans and Guaimar was strong.
During his reign, William and Guaimar began the conquest of
Calabria in 1044 and built the great castle of Stridula, probably near
Squillace. William was less successful in Apulia, where, in 1045, he was defeated near
Taranto by Argyrus, though his brother, Drogo, conquered
Bovino. With William's death, however, the period of Norman mercenary service would come completely to and end and witness the rise of two great Norman principalities, both 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
In 1046, Drogo entered Apulia and defeated the catepan,
Eustathios Palatinos, near
Taranto. His brother
Humphrey meanwhile forced
Bari to conclude a treaty with the Normans. In 1047, Guaimar, who had auspiciously supported his succession and thus the establishment of a Norman dynasty in the south, gave Drogo his daughter
Gaitelgrima in marriage. Then the
Emperor Henry III came down and confirmed the county of Aversa in its fidelity to him and made Drogo his direct vassal too, granting him the title
dux et magister Italiae comesque Normannorum totius Apuliae et Calabriae, the first legitimate title for the Normans of Melfi. Henry, whose wife
Agnes had been mistreated by the Beneventans, then authorised Drogo to conquer
Benevento and hold it from the imperial crown. The Normans didn't capture it until 1053, however.
In 1048, Drogo commanded an expedition into Calabria via the valley of
Crati, near
Cosenza. He distributed the conquered territories in Calabria and granted his brother
Robert Guiscard a castle at
Scribla to guard the entrances. In 1051, Drogo was assassinated in a Byzantine conspiracy. He was succeeded by Humphrey after a brief interregnum. The rebelliousness of the Norman knights under Drogo had angered
Pope Leo IX and its papal opposition with whch Humphrey first had to deal.
On
18 June 1053, Humphrey led the armies of the Normans against the combined forces of Pope and Empire. At the
Battle of Civitate, the Normans destroyed the papal army and captured Leo IX, whom they imprisoned in Benevento, which had readily submitted to them. The remainder of Humphrey's reign consisted of the conquest of
Oria,
Nardò, and
Lecce (all by the end of 1055). He died in 1057 to be succeeded by Guiscard, who soon quit himself of loyalty to the Empire and made himself a vassal of the papacy in return for a greater title, that of duke.
County of Aversa, 1049–1078
In 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 succeeded, probably through violence, to the County of Aversa in 1049 and immediately began a policy of territorial aggrandisement in competition with his Hauteville rivals.
At first, he warred incessantly with his Lombard neihbours, such as
Pandulf VI of Capua,
Atenulf I of Gaeta, and
Gisulf II of Salerno. He pushed back the borders of the latter until there was little left of the once great principality but the city of
Salerno itself. He aimed to extend his influence peacefully when he betrothed his daughter to the eldest son of Atenulf of Gaeta; but when the boy died before the marriage took place, he demanded the Lombard
morgengab from the boy's parent's anyway. The duke refused and Richard besieged and took
Aquino, one of the few feudatories of Gaeta remaining (1058). The chronology of his conquest of Gaeta is confusing. Documents from 1058 and 1060 refer to
Jordan, Richard's eldest son, as
Duke of Gaeta, but these have been disputed as forgeries, since Atenulf was still Duke when he died in 1062. After Atenulf's death, Richard and Jordan took over the rule of the duchy, but 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 dukes of usually Norman extraction.
When the weak prince of Capua died in 1057, Richard immediately besieged
Capua. As with Gaeta, the chronology of his conquest of Capua is confusing. 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, probably beneath them, and to hold the keys to the city for at least four years more. In 1059,
Pope Nicholas II convened a synod at Melfi whereat he confirmed Richard as Count of Aversa and Prince of Capua. Richard subsequently swore allegiance to the Papacy for his holdings. After that, the Drengots made Capua their headquarters and ruled Aversa and Gaeta from there.
Richard and Jordan expanded their new Gaetan and Capuan territories northwards in
Latium towards and into the
Papal States. In 1066, Richard marched on Rome itself, but was easily forced back. Jordan's tenure as Richard's successor, however, marked a period of alliance with the papacy (which Richard had tried off and on) and the conquests of Capua stopped.
Conquest of the Abruzzo, 1053–1105
In 1077, the last Lombard prince of Benevento died. The Pope appointed Robert Guiscard to succeed him in 1078. In 1081, however, the Guiscard relinquished the principality, which by then comprised little more than Benevento itself and its neighbourhood, having been reduced by the Normans through conquest in the previous decades, especially after Civitate, and even after 1078. At Ceprano in June 1080, the Pope reinvested Robert in Benevento in an attempt to put a halt to Norman infractions on its territory and also on that which was technically tied to Benevento in the Abruzzi, which Robert' relatives were conquering for their own.
In the immediate aftermath of Civitate, the Normans began the conquest of the Adriatic littoral of the Benevenatn principality.
