| CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' | 
|  | MEDIEVAL HISTORY.THE CONTEST EMPIRE AND PAPACY |  | 
|  |  | 
| CHAPTER IV.
          (A)
          THE CONQUEST OF SOUTH ITALY AND SICILY BY THE NORMANS.
              
           When the
          Normans made their appearance at the beginning of the eleventh century, South
          Italy was divided into a large number of small states. Sicily was occupied by
          the Saracens, Apulia and Calabria by the Byzantines; Gaeta, Naples, and Amalfi
          were all three republics; Benevento, Capua, and Salerno were the capitals of
          three Lombard principalities, which were bounded on the north by the Papal
          State.
   In
          spite of this subdivision caused by the anarchy which had prevailed throughout
          the south of the peninsula during the ninth and tenth centuries, Byzantine
          historians imply that South Italy had not changed in any particular and that
          the Greek Emperors still maintained their predominance. It is indeed true that
          the continual warfare and constant rivalries between the principal towns of
          South Italy often led one of the combatants to have recourse to Byzantium;
          appeals thus made to the sovereign authority of the Emperor no doubt
          contributed to the maintenance in Constantinople of the idea that the imperial
          sovereignty was still recognised by provinces which seem in fact to have been
          absolutely independent. The Byzantine possessions properly so called now
          consisted only of Apulia, the region of Otranto, and Calabria, and, although
          the Greek Empire gained much prestige by the reconquest of Italy undertaken by
          Basil II, yet—even in the territory under its sway—it only exercised a somewhat
          feeble authority and its power was by no means firmly established.
   In
          spite of the attempt at Hellenisation made in the tenth century, Byzantium only
          partially succeeded in its efforts to assimilate the inhabitants of the
          territory taken from the Lombards. Only Calabria and the district of Otranto
          really succumbed to Greek influence. There was not the same result in Apulia,
          where Byzantium encountered a very strong and persistent Lombard influence
          which could neither be crushed nor undermined. It was thus that the Lombards
          retained the use of Latin, and obliged the Greek Emperors to allow the
          maintenance of Latin bishoprics in many towns, to tolerate the practice of
          Lombard law, and to admit native officials into the local administration. Thus
          the links which bound South Italy to Constantinople were very weak. Byzantium
          had shown itself incapable of defending the country and giving security.
           The
          position arising from the strength of the native element and the weakness of
          the central power favoured the development of autonomy in the cities and led to the establishment of real communes. On the other
            hand, there were many burdens on the inhabitants, and the country was crushed
            under the weight of taxes and military levies. Thus the advantages derived by
            the populations under Byzantine sway from their submission to the Empire did
            not seem commensurate with the burdens they had to bear, and there arose a
            general state of discontent, which at the close of the tenth century found
            expression in the frequent assassination of Byzantine officials and in constant
            revolts; these were facilitated by the organisation of local bands—the conterati. It was easy for Byzantium to overcome the first isolated attempts, but her task
            became more difficult when there arose leaders capable of attracting
            malcontents, organising their forces, and directing the struggle with the
            Greeks in a firm resolution to attain the freedom of their country. The first
            great revolt was that of Melo.
   Melo belonged to
          the Lombard aristocracy. He was a native of Bari, and exerted considerable
          influence not only in his birthplace but throughout Apulia. Openly hostile to
          the Byzantines whose yoke he wished to cast off, Melo first sought to rouse his
          countrymen in 1009. He was secretly supported by the Lombard Princes of Capua
          and Salerno. This first attempt failed, and the Lombard leader, forced into
          exile, probably betook himself to Germany, and besought the Emperor Henry II to
          intervene in the affairs of South Italy. By 1016 he was back in his own
          country. In that year he entered into negotiations with a band of Norman
          pilgrims who had come on pilgrimage to the shrine of St Michael on Monte Gargano,
          and begged for their help in driving out the Greeks. The Norman knights did not
          accept the offers made to them, but promised Melo that they would encourage
          their compatriots to join him.
               The Norman
          knights of Monte Gargano may probably be identified with the pilgrims spoken of
          by the chronicler Aimé of Monte Cassino. According to him, at a time when
          Salerno was besieged by the Saracens, a band of Norman knights returning from
          the Holy Land disembarked there. Scarcely had they landed before they fell on
          the infidels and put them to flight. Amazed at the courage of these unexpected
          allies, Guaimar IV, Prince of Salerno, and the inhabitants of the city begged
          them to remain, but the Normans refused. In view of this refusal Guaimar
          thereupon decided to send back messengers with the pilgrims to raise a body of
          Norman auxiliaries in Normandy itself.
               If we admit the
          identity of the pilgrims of Salerno with the pilgrims of Monte Gargano, which
          is almost inevitable, we are led to believe that the meeting of Melo and the
          Normans was not accidental, but that it was arranged by Guaimar IV, who had
          already supported the Lombard leader in his rebellion. In any case the body of
          auxiliaries raised in Normandy on the return of the Norman pilgrims was
          recruited on behalf of both Melo and Guaimar.
               The Lombard
          envoys easily succeeded in raising a sufficiently powerful body of auxiliaries
          in Normandy. At this period, indeed, Normandy was pre-eminently the land of
          adventurers. The frequent emigrations, often referred to, were due not only to
          a natural tendency of the race but to the existence of a population too dense
          for the country, part of which was therefore obliged to expatriate itself.
          Moreover, as a result of the violent quarrels and constant struggles between
          the nobles, there was always a certain number of men who were obliged, by crime
          or misfortune, to leave their country. There was no lack of this element in
          the first band recruited for the Prince of Salerno. The leader who commanded
          it, Gilbert le Tonnelier (the Cooper,
          Buatere, Botericus), had incurred the anger of Duke Richard by an
          assassination. He was accompanied by four of his brothers, Rainulf, Asclettin,
          Osmond, and Rodolf.
           On their arrival
          in Italy, the Normans divided into two parties, one of which joined Melo, while
          the other entered the service of the Prince of Salerno. Melo was awaiting the
          coming of his Norman auxiliaries before making a fresh attempt to drive out the
          Byzantines. In 1017, supported by Guaimar IV and by Pandulf (Paldolf) III, ruler
          of Capua, he attacked Apulia, and soon became master of all the country between
          the Fortore and Trani. In October 1018, however, the Byzantines destroyed the
          rebel army at Cannae, and the Catapan Boioannes re-established imperial
          authority throughout Apulia.
               While the
          vanquished Melo sought the support of Henry II and fled to Germany, where he
          eventually died, the Normans who had come to Italy entered the service of
          various nobles. Some remained with Guaimar IV, others were engaged by Prince
          Pandulf of Benevento, others by Atenolf, Abbot of Monte Cassino, and the rest
          by the Counts of Ariano. Some of this last party entered the service of the
          Greeks a little later, and were established at Troia by the Catapan Boioannes.
               For some years
          the Normans played only a secondary part in Italy, content to reap an advantage
          by turning to their own ends the rivalries which sowed discord between the
          rulers of the Lombard states. After the death of Henry II (1024), Pandulf III,
          Prince of Capua, who had been made prisoner by the deceased Emperor, was set
          free by his successor Conrad. With the help of the Greeks, Pandulf regained
          his dominions, and soon took advantage of the death of Guaimar IV (1027) and
          the succession of his son Guaimar V (still in his minority) to extend his
          dominions at the expense of the neighbouring principalities. Sergius IV, Duke
          of Naples, realising that his state was threatened by Pandulf, whom Aime refers
          to as the “fortissime lupe” of the Abruzzi, called to his aid the
          Normans under Rainulf’s command. He took them into his service,and conceded Aversa and
            its dependencies to their leader (about 1029).
           This was not the
          first occasion on which the Normans had been granted territory since their
          arrival in Italy, but none of the settlements thus founded had ever developed.
          It was Rainulf’s personality which ensured the success of the county of Aversa.
          He had hitherto played only a secondary part in Italian affairs, but now shewed
          himself to be a very shrewd and clever politician. He appears to have been the
          first Norman capable of rising above his immediate personal interest to further
          the attainment of some future political object. Devoid of scruples, guided only
          by interested motives, in no way hampered by feelings of gratitude, he
          possessed all the requisite qualities for arriving at a high political
          position. Throughout his career he had a marvellous capacity for always
          attaching himself to the stronger party. In 1034 Rainulf deserted Sergius IV to
          enter the service of the Prince of Capua, whom he presently forsook in 1037 to
          join the young Prince of Salerno, Guaimar V. The last-named soon restored the
          earlier ascendency of the principality of Salerno, thanks to the assistance of
          the Normans, and his success was crowned in 1038 on the arrival of the Emperor
          Conrad, who reunited the principality of Capua with Salerno.
               The establishment
          of the Normans at Aversa was followed by a considerable influx of their
          compatriots, a tendency always warmly encouraged by Rainulf. The new arrivals
          were cordially received at his court, and very soon Aversa became the centre
          where all adventurers coming from Normandy could forgather; it was a kind of
          market where those in need of soldiers could engage them.
