Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Ferdinand I of Naples
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==== The retaliation of Ferrante ==== The Duke of Milan entered the war in aid of Ferrante also for fear of the claims that the [[Charles, Duke of Orléans|Duke of Orleans]] had on the [[Duchy of Milan|State of Milan]]. Therefore, he sent his brother [[Alessandro Sforza]] and [[Roberto Sanseverino d'Aragona|Roberto Sanseverino]], Count of [[Caiazzo]], who was the son of his sister, to the king, both to advise him and also to foster a reconciliation between the king and the barons. The arrival of the Count of Caiazzo greatly raised the fate of the war, because being a relative of the [[Roberto Sanseverino, Prince of Salerno|Count of Marsico and San Severino]], he negotiated with him to return loyal to the king, managing in the end to convince him. The count gladly accepted the privileges that the king offered him, including the concession of the city of Salerno with the title of Prince, to be able to mint coins, and many other privileges. The Count of Marsico, who from that moment was called Prince of Salerno, immediately sent a messenger to Pope Pius II for the acquittal of the oath he had made to Duke John when he made him his Knight. From this episode many other barons followed his example, rejecting the [[Ordre du Croissant]] of which John had honored them as Knights. Pope Pius II, with the bull of January 5, 1460, absolved from the oath all those who had taken the Ordre du Croissant from John and undid this Confraternity. The agreement between the Prince of Salerno and the King overturned the war in favor of Ferrante because it opened the way for him to reconquer Calabria, since the lands of the Prince of Salerno from [[Mercato San Severino|San Severino]] to Calabria belonged to him, to the Count of [[Capaccio Paestum|Capaccio]], to the Count of [[Lauria]], or to other followers of his lineage. The prince of Salerno then went with Roberto Orsini to conquer it. He managed to take Cosenza, which was sacked, [[Scigliano]], Martorano, [[Nicastro]], [[Bisignano]], and in a short time almost the whole province returned to the king.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli"/><ref>{{harvnb|Biancardi|1737|pp= 334–335}}.</ref> Meanwhile, Pope Pius II sent his nephew Antonio Piccolomini to help the king with 1000 horses and 500 foot soldiers, managing to reconquer the Terra di Lavoro. At the same time the Duke of Milan sent a new aid, with which he managed to reconquer many lands in Abruzzo. In the meantime, the king went to Lucera in Apulia, where Duke John lived, and who with a large army, was waiting for the Prince of Taranto. Many cities surrendered to Ferrante, such as San Severo, Dragonara, many lands of Mount Gargano, and finally [[Monte Sant'Angelo|Sant'Angelo]]. The king went down to the underground church of that famous [[Sanctuary of Monte Sant'Angelo|sanctuary]]; he found a great deal of silver and gold, not only what had been donated for the great devotion to the sanctuary; but also what had been brought by priests from the nearby lands. Having noted it, he took it, promising after the victory to return everything; and with that silver he immediately had that coin called "Li Coronati di S. Angelo" struck, which benefited him a lot in this war.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli"/><ref>{{harvnb|Biancardi|1737|p= 335}}.</ref> [[Skanderbeg|Gjergj Kastrioti]], nicknamed Skanderbeg, came to help King Ferrante from [[Albania]] with numerous ships, 700 horses, and 1000 veteran infantrymen. He was a very famous man at that time for his campaigns against the [[Ottoman Empire|Turks]] of [[Mehmed the Conqueror|Mehmed II]], who reciprocated the help of Alfonso the Magnanimous who, years earlier, when the Turks had attacked him in Albania where he ruled, had rescued him. His coming was so effective that he made his enemies wary of attacking him.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli"/><ref name="Biancardi 1737-2">{{harvnb|Biancardi|1737|p= 336}}.</ref> Ferrante went to meet Skanderbeg, welcomed him in celebration, and for several days gave him a grateful rest in Bari. Skanderbeg then had his soldiers gathered and raised their spirits by inspiring him with gratitude for the Aragonese and rekindling in them the love of glory. [[Jacopo Piccinino]], who commanded the allied army and observed its discomfort, demanded and obtained a truce. However, because he foresaw an unhappy end, he decided not to maintain the truce. Skanderbeg, having known this, told him that the next day he would engage him in battle and Skanderbeg, having arrived in Bari, joined Ferrante who had set up his camp in [[Orsara di Puglia|Orsara]], in Apulia. The following day they came to arms and the Albanian, animated by the example of their leader and the King, fully defeated the enemy army, and Piccinino and John of Anjou were forced to flee. In this battle, four thousand enemies fell, and a thousand others remained prisoners with twenty-five flags and the victors, rich in the spoils of the vanquished, celebrated