Geoffrey of Hauteville, a brother to the Hauteville counts of Melfi, conquered the Lombard county of
Larino and by force of arms the castle
Morrone in the region of
Samnium-Guillamatum. Geoffrey's son
Robert converted these conquests into a unified county, that of
Loritello, in 1061. He continued nevertheless to expand his territory into Lombard Abruzzo. He conquered the Lombard county of Teate (modern
Chieti) and besieged
Ortona, which became the goal of Norman efforts in that quarter. Soon Loritello reached as far north as the
Pescara and the Papal States. In 1078, Robert allied with Jordan of Capua and ravaged the Papal Abruzzo. By a treaty with
Pope Gregory VII of 1080 they were constrained to respect Papal territory. In 1100, Robert of Loritello extended his growing principality across the
Fortore and took
Bovino and
Dragonara.
The conquest of the
Molise is shrouded in obscurity.
Boiano, the chief town, may have been conquered in the year prior to the Battle of Civitate, perhaps under the leadership of Robert Guiscard, who had encirlced the
Matese massif. The county of Boiano was bestowed on
Rudolf of Moulins. His grandson,
Hugh, expanded it eastwards, occupying
Toro and
San Giovanni in
Galdo, and also westwards, where he annexed the Capuan counties of
Venafro,
Pietrabbondante (1105), and
Trivento (1105).
Conquest of Sicily, 1061–1091
Sicily, mostly inhabited by
Greek Christians, was under Arab control at the time of its conquest by the Normans. It had originally been under rule of the
Aghlabids and then the
Fatimids, but in 948 the
Kalbids wrested control of the island from its the Fatimids and held it until 1053. In the 1010s and 1020s a series of succession crises opened up the way for the interference of the
Zirids of
Ifriqiya. Sicily fell into turmoil as petty fiefdoms battled each other for supremacy. Into this mess the Normans, under Robert Guiscard and his younger brother
Roger Bosso, came with the intent to conquer, for back when the pope had invested Robert with the ducal title, he'd also conferred on him the empty title of "Duke of Sicily", thus urging him to undertake a campaign to wrest Sicily from the Saracens.
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 during the night and surprising the Saracen army in the morning. When the Guiscard'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 at-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). They assaulted the town of
Centuripe, but there resistance was strong, and they moved on.
Paternò fell quickly and Robert brought his army before
Castrogiovanni (modern Enna), the most formidable fortress in central Sicily. While the garrison was defeated in a sally, the citadel itself didn't fall and winter compelled Robert return to Apulia. Before leaving he constructed a fortress at
San Marco d'Alunzio: the first Norman castle in Sicily.
Robert returned in 1064, but bypassing Castrogiovanni, went straight for the metropolis of
Palermo. His camp, however, had to be abandoned because of
tarantulas and the entire campaign was called off. He reinvested Palermo in 1071, but only the city and not its citadel fell. He ivested Roger as
Count of Sicily underneath the suzerainty of the Duke of Apulia. The citadel fell in January 1072. In a partition of the island with his brother, Robert retained Palermo, half of Messina, and the
Val Demone, leaving the rest, included what wasn't yet conquered, to Roger.
In 1077 Roger besieged
Trapani, one of two Saracen strongholds remaining in the west of the island. His son
Jordan led a sortie that surprised the guards of the garrison's grazing animals. With its food supply cut off, the city soon surrendered. In 1079
Taormina was besiegd and in 1081 Jordan, with Robert de Sourval and Elias Cartomi, conquered
Catania, a holding of the emir of
Syracuse, in another surprise attack.
Roger himself left Sicily behind in the summer of 1083 to assist his brother on the mainland, but Jordan, whom he'd left in charge, revolted and he was forced to return to Sicily, where he reduced his son to submission. In 1085, he was finally able to undertake a systematic campaign. On
22 May 1085 Roger approached Syracuse by sea while Jordan led a small cavalry detachment fifteen 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 the forces under Jordan began the siege of 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, after a short effort, Noto yielded as well and the conquest of Sicily was complete.
Because the conquest of Sicily was undertaken under the direction of a unified command, the authority of Roger wasn't challenged by other conquerors and he maintained a strong power over his Greek, Arab, Lombard, and Norman vassals and subjects. The Roman Catholic church was introduced to the island and its ecclesiastical organisation overseen by Roger with papal approval.
Sees were established at Palermo (with
metropolitan authority), Syracuse, and
Agrigento. After its elevation to a Kingdom in 1130, Sicily became the centre of Norman power.
In 1091, Roger landed at Malta and subdued the walled city of
Mdina. He imposed taxes on the islands, but allowed the Arab governors to continue functioning. In 1127, Roger II removed the Muslim government and replaced it with Norman officials. Under Norman rule, the Arabic which the Greek Christian islanders had adopted under centuries of Muslim domination was transformed into a distinct language:
Maltese.