               Among the
          adventurers who came thither between 1034 and 1037 were the sons of a petty
          Norman noble, Tancred de Hauteville, whose name was to receive enduring renown
          from the exploits of his descendants. Tancred, who held a fief of ten
          men-at-arms at Hauteville-la-Guicharde near Coutances, was not rich enough to
          bestow an inheritance on all his numerous children. By his first wife,
          Muriella, he had five sons, William, Drogo, Humphrey, Geoffrey, and Sarlo; by
          his second, Fressenda, he had Robert Guiscard, Mauger, William, Auvrai,
          Tancred, Humbert, and Roger, to say nothing of daughters. The two eldest sons,
          William and Drogo, realising the modest future which awaited them if they
          remained under the paternal roof, resolved to seek their fortunes abroad, and
          started for Aversa.
               Not all the
          Normans who came to Italy entered Rainulf’s service, numerous parties remaining
          either in the service of Salerno or in that of Byzantium. The greater number
          flocked to join the army which the Greek Empire, when threatened by the
          Sicilian Saracens, determined to dispatch under the command of George Maniaces.
          During this expedition (1038-1040) difficulties, either with reference to pay
          or ‘to the division of booty, arose between the Greek general and his Norman
          and Scandinavian auxiliaries, who finally left the army. The leader of the
          Norman forces, a Milanese adventurer named Ardoin, joined the Catapan Michael
          Doceanus, while his troops dispersed, most of them returning either to Salerno
          or to Aversa.
               Ardoin, who was
          almost immediately appointed topoteretes, or governor, of the district
          of Melfi, soon realised that the position of the Greeks in Apulia was very precarious, and that there was a magnificent
            opportunity for bold adventurers such as those he had lately commanded. At that
            time, indeed, discontent was rampant in Apulia because of the levies in men and
            money necessitated by the war in Sicily. Profiting by the reduction of the
            Byzantine forces due to the Sicilian expedition, the Lombards had resumed their
            agitation, assassinations of Byzantine officials were becoming multiplied, and
            Argyrus, Melo’s son, was endeavouring to rouse his compatriots; Ardoin
            therefore visited Rainulf, who was then regarded as leader of the Normans, and
            raised a force of three hundred men commanded by a dozen leaders, chief of whom
            were Pierron, son of Amyas, and the two sons of Tancred de Hauteville, William
            of the Iron Arm and Drogo, who had both become famous during the Sicilian war.
            Half of the land to be conquered was to be reserved for Ardoin, the other half
            to be given to the Normans.
   With
          the help of the Normans, the Lombard rebels won a series of victories, the most
          important being that of Montemaggiore (4 May 1041). Atenolf, brother of the
          Prince of Benevento, was then chosen as leader by the insurgents. This choice
          shews clearly that the Normans were not yet masters, and proves the Lombard
          character of the insurrection. After the victory of Montepeloso in September
          1041, Atenolf was superseded by Argyrus, Melo’s son, in spite of Guaimar’s
          efforts to be elected as leader (February 1042).
   The
          rebellion came near to being crushed when Maniaces was appointed governor of
          South Italy in the spring of 1042, but, when he fell out of favour in September
          of the same year, the Byzantine general crossed the Adriatic to march on
          Constantinople. He took with him some of the Norman adventurers, who after his
          death entered the service of the Greek Empire. They were the nucleus of the
          Norman force which was formed in Byzantium, a force swelled every year by the
          arrival of other adventurers from Italy. Soon Normans were chosen to fill some
          of the highest offices at court, and a few years later one of them, Roussel de
          Bailleul, even aspired to mount the throne of Constantinople.
   It
          was only after the departure of Maniaces that the Normans assumed control of
          the insurrection. When Argyrus deserted to the Greeks, the Normans took
          advantage of his treachery to choose the Prince of Salerno as leader. At the
          same time they divided among their own chiefs the territory at the conquest of
          which they aimed, and during the following years, under the command of William
          of the Iron Arm, they pursued the methodical subjugation of the Byzantine
          provinces. Henceforth the struggle with the Greeks was incessant, and every
          year the Norman conquest crept further south.
   During
          this period Guaimar remained the ally of the Normans, but his authority was no
          longer unquestioned. At the death of Rainulf of Aversa in 1045, he was
          unsuccessful in imposing his candidate, and was
            obliged to recognise Rainulf II Trincanocte. About the same time William of the
            Iron Arm died, and his brother Drogo was recognised as leader of the Apulian
            Normans (1048).
   The position of
          the Normans was not affected by the visit of the Emperor Henry III in 1047; but
          Guaimar was not so fortunate, as Capua was taken from him and restored to
          Pandulf III. The years which followed the coming of Henry III were the most
          active period of the Norman conquest. We know nothing of the details of events,
          but we can judge what this conquest meant to the unfortunate inhabitants of southern
          Italy by the adventures of Robert Guiscard, one of the sons of Tancred de
          Hauteville, a late arrival in Italy.
               A fair giant of
          Herculean strength, with a ruddy complexion, broad shoulders, and flashing
          eyes—such is the description given by Anna Comnena of the hero who intimidated
          her father—Guiscard was coldly received by his brothers, and he had an uphill
          struggle at first, as he passed from the service of Pandulf to that of Drogo.
          The latter assigned to him the conquest of one of the poorest parts of the
          country, Calabria, where only a scanty profit could be made. Established first
          at Scribla in the valley of Crati, subsequently at San Marco, Guiscard led the
          life of a robber chief, pillaging, destroying the harvests, burning down houses
          and olive-groves, laying waste the tracts he could not conquer, holding up
          merchants to ransom, and robbing travellers. Unable to obtain food or horses
          save by robbery, Guiscard shrank from no violence, and nothing was sacred to
          him; he respected neither old age, nor women and children, and on occasion he
          spared neither church nor monastery. In these circumstances Robert gained the
          reputation of a bold and resolute leader, and his support was soon sought by
          Gerard, lord of Buonalbergo, who joined him and brought with him two hundred
          knights. From that day Robert’s fortune was made, and he began to “devour” the
          earth.
               The life led by
          other Norman chiefs differed in no way from that of Guiscard; we can therefore
          easily imagine the unhappy lot of the wretched population of South Italy while
          the Norman conquest was in progress. From their midst there soon arose a
          clamour of distress and a cry of hate against the oppressors, which reached the
          Pope, Leo IX. Touched by the complaints of the victims of Norman cruelty, the Pope,
          who blamed the conquerors above all for making no distinction between the
          property of God and the property of the laity, determined to intervene. His
          first visit to South Italy (1049) led to no result. Leo IX then begged for the
          support of Henry III. On his return from Germany, he received an embassy from
          the people of Benevento, who, to save their city, handed it over to him (1051).
          Being therefore more directly interested, and supported moreover by the
          Emperor, the Pope henceforward intervened much more actively in the affairs of
          southern Italy.
               In these
          circumstances a widespread plot was organised to assassinate all the Normans
          on the same day. This attempt failed, only Drogo and some sixty of his
          companions being massacred (1051). Drogo’s death had considerable importance,
          because by the position he had acquired he stood for the type of Norman who had
          succeeded, who maintained a degree of order in his territory and was no longer
          a mere brigand chief. After his disappearance there was no one with whom the
          Pope could negotiate. Henceforward anarchy increased, and for some time the
          Normans were without a leader.
               Leo IX determined
          to have recourse to arms, and collected around him all the native nobles with
          the exception of Guaimar V, who refused to fight against his allies. The
          situation was not changed by the assassination of Guaimar (June 1052), for the
          Normans, led by Humphrey, established Gisulf, son of the dead prince, at
          Salerno, although their support cost him very dear. The following year (1053),
          having recruited troops even as far as Germany, Leo IX marched against the
          Normans, after having come to terms with Argyrus, who represented the Greek
          Emperor at Bari. His force was defeated at Civitate on the banks of the
          Fortore, and he himself was taken prisoner (23 June 1053). The conquerors knelt
          before their august prisoner, but did not release him until he had agreed to
          all their demands. We know nothing of the agreement thus signed.
               The death of Leo
          IX (19 April 1054) was followed by a long period of unrest. Richard, Count of
          Aversa, nephew of Rainulf I and son of Asclettin, extended his possessions at
          the expense of Gisulf of Salerno, of the Duke of Gaeta, and of the Counts of
          Aquino. The Normans still advanced southward; they reached Otranto and Lecce;
          Guiscard took Gallipoli, and laid the territory of Taranto waste. In Calabria
          he came to terms with Cosenza, Bisignano, and Martirano. He also attacked the
          principality of Salerno, and his brother William, appointed by Humphrey as
          Count of the Principato, conquered the territory which had been granted to him
          at the expense of the State of Salerno. In 1057 Humphrey died, and Guiscard
          was called to be his successor (August 1057). He at once appropriated the
          heritage of his nephews, Abelard and Herman; then, resuming his victorious
          advance southward, he threatened Reggio. In the region of Monteleone near
          Bivona he established his brother Roger, who had just arrived to seek his
          fortune in Italy. Robert had soon to return, because the Norman nobles of Apulia
          refused to recognise him, and it was by force that the new count taught his
          rebellious vassals that they had now a master who knew how to make his
          authority respected.