the triumph for 8 days. When Ferrante returned to Naples, the inhabitants welcomed him with lively cheers and renewed the sacrament of fidelity. In the [[Terra di Bari]] only [[Trani]] remained on the Angevin side, which the ambitious Sicilian Fusianò was appointed by Ferrante to govern it and with the order to defend it. Seeing the kingdom in disorder, he took advantage of it to become master of the city, even starting to extort the inhabitants of the neighboring villages. However, the appearance of Skanderbeg in the area of Trani was enough for the downfall of such a rogue and he was pardoned by the King, therefore not being punished. Inanto, the gratitude that bound him to the Skanderbeg was not silent in Ferrante's heart and, wanting to give him a sign, he gave him to his own and perpetual heritage Trani, [[Siponto]], and [[San Giovanni Rotondo]], a city in Puglia and therefore opposite Albania.<ref name="Nicolò Morelli-1849" /> The [[Bartolomeo Roverella|Cardinal Roverella]], Apostolic Legate, who was in Benevento, managed to bring the side of Ferrante Orso Orsini and, after this episode, even the Marquis of Cotrone and the Count of Nicastro reconciled with the king.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli"/><ref name="Biancardi 1737-2"/> [[Alfonso II of Naples|Alfonso]], Duke of Calabria, Ferrante's eldest son, who was less than 14 years old, was sent by his father under the protection of Luca Sanseverino to subdue Calabria.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli"/><ref name="Biancardi 1737-2"/> The king, on the other hand, managed to defeat his enemies in Capitanata, took Troia, and entirely subdued that province. Some barons, seeing the defeats of the Angevins, decided to surrender to the king, as did Giovanni Caracciolo, Duke of [[Melfi]], among other things.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli"/><ref name="Biancardi 1737-2"/> [[File:Castel_Nuovo_(9)_(15583503425).jpg|thumb|left|Depiction of the [[battle of Troia]] in 1462 on a leaf of the bronze door of the [[Castel Nuovo]] in [[Naples]], commissioned by Ferrante]] The fate of the war turned in Ferrante's favor on 18 August 1462 in Puglia with the [[battle of Troia]], where King Ferrante and Alessandro Sforza inflicted a definitive defeat on their adversaries. After the battle, the ranks of Ferrante's enemies constantly fell apart. Only the Terra di Lavoro remained to be subdued beyond the Volturno and Abruzzo, where the Duke [[John II, Duke of Lorraine|John]] had fortified himself. The Prince of Rossano, on the other hand, was at war in Sora, where the Pope's army, urged by Ferrante for the assault, did not want to move, claiming that the Pope had not sent him to help the king, as there was no more need given that the Duke of Anjou was exhausted by the war, but that they had been sent only because the Pope demanded that the [[Duchy of Sora]], the county of [[Arpino]], and that of Celano having once been the territory of the [[Papal States|Church]], were returned to him. In order not to get involved in new disputes, he decided to give the county di Celano to Antonio Piccolomini, nephew of the Pope and his son-in-law, with the condition that he recognize the king as supreme lord. Pope Pius then died, and with the same condition he gave the Duchy of Sora to Leonardo della Rovere, nephew of [[Pope Sixtus IV|Pope Sixtus]]. Returning to the war, finally the Prince of Rossano capitulated, and through Cardinal Roverella, the peace treaty was concluded with some conditions, including a new parental bond: Ferrante had to grant Giambattista Marzano, son of Marino, his own daughter [[Beatrice of Naples|Beatrice]], who was immediately sent to Sessa by her aunt Eleonora as a sign of peace. Marino was subsequently imprisoned by Ferrante, who had already taken possession of all his fiefdom. The [[Giovanni Antonio Orsini del Balzo|Prince of Taranto]], seeing the situation degenerate because of the king, who was reaching him to conquer it, asked him for peace. Ferrante did not refuse it and sent [[Antonello Petrucci]]o, his secretary, with Cardinal Roverella, the Pope's legate, to negotiate the conditions of the armistice with the Prince's ambassadors. Among the conditions of the armistice, there was that the prince was expelled from Puglia and the Duke John from all his fiefs. The [[Giovanni Antonio Orsini del Balzo|Prince]] retired to [[Altamura]] where he died shortly after, not without the king's suspicion of poisoning.<ref name="Le vite de Re di Napoli" /><ref>{{harvnb|Biancardi|1737|pp= 336–337}}.</ref> On November 16, the death of Giovanni Antonio Orsini Del Balzo, [[Principality of Taranto|Prince of Taranto]], deprived the Angevin front of its most influential boss and financier. With his death, the original plan of Alfonso V of Aragon to make Taranto the pivotal principality in his and his heirs' hands was realized. The Apulian fiefdom was inherited by his wife Isabella and became a fundamental strength for Ferrante's resources.<ref name="test1" />
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Ferdinand I of Naples
(section)
Add topic