Conquest of Amalfi and Salerno, 1073–1077
The fall of Amalfi and Salerno to Robert Guiscard both happened through the influence of his wife,
Sichelgaita. Amalfi probably surrendered through her negotiations, while Salerno fell after the moment when she ceased to petition her husband on her brother the Prince of Salerno's behalf. The Amalfitans, too, briefly put themselves under Prince Gisulf in an attempt to avoid Norman suzerainty, but this failed and the two states whose histories had been so closely tied since the ninth century were both put under Norman control permanently.
By Summer 1076, Gisulf II of Salerno, through piracy and raids, had caused the Normans enough trouble to incite them to destroy him; that season the Normans of Richard of Capua and Robert Guiscard united to besiege Salerno. Though Gisulf had ordered his citizens to store up two years worth of food, he confiscated enough of it to continue his life of luxury that the citizens were soon starving. On
13 December 1076, the city submitted and the prince and his retainers retreated to the citadel, which fell in May 1077. Gisulf's lands were confiscated, his relics taken, but he went free. The Principality of Salerno had long been reduced by wars with
William of the Principate, Roger of Sicily, and Robert Guiscard to little more than the capital city and its environs. 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 only an infant,
John III, as his successor. Requiring a strong hand to protect them in those unstable times, the Amalfitans exiled the infant duke and called in Robert Guiscard that same year. Amalfi, however, remained restless under Norman control. Robert's successor, the aforementioned Roger Borsa, was only able to take control of Amalfi in 1089, after expelling Gisulf, the deposed Prince of Salerno, whom the citizens had installed with papal aid against the pretensions of Robert's heirs. From 1092 to 1097, Amalfi didn't recognise its Norman suzerain and appears to have sought Byzantine help. In 1131, Roger demanded from the citizens of Amalfi the defences of their city and the keys to their castle. When the citizens refused,
Sergius VII of Naples initially prepared to aid them with a fleet, but the George of Antioch blockaded Naples' port with a larger armada and Sergius, cowed too 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 [ie,that of Amalfi's fall]."
In 1134, Sergius supported the rebellion of
Robert II of Capua and
Ranulf II of Alife, but avoided any direct confrontation with Roger. After the fall of Capua, he did homage to the king. On
24 April 1135, a
Pisan fleet captained by Robert of Capua laid anchor in Naples carrying 8,000 reinforcements. Naples served as the centre of the revolt against Roger II for the next two years. Sergius, Robert, and Ranulf were besieged in Naples until Spring 1136. By then, many people were dying of starvation. Yet according to the historian and rebel sympathiser
Falco of Benevento, Sergius and the Neapolitans didn't relent, "preferring to die of hunger than to bare their necks to the power of an evil king." The failure, too, of the naval blockade of Naples to prevent Sergius and Robert, on two separate occasions, from going to Pisa to retrieve more supplies marked the inadequacy of Roger's efforst. When a relief army, commanded the
Emperor Lothair II, marched to Naples' rescue, the siege was lifted. When the emperor left hurried the nexy year, however, Sergius, in return for a complete pardon, re-submitted to Roger and did feudal homage in the Norman fashion. On
30 October 1137, the last Duke of Naples died serving alongside the king at the
Battle of Rignano.
The defeat at Rignano, however, opened up the Norman conquest of Naples, since Sergius died heirless and the Neapolitan nobility couldn't reach an agreement as to who should succeed as duke. Nevertheless, there were an intervening two years between the death of Sergius and the incorporation of Naples into Sicily. The nobility seems to have exercised authority in the interim; it has often been assumed that the interim marked the final period of Neapolitan independence from Norman rule. In 1058,
Scalea was built on a seaside cliff.
Guiscard was a major castle-builder after his accession to the Apulian countship. He built the castle at
Gargano with pentagonal towers called the "Towers of Giants." Later
Henry, Count of Monte Sant'Angelo, built a castle at
Castelpagano not far away. In the
Molise, the Normans built many fortresses into the naturally defensible terrain, such as
Santa Croce and
Ferrante. The region around a rough line from
Terracina to
Termoli has the greatest density of Norman castles in Italy. Many of the sites chosen were origianlly
Samnite strongholds reused by the
Romans and their successors; the Normans called such a fortress a
castellum vetus, meaning "old castle." Many Molisian castles have walls integrated into the stone faces of the mountains and ridges, and much quickly erected masonry shows that the Normans introduced the practice of the
opus gallicum into at least the Molise.
The
incastellmento of Sicily was begun at the behest of the native Greek inhabitants. In 1060, they asked Guiscard to construct a castle at
Aluntium to defend them: the first Norman building on Sicily, San Marco d'Alunzio, named after the Guiscard's first castle at Argentano in Calabria, was erected. Its ruins survive. Petralia Soprana was built near
Cefalù next, then a castle at
Troina in 1071; in 1073 one was raised at
Mazara (the ruins still exist) and another at
Paternò (the ruins are restored). Other fortifications in Sicily were taken over from the Arabs and the palatial and
cathedral architecture of the major cities, like Palermo, has distinctive and obvious Arab markers. Arab artistic influence in Sicily mirrors Lombard influence in the Mezzogiorno.
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