               In these early
          struggles Robert Guiscard was supported by his brother Roger, who likewise
          assisted him in a new and vain attempt to take Reggio in the winter of 1058. In
          the course of that year they quarrelled, and Roger made an alliance with
          William of the Principato. Roger settled at Scalea and in his turn led the life
          of a brigand chief, but it was his brother’s territory which suffered most from
          his depredations. The year 1058 was remarkable for a great famine in Calabria.
          This is not surprising if we consider the systematic destruction of harvests,
          the usual procedure of the Normans in war. The general misery caused a revolt,
          and the Calabrians attempted to take advantage of the quarrel between the two
          brothers to avoid military service and to refuse tribute; they even came to
          open resistance and massacred the Norman garrison of Nicastro. Guiscard
          realised that if the rebellion spread he ran a great risk of losing Calabria,
          and determined to treat with Roger. He conceded him the half of Calabria
          whether in his possession or to be acquired, from Monte Intefoli and Squillace
          to Reggio. By this it must be understood that the two brothers shared equally
          in each town. At about the same time Gisulf of Salerno determined to treat with
          Guiscard. The latter thereupon repudiated his wife Auberea, by whom he had a
          son Bohemond, in order to marry Gisulf’s sister Sykelgaita.
               The year 1059
          marks an important date in the history of the Normans in Italy—their
          reconciliation with the Papacy. This reconciliation was due to a somewhat
          curious evolution in papal policy. The continuation of the struggle with the
          Normans had been one of the articles of the programme which the party of reform
          in the Church led by Hildebrand aspired to realise. To attain this much-desired
          object, the successors of Leo IX—Victor II and Stephen II, encouraged by the
          future Gregory VII —had recourse to external aid, the former to the German
          Emperor, the latter to his own brother, Duke Godfrey of Lorraine, on whom he
          intended to bestow the imperial crown, when his pontifical career was cut short
          by death. The party of the Roman aristocracy which was hostile to reform now
          triumphed and proclaimed Benedict X as Pope, while Hildebrand favoured the
          election of Nicholas II. The approval of this election by the Empress Agnes
          soon confirmed the legitimacy of Hildebrand’s candidate, and Nicholas II
          shortly afterwards obtained possession of Rome. This double election deprived
          the party of reform of all the ground so laboriously gained. Again the Papacy
          had found itself between the Roman aristocracy and the Empire, and had only
          triumphed over the former by placing itself in dependence on the latter, and
          again the legitimacy of the Pope had been established by the recognition of the
          imperial court. If the work of reform were to be carried out, the Papacy must
          be rendered independent both of the Emperor and of the Roman aristocracy. The
          Pope now risked a very grave step: with remarkable political insight he
          realised the changes which were beginning to appear in the various states of
          the southern peninsula, and appealed to the only Italian power capable of
          supporting him—the Normans. To appreciate the audacity of this policy we must
          remember the reputation of the Normans, which was moreover richly deserved ;
          they were regarded as freebooters and Saracens.
               It seems,
          however, that the idea of this alliance, which was to lead to such grave results, did not occur immediately to
            Hildebrand. The Pope required soldiers to oppose the partisans of Benedict X,
            who were in the field, and, probably by the suggestion of Desiderius, Abbot of
            Monte Cassino, he applied first to Richard of Aversa, now ruler of Capua. The
            latter had already acquired a certain respectability, and had become
            sufficiently powerful to act as the head of a state rather than as a robber
            chief. He complied with the Pope’s request. Nicholas II had full cause for
            self-congratulation in his first dealings with the Normans, who enabled him to
            restore order. Therefore, when in 1059 he promulgated his decree on papal
            elections, he sought for an ally in view of the dissatisfaction which the
            proposed measures were certain to excite at the imperial court, and appealed to
            the Normans. The interview between the Pope and the two Norman chiefs, Richard
            of Capua and Robert Guiscard, took place at Melfi in August. The Normans had
            already tried to obtain from Leo IX the recognition of the states they had
            established; this was now conceded by Nicholas II. The Pope received an oath of
            fealty from Robert Guiscard and probably also from Richard of Capua; he
            conferred on the latter the investiture of the principality of Capua, and on
            the former that of the duchy of Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily. We have no record
            of Richard’s oath, but Guiscard in his undertook to pay an annual tribute to
            the Pope, and to be faithful for the future to the Pope and the Church. He
            promised to be the ally “of the Holy Roman Church, so that she might preserve
            and acquire the rights of St Peter and his dominions,” to help the Pope to
            retain the see of Rome, and to respect the territory of St Peter. Finally, in
            the event of an election he bound himself to see that the new Pope was elected
            and ordained according to the honour due to St Peter, as he should be required
            by the better part of the cardinals and by the Roman clergy and laity.
             By
          what title did the Pope bestow the investiture of territory which had never
          belonged to his predecessors? The terms used undoubtedly imply that Nicholas II
          based his action partly on Charlemagne’s Donation, granting the duchy of
          Benevento to the Roman Church, and partly, as regarded Sicily, on the theory shortly
          afterwards expressed by Urban II, that all islands appertained to the domain of
          St Peter in virtue of the (spurious) Donation of Constantine.
   After
          his recognition at Melfi as rightful Duke of Apulia, Robert Guiscard had to
          defend himself during the ensuing years against the other Norman chiefs, who at
          first refused to admit the supremacy of one of their number. The opposition
          encountered by the new duke caused him most serious difficulties and favoured
          the return of the Byzantines. In 1060 Guiscard had taken Taranto, Brindisi, and
          Reggio from the Greeks, and as soon as the last-named place had fallen, he and
          his brother Roger were irresistibly attracted to Sicily; but events in Italy
          detained the duke in Apulia. First, there was a revolt of the Norman nobles in the north of Apulia, which favoured a
            resumption of hostilities by the Greeks. Guiscard thereafter lost Brindisi,
            Oria, Taranto, and Otranto, and the Byzantines laid siege to Melfi. The duke
            returned from Sicily, and restored his ascendency during the early months of
            1061, finally recapturing Brindisi in 1062. Two years later (1064) some Norman
            nobles—Geoffrey of Conversano, Robert of Montescaglioso, Abelard (Humphrey’s
            son), Amyas of Giovenazzo, and Joscelin—entered into negotiations with a
            representative of the Greek Emperor at Durazzo. With the help of the Byzantines
            they rose in the spring of 1064. For four years it was with difficulty that
            Guiscard held his own. Finally, the duke’s victory was assured by the
            successive defeats of Amyas, Joscelin, and Abelard, and the capture of
            Montepeloso from Geoffrey of Conversano. Robert now realised that he could
            only hope to complete the conquest of Sicily when he had no cause to fear a
            revolt of his vassals in Apulia; consequently, to be sure of their absolute
            obedience, he must above all deprive them of Greek assistance. The ensuing
            years were therefore devoted to the task of wresting from the Byzantines their
            remaining territory. This was more easily done because the Basileus, Romanus
            Diogenes, was engaged in a bitter struggle with the Turks in Asia. In 1068
            Guiscard was victorious at Lecce, Gravina, and Obbiano, and in the summer of
            the same year he laid siege to Bari. As supplies reached this city by sea, it held
            out for three years; finally the Norman fleet overcame the Byzantine ships
            which were bringing reinforcements, and the inhabitants entered into
            negotiations with Guiscard and surrendered the town (April 1071). The capture
            of Bari marks the real fall of Byzantine power in Italy; moreover it brought
            Guiscard another advantage, ensuring him a fortified place of the first rank in
            the very heart of Apulia, which assisted him greatly in maintaining his
            authority over his vassals.
             Relieved of
          anxiety regarding Apulia, Guiscard was now again free to deal with Sicily. The
          capture of the island from the Saracens had been the object of the Normans ever
          since their arrival at Reggio. Their cupidity was excited by its riches and
          fertility, and, moreover, the proximity of the Saracens constituted a permanent
          danger to their possessions. Guiscard, however, was detained during the early
          years of the conquest by events in Italy, and played a somewhat secondary part
          in the conquest of Sicily, leaving the principal part to his brother Roger.
               The Norman
          conquest was further facilitated by the quarrels of the Muslim emirs who shared
          the island; ‘Abdallah ibn Hauqal held Mazzara and Trapani, Ibn al-Hawwas was in
          possession of Girgenti and Castrogiovanni, and Ibn ath-Thimnah was at Syracuse.
          Ibn ath-Thinmah, having been defeated by the Emir of Girgenti, called for the
          help of the Normans, who since 1060 had been vainly endeavouring to take
          Messina. At Mileto the emir came to terms with Roger, who at a renewed attempt
          succeeded in laying waste the region of Milazzo. The capture of Messina in the
          summer of 1061 provided the Normans with a base of operations, but the invaders
          failed to take Castrogiovanni, nor were they more successful at Girgenti,
          although they succeeded in establishing themselves at Troina. The death of Ibn
          ath-Thimnah in 1062 deprived the Normans of a valuable ally, and they had to
          retire on Messina. In the same year Roger was dissatisfied because Guiscard
          paid him in money instead of in land, and quarrelled with his brother, so that
          another war began between them. Only the fear of an insurrection in Calabria
          brought them to terms. Threatened with the prospect of a revolt, Guiscard
          consented to share his Calabrian territory with Roger, and the treaty then
          concluded established a kind of condominium of the two brothers over every town
          and every stronghold. The struggle with the Saracens was resumed at the end of
          1062, and continued during the following year. During this first period the
          Normans only succeeded in establishing themselves at Messina and Troina, the
          rest of the island remaining in the hands of the Saracens. In 1063 the latter
          attacked Troina, but were overwhelmingly defeated near Cerami. In 1064 Roger
          and Guiscard vainly attempted to take Palermo. The following years the conquest
          advanced slowly towards the capital. At Misilmeri in 1068 the Normans defeated
          Ayyub, son of Tamim, the Zairid Emir of Africa, who had been summoned to help
          the Sicilian Saracens. Ayyub had succeeded Ibn al-Hawwas. After his defeat
          Ayyub returned to Africa, and the Saracen party became disorganised.
               The struggle was
          interrupted by the siege of Bari, but was resumed immediately after the fall of
          that city. Guiscard, realising the necessity of having a naval force, had
          succeeded in equipping a fleet, by the help of which the Normans occupied
          Catania and then proceeded to blockade Palermo; on 10 January 1072 the city
          fell into their hands, and, as a result of this success, the Saracens of
          Mazzara capitulated.
               The
          first stage in this conquest of Sicily closed with the capture of Palermo; for
          the next twelve years the Normans, having but weak forces at their disposal,
          could only advance very slowly. As they were masters of Mazzara, Messina,
          Catania, and Palermo, they encircled the territory of the Emirs of Syracuse and
          Castrogiovanni in the north, who, however, succeeded in prolonging the struggle
          for a considerable time.    
   Sicily was
          divided by Guiscard as follows: for himself he retained the suzerainty of the
          island, with Palermo, half Messina, and Val Demone, while he assigned the rest
          to Roger. It must be noted that the position in Sicily differed greatly from
          that of South Italy. In Italy the leaders of the original Norman forces were at
          first equal among themselves, and consequently they for long refused to
          recognise Guiscard’s authority, which had to be forcibly imposed. In Sicily, on
          the contrary, the conquest was achieved by troops in the pay of Guiscard and
          his brother Roger; consequently, they possessed all rights over the conquered
          territory, and their vassals received the investiture of their fiefs from them;
          and both were careful not to bestow too much land on their followers, whereby
          they made sure that none of their vassals would be powerful enough to rival
          them.
               After the capture
          of Palermo, Robert Guiscard remained some months there, consolidating his
          gains. In the autumn of 1072 he had to return hurriedly to Italy, where his
          Apulian vassals had again taken advantage of his absence to revolt. At the head
          of the movement were Amyas, lord of Giovenazzo, Peter of Trani, and Abelard and
          Herman, Humphrey’s two sons; the rebels were upheld by Richard, Prince of
          Capua, whose power had increased to a remarkable extent since the Treaty of
          Melfi. He was the protector of Pope Alexander II, who had only been able to
          maintain himself from 1061 to 1063 by Richard’s aid, and the latter had
          attempted to force recognition of his suzerainty over all the petty nobles
          whose possessions surrounded his own. He had been energetically supported by
          Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino, who realised that only a powerful state
          could restore the peace so incessantly broken by wars between nobles. On the
          other hand, Alexander II was disturbed by the growth of the Capuan state, which
          adjoined the papal dominions. He actually came to an open rupture with Richard,
          who in 1066 revenged himself by laying waste the Papal State up to the very
          gates of Rome. For a while the Romans hostile to the Pope even thought of
          electing the Prince of Capua as Emperor. But the latter became reconciled with
          Alexander II when Godfrey of Lorraine took up arms; we know, however, nothing
          of the grounds of conciliation. Nevertheless the Pope did not forgive Richard
          for his aggressive policy, and he tried to excite disorders in the principality
          of Capua by means of another Norman, William of Montreuil. Thereby Alexander II
          inaugurated a new policy, to be hereafter pursued by the Papacy, which, not
          having reaped all the expected advantages from the Norman alliance and being
          unable to overcome the Normans by arms, applied itself henceforward to reducing
          them to impotence by inciting one leader against another.
               Such, therefore,
          was the position in the autumn of 1072 when Guiscard returned to Italy. The
          duke very soon brought his vassals back to obedience, but hardly had he dealt
          with them when he found himself in difficulties with Gregory VII, the successor
          of Alexander II. The new Pope, who had inspired the Norman policy adopted by
          his predecessors, saw with irritation that the Papacy had not derived those
          benefits from the Norman alliance which had been hoped for, and that as a whole
          it was Richard and Robert who had reaped advantage from the Treaty of Melfi.
          Moreover, Gregory VII was particularly annoyed to see the Normans beginning to extend
          towards the north in the region of the Abruzzi, near Amiterno and Fermo, where
          several chiefs had established themselves—notably, Robert, Count of Loritello.
   After the first
          interviews which he had with Robert Guiscard at Benevento (August 1073),
          Gregory VII, who displayed his usual stubbornness in the negotiations, came to
          an open breach with the Duke of Apulia. It was probably on the question of the
          conquest of the Abruzzi that the conference was wrecked. Having broken with Guiscard,
          Gregory VII turned to the Prince of Capua, who accepted the proposed alliance.
          Henceforward for some years war was resumed with great energy throughout
          southern Italy. Guiscard fought in Calabria against his nephew Abelard, in the
          neighbourhood of Capua with Richard, and meanwhile succeeded in establishing
          himself at Amalfi (1073).
               As a result of
          these violent conflicts, the anarchy prevailing throughout South Italy reached
          such a height that the destruction of the Normans became the first condition
          necessary for the realisation of all the plans which Gregory VII had formed for
          the succour of the Greek Empire, now threatened by the Muslims. In March 1074
          Guiscard and his partisans were excommunicated, and the Duke of Apulia must
          have feared at the time of the expedition in June of that year that the Pope
          would succeed in his plans, but the quarrels which arose between the Pope’s
          allies caused the enterprise to fail dismally. Cencius, the leader of the Roman
          aristocracy and of the party hostile to the Pope, now offered to make Guiscard
          Emperor if he would help them to expel Gregory VII. The Duke of Apulia was too
          well aware how little he could count on the Roman nobles, who were incapable of
          upholding their candidates, and he did not accept their proposition.
               After the
          agreement between the principality of Capua and the Pope, the hostilities
          between Robert and Richard continued until 1075, when Guiscard was invited by
          Henry IV to abandon the papal for a royal alliance. He refused. This
          circumstance decided the two Normans to combine against the common enemy, and
          their reconciliation was the prelude to a general coalition between the
          Normans. Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino, who brought all his influence to
          the cause of peace, tried to arrange a treaty between Gregory VII and Guiscard,
          but failed, because the Pope, in spite of the critical position in which he was
          placed by the breach with the king, refused all the concessions which the Duke
          of Apulia, taking advantage of the papal necessities, impudently demanded.
               Without any
          further consideration for the Pope, Robert and Richard took up arms and
          together besieged Salerno and Naples. They also combined their forces to make
          some successful expeditions into papal territory. At the very moment when Gregory
          VII was triumphing over Henry IV and obliging him to come to Canossa, Gisulf,
          Prince of Salerno, the only ally remaining to the Pope in South Italy, was
          deprived of his states by Guiscard (1077), and in December of the same year the
          bold Duke of Apulia laid siege to Benevento. This attack directed against a
          papal possession must have exasperated Gregory VII, who was already indignant
          with Robert, to whom fortune had never been kinder than since the day he was
          excommunicated. At the Council of Rome in March 1078 the Pope pronounced the
          excommunication of “those Normans who attack the territory of St Peter, i.e. the March of Fermo and the duchy of Spoleto, those who besiege Benevento and
          dare to lay waste the Campagna, the Marittima, and Sabina”. The Pope forbade
          any bishop or priest to allow the Normans to attend the divine offices.
           The
          excommunication pronounced by Gregory VII brought discord between the Normans.
          When Jordan, son of Richard of Capua, found that his father was seriously ill
          (Richard died on 5 April 1078), he feared lest the Pope should raise obstacles
          to his succession, and went to make his submission at Rome; as soon as his
          father died, he forced Guiscard to raise the siege of Benevento; shortly
          afterwards the new Prince of Capua played an important part in the preparation
          of the rebellion which, towards the end of 1078, again set the duke and his
          Apulian vassals at odds.
               On the occasion
          of the marriage of one of his daughters, Guiscard for the first time demanded
          from his vassals the levy due to the lord when his daughters married. No one
          dared resist openly, but the duke’s demand excited great discontent. Probably
          inspired by Gregory VII, who visited Capua in 1078, Jordan called Geoffrey of
          Conversano, Robert of Montescaglioso, Henry, Count of Monte Sant Angelo, and
          Peter, Count of Taranto, to join him. The insurrection at once spread not only
          to Apulia but to Calabria and Lucania; Bari, Trani, Bisceglie, Corato, and
          Andria all revolted, and sent their troops to swell the ranks of the insurgents
          (1079).
               After Calabria
          had been pacified, Guiscard repaired to Apulia with considerable forces and
          soon dispersed the rebels; he then at once marched against Jordan. The Abbot of
          Monte Cassino succeeded in inducing the two princes to make peace. Then
          returning to Apulia, Guiscard recaptured the rebel towns one by one. Several of
          the revolting nobles fled to Greece to escape the punishment due to them;
          amongst these was Abelard, the duke’s nephew. After the suppression of the
          revolt (1080), Guiscard was more powerful than ever, at the very moment that
          Gregory VII finally excommunicated and deposed Henry and recognised his rival,
          Rudolf, as King of Germany. As Gregory VII feared that Guiscard might form an
          alliance with Henry, he determined himself to treat with the Duke of Apulia.
          The negotiations were conducted by Abbot Desiderius, and ended in the
          compromise of Ceprano, where on 29 June Guiscard took an oath of fealty to the
          Pope. He swore to be the Pope’s man, with a reservation as to the March of
          Fermo, Salerno, and Amalfi. Gregory VII recognised the conquests of the Count
          of Loritello, on condition that for the future the territory of St Peter should
          be respected. The duke moreover promised that he would help the Pope to defend
          the Papacy. On the whole, at Ceprano Gregory VII had to yield all along the
          line; he preserved appearances by reserving the most vexed questions, but in
          reality on 29 June 1080 it was the Norman who triumphed over the Pope and
          obliged him to recognise his achievements.
               After the meeting
          at Ceprano, Guiscard’s insatiable ambition was far from being satisfied, and,
          master of South Italy, he now attempted to realise his long-cherished project
          of mounting the throne of Constantinople. On the one hand the Duke of Apulia
          wished to punish the Greek Emperor for the support given to the rebel Normans,
          whose headquarters were now in the Byzantine territory in Illyria, and on the
          other hand, consciously or unconsciously, the Norman had succumbed to the
          attraction which Byzantium and the Byzantine world exercised over all the
          West. Already in Italy Guiscard had come to be looked on as the legitimate
          successor of the Emperors, whose costume he affected, going so far as to copy
          their seal. Moreover, how was it possible for Guiscard to imagine that the
          conquest of Byzantium could offer any difficulties to him, the mighty Duke of
          Apulia, when quite recently two poor Norman knights, Robert Crispin and Roussel
          de Bailleul (of whom the former had served under the orders of Richard of Capua
          and the latter with Robert himself), had almost succeeded in mounting the
          throne of Constantinople? Guiscard had long felt attracted to Constantinople;
          and for their part the Emperors could not ignore their powerful neighbour, and
          sought his alliance. About 1075 the negotiations which had been  entered on ended in the betrothal of one of
          Guiscard’s daughters to the son of Michael VII. This projected marriage served
          as a pretext for a declaration of war by Guiscard, when in 1080 he determined
          to profit by the disturbances which had broken out in the Greek Empire, and to
          attempt to seize Constantinople. At the accession of Nicephoros Botaniates,
          Guiscard’s daughter had been relegated to a convent; under the pretext of
          defending his daughter’s rights, the Duke of Apulia became the champion of the
          dethroned Emperor. As his plans aroused only moderate enthusiasm among his
          vassals, the Duke of Apulia determined to carry out a fraud, and in the middle
          of 1080 he presented a Greek named Rector as the real Michael VII escaped from
          a monastery, where he had been imprisoned by Botaniates. By this means the wily
          Norman hoped to inflame his vassals and conciliate the Greek population.
           Gregory VII fell
          in with the views of Guiscard, who persuaded him that the proposed expedition
          would realise the projected crusade which had been near the Pope’s heart for
          some years, and would end the schism and bring about reunion with the Greek
          Church. In July 1080 the Pope wrote to the bishops of Apulia and Calabria,
          exhorting them to favour the duke’s plans. In 1081, at the end of May, Guiscard
          took the field and landed at Avlona. His son Bohemond had already taken Avlona,
          Canina, and Hiericho. Soon Corfu fell into the hands of the Normans, who next
          laid siege to Durazzo. Although they were defeated at sea by the Venetians,
          whom Alexius Comnenus had summoned to his aid, the Normans nevertheless
          continued the siege of the Illyrian capital. On 18 October they defeated the
          army which the Emperor had brought to relieve the besieged city, and on 21
          February 1082 Durazzo was taken.
               In the spring of
          1082 Guiscard was obliged to return. Gregory VII had sent him urgent appeals
          for help, threatened as he was by Henry IV’s expedition to Italy. On the other
          hand, Alexius Comnenus was subsidising the German king, and at the same time,
          by means of Abelard and Herman, Robert’s nephews, had succeeded in exciting an
          insurrection in Apulia. Leaving Bohemond to continue the war against the
          Emperor, Guiscard returned to Italy, and spent some time in re-establishing
          his authority in Apulia (1082 and 1083). In May 1084 he marched on Rome which
          was occupied by the German Emperor; Henry did not await the coming of the
          Normans, but his retreat did not prevent Guiscard from entering the city in
          force; he sacked it and freed Gregory VII, whom the partisans of the anti-Pope,
          Clement III, were besieging. As soon as the Pope was free, Guiscard placed him
          in Salerno for safety, and immediately returned to the conquest of
          Constantinople.
               After his
          father’s departure, Bohemond had again defeated the Greeks at Joannina and
          Arta; he had then occupied Ochrida, Veria, Servia, Vodena, Moglena, Pelagonia,
          Tzibikon, and Trikala, but in 1083 he was defeated outside Larissa by Alexius
          Comnenus, and was shortly afterwards obliged to return to Italy, as his troops
          were clamouring for pay. After this the Byzantines regained the advantage, and
          the Normans lost all the places they had occupied, including Durazzo.
               When Guiscard
          took the field in the autumn of 1084, he had consequently no foothold on the
          other side of the Adriatic. While his son Roger occupied Avlona, the duke
          proceeded to Butrinto, whence in November he arrived at Corfu. Although twice
          defeated near Cassiope by the Venetian fleet, Guiscard soon took his revenge
          when he won an overwhelming victory near Corfu, which fell into his hands as a
          result of this success. The duke sent his army into winter quarters on the
          banks of the Glycys, while he went to Bundicia; during the winter an epidemic
          ravaged the Norman army, but hostilities were resumed at the beginning of the
          summer, and Roger sallied forth to attack Cephalonia. On the way to join his
          son, Guiscard fell ill; he was obliged to halt at the promontory of Ather,
          where he died on 17 July 1085 in the presence of his wife Sykelgaita and his
          son Roger.
               With Guiscard
          closed what may be called the heroic era of the history of the Normans in
          Italy. Robert’s immediate successors, being unable to maintain their authority,
          abandoned his plans, which were only resumed on the day when the Counts of
          Sicily became kings and consolidated the work, of conquest.
               The reign of
          Guiscard’s son, Roger Borsa (1085-1111), was a period of absolute decadence in
          the duchy of Apulia; the prince was too weak to make his authority respected,
          and he was bitterly opposed by his brother Bohemond, of whom he was relieved by
          the First Crusade, and also by most of his vassals, who shook off the yoke
          imposed by Guiscard. In 1086, however, it was again the Duke of Apulia who,
          assisted by the Prince of Capua, restored Rome to the successor of Gregory VII.
          A few years later, during the pontificate of Urban II (1088-1099), it was no
          longer Roger who protected the Pope but the Pope who extended his protection to
          the duchy of Apulia, and exerted himself to re-establish order in the sorely
          troubled land. The only political success achieved by Duke Roger was the
          recognition of his suzerainty by Richard, son of Jordan of Capua, who sought
          his aid to enter into possession of his paternal inheritance (1098). Then for
          the first time, in theory at least, the authority of the Duke of Apulia
          extended throughout the Norman possessions.
               In the midst of
          all the difficulties surrounding him, the Duke of Apulia found a supporter in
          his uncle Roger I, Count of Sicily. During the years which followed the fall of
          Palermo, Guiscard’s brother played only a secondary part in Italian affairs,
          for he was detained by the conquest of Sicily, a long and troublesome
          undertaking. Twenty years elapsed after his establishment in Palermo before the
          Normans succeeded in totally expelling the Saracens. Syracuse was not taken
          until 1085, Noto and Butera, the two last places retained by the Saracens, not
          until 1088 and 1091. Although the Saracens were still powerful in 1072, this
          mere fact is not enough to explain the slow progress of the conquest, and we
          must attribute the delays of the Normans to other causes. During all this time,
          and especially at first, Roger was left with only his own troops; generally he
          had but a few hundred knights under his command, so that it was with greatly
          reduced forces that he had to carry on the struggle. It was because of this
          that the Count of Sicily was obliged to avoid great undertakings and confine
          himself to guerilla warfare, which was the only method which his weak forces
          permitted.
               Gradually, as the
          conquest proceeded, the count felt that the strength of his infant state was
          increasing, and the time came during his nephew’s reign when he represented the
          only power in the midst of general anarchy. Called to arbitrate between the
          parties, Roger of Sicily was quick to realise how to profit by the situation.
          In return for his services, he successively extorted from the Duke of Apulia
          the abandonment of the strongholds in Calabria which they had hitherto held in
          common, as well as the half of the city of Palermo. Roger also obtained a
          promise of half of Amalfi and, when Richard of Capua sought his aid, he
          demanded that all rights on Naples should be abandoned to him.
               Supported by a
          powerful military force, a considerable part of which consisted of Saracens,
          Roger of Sicily thus became one of the leading personages of Europe, and his
          alliance was sought by Count Raymond IV of Saint Gilles, Philip I of France,
          Conrad, son of Henry IV, and Koloman, King of Hungary, all of whom aspired to
          marry his daughters.
               The position of
          protector of the Holy See, which the Duke of Apulia was powerless to retain,
          was offered to the Count of Sicily by Urban II, who, in 1098, had to concede the
          privilege of the Apostolic Legateship, whereby for the future papal
          intervention in Roger’s states was to be exercised only through the count
          himself. When Guiscard’s brother died on 22 June 1101, he left his successor a
          state possessed of cohesion, wherein the authority of the overlord was
          everywhere recognised. The last survivor of the heroic age of conquest
          disappeared with him; his successor was rather a politician than a soldier,
          and, although Roger II succeeded in establishing his supremacy over all the
          Norman provinces in Italy, it was to a great extent because his father had
          established his Sicilian state on so solid a foundation.
               B KINGDOM
          OF SICILY.
               In 1103, after the death of young Count Simon, who had
          succeeded Roger I in 1101, the county of Sicily passed to his brother, Roger
          II. The new count remained under the guardianship of his mother Adelaide until
          1112, and very little is known about his early years. According to some
          authorities Robert of Burgundy was Adelaide’s favourite, but he became so
          powerful that the countess-regent grew uneasy and caused him to be poisoned;
          unfortunately all our information on this point lacks precision. Towards the close
          of her regency, Adelaide was sought in marriage by King Baldwin of Jerusalem,
          who wished to repair his fortunes by a wealthy marriage. Before leaving for the
          Holy Land, Roger I’s widow stipulated that if her union with the King of
          Jerusalem were childless, the crown of Jerusalem should revert to the Count of
          Sicily. This agreement remained a dead letter, for the deserted and betrayed
          queen died miserably in Sicily, but it is of interest as revealing the dreams
          of future greatness cherished even at the beginning of his reign by the
          youthful Roger II.
               Boundless
          ambition was, in fact, the ruling characteristic of the founder of the Norman
          monarchy; Roger II was bold and adventurous and always intent on extending his
          dominions, while his thirst for conquest was insatiable. Even at the beginning
          of his reign he conceived the daring plan of concentrating all the commerce of
          the Mediterranean in his states by obtaining command of the two most important
          maritime routes. By his possession of Messina he already controlled one, and he
          sought to attain the other by the conquest of the Tunisian coast. The first
          Norman attempts to establish themselves in Africa were unsuccessful
          (1118-1127), and Roger II was obliged to seek for allies. At the very moment
          when he had signed agreements with Raymond-Berengar III, Count of Barcelona,
          and with the city of Savona, the death of his cousin William I, Duke of Apulia,
          induced him to postpone for a time his plans for an African war, because,
          before he undertook distant conquests, the Count of Sicily wished to unite in
          his own hands all the Norman states of South Italy.
               Duke William’s
          reign (1111-1127) had been even more disastrous than that of his father Roger
          Borsa. Incapable even of preserving the inheritance, already sadly diminished,
          which he had received, he died leaving South Italy almost in the same state as
          it was before Guiscard’s reign. The title of duke was an empty word, for the
          duchy of Apulia now existed only in name; it had in fact been dismembered and
          consisted of a number of independent seigniories.
               As Duke William
          had died childless, the most direct heir was Bohemond, son of Bohemond I, then
          at Antioch. The Count of Sicily was a degree further off in relationship to the
          deceased duke. As soon as he heard of his cousin’s death, Roger II determined
          to seize the inheritance so as to present an accomplished fact to this possible
          rival. The rapidity with which he appeared outside Salerno and induced the
          inhabitants to treat with him disconcerted his opponents. The intervention of
          Pope Honorius II, who feared above all things that the Count of Sicily might
          succeed William, came too late, and he had to resign himself to the fact that
          the union of the duchy of Apulia with the county of Sicily disturbed the
          balance of power which the Papacy, in its own interests, had endeavoured to
          maintain between the various Norman states. Although he had sided with the
          Normans who refused to recognise Roger II, Honorius II was, in 1128, obliged to
          invest the Count of Sicily with the duchy of Apulia. In the following year the
          new duke finally crushed the chief rebels and obliged the ducal towns to ask
          for terms, while the Prince of Capua himself recognised Roger II as his
          suzerain. In order to secure the submission of the rebels, the duke displayed
          great leniency and granted important privileges to the towns. In particular,
          several of these obtained the right of themselves defending their walls and
          citadels. As soon as his authority was established, Roger revoked a concession
          which rendered his authority absolutely precarious.
               The new duke’s
          conception of his authority differed entirely from that of his two
          predecessors. In September 1129 he expounded it to his vassals assembled at
          Melfi. After they had taken the oath of fealty to , his sons, Roger and
          Tancred, he instructed them in the rules of government which he insisted all
          should observe; he forbade private feuds, imposed on the nobles the obligation
          of handing over criminals to the ducal courts of justice, and ordered that the
          property and persons not only of ecclesiastics, but also of pilgrims,
          travellers, and merchants, should be respected. It was not easy to impose such
          habits of discipline on, nor to ensure respect for ducal authority from, the
          Norman feudatories, who had hardly submitted to Guiscard’s iron rule. It took
          Roger nearly ten years to make his vassals obey his wishes.
               In 1130 for the
          first time all the principalities founded by the Normans in Italy were united
          in a single hand. Roger II considered that the title of duke was therefore
          inadequate, and decided to make his state into a kingdom. To attain this
          object, he made very skilful use of the schism which followed the double
          election of Anacletus II and Innocent II in February 1130. He promised to
          support the former, and received in return “the crown of the kingdom of
          Sicily, of Calabria, and Apulia, the principality of Capua, the honour of
          Naples, and the protectorate of the men of Benevento” (27 September 1130). As
          soon as the Pope’s consent was obtained, Roger II held an assembly near
          Salerno, where he caused his vassals to entreat him to take the title of King.
          Then on Christmas Day 1130, in the cathedral of Palermo, his coronation closed
          the first chapter in the history of the descendants of Tancred of Hauteville, whose
          grandson thus became King of Sicily.
               “Whoever makes
          himself King of Sicily attacks the Emperor.” These words, addressed by St
          Bernard to the Emperor Lothar, were true not only as applied to the Germanic
          Empire but also to the Greek Empire. Neither of the two Empires had ever
          regarded as legitimate the Norman occupation of territories over which both
          claimed rights. Therefore, alike in Germany and in Byzantium, the establishment
          of the Norman kingdom was regarded as a flagrant insult. United by an equal hatred
          of the common enemy, the two Empires sought by means of an alliance to crush
          their adversary. Both Roger II and his successor had to employ almost all their
          energy, either in fighting the two Emperors singly or in preventing the
          Germano-Byzantine alliance from producing its full effect.
               During the whole
          course of its existence the kingdom of Sicily had to struggle with a third
          enemy. Never did the Papacy submit to the establishment of a powerful state in
          South Italy, even when its recognition was inevitable. As soon as the Papacy
          was on good terms with the Germanic Emperor, it incited him to destroy the
          Norman state, and if, on the contrary, its relations with the Empire became
          less cordial, the Popes gladly fell back on the support of the Norman sovereign.
          This explains the alternations of policy pursued by the Papacy throughout the
          twelfth century as regards Roger II and his successors.
               The organisation
          which Roger II insisted on establishing in his states, and the manner in which
          he demanded respect for his authority from his vassals, excited general
          discontent, which in 1131 caused a revolt led by Tancred of Conversano and
          Grimoald of Bari. Although the king met with some successes, the insurrection
          spread, Rainulf, Count of Alife, and Robert, Prince of Capua, joining the
          movement at the instigation of Pope Innocent II; and Roger was severely
          defeated on the banks of the Sabbato (1133). The coming of the Emperor Lothar
          to Rome, where he established Innocent II, was certainly connected with the revolt
          of Roger’s vassals. They were seriously disappointed when they realised that
          the Emperor did not intend to invade South Italy. During the summer of 1133
          Roger resumed the struggle, and succeeded in restoring order in Apulia; when he
          returned to Sicily the rebel party was disorganised. The conflict was continued
          only by the Duke of Naples, the Prince of Capua, and the Count of Alife, who
          wished to secure the assistance of the Pisans. The year 1134 witnessed further
          progress by the king, who succeeded in crushing the rebels, but all the effect
          of the success attained was destroyed by a false rumour of Roger’s death, which
          caused a general revolt in the winter of 1135. The king had again to fight the
          rebels, and had not quite subdued them when in 1136 the Emperor Lothar at
          length invaded his dominions in response to the appeal of Innocent II. At the
          approach of the Germans the whole country rose in arms against the king. Lothar
          encountered hardly any resistance; his two most notable successes were the taking
          of Bari and Salerno. The Emperor, however, did not seek to push his advantage
          any further, for most of his vassals begged him to return north. He was obliged
          to consent, but before his departure he invested Count Rainulf of Alife with
          the duchy of Apulia. It took the King of Sicily three years to destroy the
          organisation established by the Germanic Emperor. His task was facilitated by
          Rainulf’s death on 30 April 1139, as well as by the failure of Innocent II.
               When the schism
          was ended by the abdication of Victor IV, successor of Anacletus II, Pope
          Innocent II vindictively pursued all the partisans of the anti-Pope. Amongst
          these Roger II was not overlooked, as it was by his help that Anacletus had
          been enabled to maintain himself in Rome. In the spring of 1139 the King of
          Sicily was excommunicated, and in the early summer the Pope, at the head of
          all the forces he could muster, set out for the south to restore the condition
          of affairs established by Lothar. It was an unlucky venture; on 22 July on the
          banks of the Garigliano, near Galluccio, he was defeated and taken prisoner by
          Duke Roger, the king’s son, who also seized the pontifical treasure. Like Leo
          IX in bygone days, Innocent II beheld the Norman leader kneeling for his
          blessing, but to obtain his liberty he had to grant to Roger II the investiture
          of his states as bestowed by Anacletus II. This royal success led to the
          collapse of the rebellion; the king shewed himself relentless in repression so
          as to discourage future revolts; to escape punishment many of his vassals fled
          to Germany and Byzantium, among them Robert of Capua. The rebel cities
          forfeited most of their privileges.
               Concord between
          the king and the Pope was not of long duration; and in 1140 a fresh rupture was
          caused by the conquests of the king’s sons in the Abruzzi. To bring Roger to
          terms, Innocent II utilised the question of episcopal elections, which had not
          been settled in 1139. The King of Sicily, in virtue of the Apostolic
          Legateship, which he claimed to exercise throughout his states, demanded the
          right of interference in episcopal elections. Innocent II denied him this
          privilege, and refused canonical investiture to the bishops of the kingdom of
          Sicily.
               There was no
          change in the position under Celestine II (1143-1144). It was otherwise with
          Pope Lucius II, who, requiring the support of the Normans to secure Rome,
          concluded a seven years’ truce with Roger II in October 1144. The same
          consideration influenced the conduct of Eugenius III, who succeeded Lucius. On
          his return to Italy in 1148, he concluded a four years’ truce with Roger II;
          the Pope confirmed the privilege of the Apostolic Legateship, but seems to have
          reserved the question of episcopal elections. In return Roger II supplied the
          Pope with men and money; thanks to this, the Pope succeeded in entering Rome.
          The King of Sicily had hoped that, in exchange for the services rendered, the
          Pope would come to a final agreement; on the contrary, Eugenius III, counting
          on the approaching descent into Italy of King Conrad III to settle the question
          of the Norman kingdom, refused to renew the investiture of Roger with his
          states. By 1151 the breach was complete, and it was without the Pope’s consent
          that Roger II had his son William crowned at Palermo on 8 April. Henceforth
          Eugenius III definitely sought an alliance with the King of the Romans.
               As soon as he had
          destroyed the organisation established in South Italy by Lothar, Roger II,
          realising clearly that the Germanic Empire would not submit meekly to such a
          check, and anxious to prevent a repetition of such an intervention, sought to
          create every possible difficulty for Conrad III, Lothar’s successor. It was
          for this reason that he supplied Welf, brother of Henry the Proud, with
          subsidies, and thus succeeded in prolonging the revolt of the German nobles
          against their new king. By this means he contrived to keep the King of the
          Romans busy in his own dominions, and prevented him from lending a favourable
          ear to the appeals for intervention in Italy which were addressed to him by all
          the Norman nobles who had taken refuge at his court.
               Above all Roger
          II feared lest the King of the Romans and the Greek Emperor, united by their
          common hatred of the kingdom of Sicily, should enter into an alliance against
          him. John Comnenus had already approached Lothar on this subject, and the
          negotiations were resumed with Conrad in 1140. To prevent this alliance, Roger
          sent an embassy to Constantinople to solicit the hand of a Byzantine princess
          for one of his sons. This embassy coincided with the death of John Comnenus (3
          April 1143). The negotiations were continued by Manuel Comnenus, but ended in a
          breach, and the Basileus about 1144 reverted to the German alliance.
               At the very
          moment when the alliance between the two Empires was about to be concluded, the
          preaching of the Second Crusade averted the danger. After vainly attempting to
          turn the Crusade to his own advantage, Roger resolved to profit by the
          embarrassment caused to Manuel Comnenus by the presence of the crusaders, and
          to invade the Greek Empire. While the crusaders were still outside
          Constantinople, the Normans took possession of Corfu, occupied Neapolis, laid
          the island of Euboea waste, and, on the homeward journey, penetrated into the
          Gulf of Corinth, pillaging and destroying Thebes (end of 1147 and beginning of
          1148). The Byzantines did not recover Corfu until 1149.
               On his way home
          from the Crusade, Conrad met Manuel Comnenus, and the two monarchs agreed to
          attack the King of Sicily in the course of 1149. In preventing the execution of
          this plan Roger shewed extraordinary activity. He again supplied Welf with
          money, and induced him to organise another league against King Conrad; at the
          same time he started the idea of a league to include all the states of western
          Europe, intended in the first instance to punish the Greek Emperor, to whom the
          failure of the Crusade was ascribed, and subsequently to succour the Christian
          communities of the Levant. Roger succeeded in converting to his views not only
          King Louis VII of France and his minister Suger, but also St Bernard, who at
          that time exercised great influence on European opinion. The projected alliance
          failed to come into being because of the opposition of King Conrad, but fortune
          again favoured the King of Sicily, for at the very moment when, by agreement
          with Manuel Comnenus, Conrad was about to invade Italy, he died (February
          1152), whereby the Norman kingdom escaped the danger of a coalition between the
          two Empires.
               In spite of the
          failure of his early expeditions, Roger II never abandoned his intention of
          attacking the coast of North Africa, and his attempts to get a foothold there
          constitute one of the most curious features of his reign. Almost all his
          expeditions were led by the Grand Emir (Admiral), George of Antioch, who with
          his father had been in the service of Tamim, the Zairid prince of Mahdiyah. He
          next entered the service of the King of Sicily, where, by his knowledge of
          Arabic and his familiarity with the Muslim world and the African coast, he was
          an invaluable auxiliary to Roger II. Taking advantage of the internal quarrels
          which continually broke out between the chiefs of the petty Muslim
          principalities of Africa, Roger first took under his protectorate Hasan, prince
          of Mahdiyah (1134), and then occupied the island of Gerba, at the foot of the
          gulf of Gabes. In 1143 he took Djidjelli, near Bugia; and in 1145 Bresk, which
          lies between Cherchell and Tinnis, was pillaged, as also the island of
          Kerkinna. In 1146 Tripoli fell into the hands of the Normans. Until then Roger
          II does not seem to have contemplated establishing himself in Africa; he was
          content to dispatch his naval forces each summer on a privateering expedition,
          to loot and burn the towns which they surprised. After the capture of Tripoli,
          he established his power in Africa on a regular basis. A garrison was placed in
          each captured town, but the native population was governed by a Wall and judged
          by a Cadi, chosen from among the Muslims.
               The fall of
          Tripoli had a great effect in Africa, and was quickly followed by that of
          Gabes, Mahdiyah, and Sus (1148). The progress of conquest was not arrested by
          the death of George of Antioch, and in 1153 the Normans occupied Bona. At this
          moment the Norman dominion in Africa reached its greatest extent; the authority
          of Roger II stretched from Tripoli to Tunis, and in the interior from the
          desert of Bakka to Qairawan. Roger appears to have proportioned his aims to the
          forces at his disposal, and to have been content to occupy the most important
          commercial centres without attempting to advance far inland. For some years the
          King of Sicily was actually master of the communications between the two basins
          of the Mediterranean. Unfortunately his work did not endure. The results
          obtained by allowing the natives to enjoy religious, judicial, and
          administrative liberty were lost when the conquerors wished to interfere in
          religious questions, and tried to make the people of Tripoli abandon the party
          of the Almohades. Under the influence of religious prejudice, an insurrection
          broke out which destroyed in one day the work of the Norman conquest. This
          mistake, however, was not made by Roger II, who died at Palermo in the height of
          his glory on 26 February 1154.
               When the founder
          of the Norman monarchy died, the political horizon of the kingdom of Sicily was
          heavy with ominous thunder-clouds. None of the vital questions affecting the
          welfare of the new kingdom had received any solution. Even the genius of Roger
          II had been unable to find any means of settling the problems which had arisen;
          he had only succeeded in postponing the moment of settlement. Internally the
          calm which had reigned since the last revolt of the aristocracy and the cities
          was more apparent than real. The exiled Norman nobles had not given up hopes of
          regaining possession of their confiscated property and were in communication
          with their partisans. The inhabitants of the cities, kept in subjection by the
          royal garrisons which occupied the citadels, still deplored their lost
          liberties; fear had indeed compelled all heads to bow before the king, but
          regret for the past was deeply enshrined in all hearts. The aristocracy,
          systematically excluded from any share in public affairs by Roger II, looked on
          jealously while the king governed with the help of men derived from the
          inferior classes of the country, for whom were reserved the highest offices at
          court. Here also submission was only apparent, and the nobles impatiently
          awaited an opportunity of claiming both their former independence and a share
          in the government.
               Abroad the Papacy
          remained hostile to the kingdom of Sicily; in 1153 Eugenius III and the new
          King of the Romans, Frederick of Swabia, had concluded an agreement entirely to
          the detriment of the Norman kingdom (Treaty of Constance). As the Greek Empire
          also remained hostile, there was no change in the situation, and an alliance
          between the two Empires against the Normans was always a possibility to be
          feared.
               Roger II was
          succeeded by William I, last survivor of the sons born of his wife Elvira,
          daughter of Alfonso VI of Castile. William I has for long had a very bad
          reputation among historians, and by universal consent the epithet of the Bad
          was attached to his name. Only in recent years has it been discovered that this
          reputation was scarcely deserved, and a more critical study of documents has
          revealed the fact that Roger’s son has been the victim of the pamphleteer Hugo
          Falcandus, a passionate opponent of the policy followed by the new king.
          William was pre-eminently the inheritor of his father’s political work; he made
          no innovations, and only followed the course which Roger had traced out.
          Brought up to distrust the nobles, he continued to deprive them of power, and
          surrounded himself with his father’s old servants, to whom he gave his
          confidence. Less energetic than Roger II, he devolved the exercise of power
          upon his ministers, and was content to live in his palace surrounded by his
          harem like an oriental sovereign. Only some very urgent necessity for his
          personal intervention could induce him to emerge, but when once he overcame his
          natural indolence the king displayed an incredible energy in executing the
          measures on which he had decided. During all the early part of the reign power
          was exercised by the Emir of Emirs (Admiral), Maio of Bari, son of a judge of
          Bari; he also had passed his whole life in the law-courts, and his high place
          in the king’s favour excited the hatred of all the nobles.
               In the very year
          of William I’s accession, Frederick Barbarossa determined to descend into
          Italy. In order to avert the danger of an alliance between the two Emperors,
          the King of Sicily offered to make peace with Manuel Comnenus; he would even
          have consented to restore all the booty taken at the sack of Thebes. Manuel
          refused the offers made to him, but on the other hand the Norman king succeeded
          in making peace with Venice, whereby in case of war Byzantium was deprived of
          the support of the Venetian fleet.
               The negotiations
          which had been entered upon between Manuel and Frederick Barbarossa proved
          abortive, very likely because the latter refused to admit the claims of the
          Basileus to South Italy. When Manuel learned of the arrival of the King of the
          Romans in Italy, he feared lest Barbarossa’s enterprise undertaken without him
          was aimed against him. He therefore sent Michael Palaeologus to Italy with
          orders to approach Frederick anew, and if he failed to take some action on his
          own account. As the negotiations with Barbarossa were inconclusive, Palaeologus
          established himself at Ancona, and entered into relations withWilliam I’s cousin,
          Robert, Count of Loritello, who had just revolted. Assisted by the exiled
          Norman nobles who flocked back in large numbers, and also by those who had
          adhered to the Count of Loritello, the Byzantines invaded William’s states and
          were extraordinarily successful. At first under the command of Palaeologus, and
          after his death under John Ducas, the Greeks occupied most of the large towns,
          Bari, Trani, Giovenazzo, and Molfetta, and advanced to Taranto and Brindisi.
          Meanwhile Palaeologus came to terms with Pope Hadrian IV. The latter had
          experienced grave disappointment when Barbarossa retired directly after his
          imperial coronation, for he had always expected that the German Emperor would
          settle the question of the Norman kingdom. Manuel Comnenus made very skilful
          use of the situation, and wished to play the part of protector of the Papacy
          which Barbarossa had relinquished. His designs very shortly became apparent,
          when he demanded that the Pope should restore the unity of the Empire in his
          person. The first offers of the Basileus were accepted, and it was by means of
          Greek subsidies that Hadrian IV paid the troops with which he invaded the
          Norman kingdom. This intervention resulted in the restoration of Robert, Prince
          of Capua, to his dominions (October 1155).
               The progress of
          the Byzantine and papal troops was greatly facilitated by the serious illness
          of William I (September-December 1155) and by the revolt of some Sicilian
          vassals. The royal army assembled by the Chancellor, Asclettin, to resist the
          German invasion, was disorganised by the revolt of the Italian vassals; and it
          could not be reinforced, because the rebellion of the Sicilian vassals
          prevented the withdrawal of troops from the island.
               It was only at
          the end of the winter of 1156 that William repaired to Butera to besiege
          Geoffrey, Count of Montescaglioso, the leader of the rebels who demanded the
          dismissal of Maio. As soon as this insurrection was crushed, William I prepared
          to attack Italy. He tried to negotiate with the Pope, to whom he offered highly
          advantageous conditions in exchange for his investiture. But Hadrian IV
          preferred the Byzantine alliance. The successes of the troops led by William I,
          however, soon caused the Pope to regret his decision. The Byzantines indeed
          lost their conquests even more quickly than they had achieved them. After their
          total defeat outside Brindisi (28 May 1156), the Greek troops were unable to
          retain the towns they had taken. William I was relentless in repression; he
          ordered a large number of rebels to be hanged, blinded, or thrown into the sea.
          These executions inspired terror everywhere, and when the Norman army reached
          Apulia no city dared to offer resistance; none the less the king made an
          example of Bari, and destroyed it. In the north of the kingdom resistance
          ceased; the Prince of Capua fled, and the dispersal of his allies left Hadrian
          IV alone in opposition to the Norman king, who besieged him in Benevento.
               Forced to treat,
          Hadrian IV had to agree to all the demands of the conqueror. The treaty therefore settled all the questions pending
            between the kingdom of Sicily and the Papacy. Hadrian IV granted to William I
            the kingdom of Sicily, the duchy of Apulia, the principality of Capua with
            Naples, Amalfi, Salerno, and the district of the Marsi (since the time of
            Gregory’ VII the Papacy had refused to recognise the last-named conquests). The
            King of Sicily took the oath of homage, and agreed to pay a tribute of 600 schifati for Apulia and Calabria, and 500 for the district of the Marsi. The questions
            relating to ecclesiastical discipline which had been raised in connexion with
            the privilege of the royal legateship were arranged by a compromise. The treaty
            made a distinction between Apulia and Calabria on the one hand, and Sicily on
            the other. In Apulia and Calabria the Pope secured the right of appeal by
            clerics to Rome, the right of consecration and of visitation except in those
            cities where the king was residing, and finally the right of summoning
            councils. In Sicily the Pope might summon ecclesiastics to attend him, but the
            king reserved the right of preventing their obedience to the Pope’s command.
            The Pope could only receive appeals and send legates at the king’s request.
            The clergy nominated the bishops, but the king had the right of refusing to
            accept their election. The Papacy obtained the right of consecration and
            visitation, but not that of nomination, over certain monasteries and churches,
            the prelates of which had to apply to Rome only for consecration and
            benediction. Thus the Treaty of Benevento confirmed in favour of the King of
            Sicilv all the privileges granted by Urban II to Count Roger, and Hadrian IV
            further had to recognise all the Norman conquests. Moreover, the King of Sicily
            obtained the erection of Palermo into a metropolitan see.
   These
          advantages were certainly considerable, but the Treaty of Benevento was to have
          far wider consequences. Possibly when he signed the Pope did not realise that
          he was severing the link which had united the Papacy and the Germanic Empire
          ever since the Treaty of Constance. Barbarossa was indignant at the attitude of
          Hadrian IV, and notwithstanding the efforts made by the Pope to remain on good
          terms both with the Emperor and the King of Sicily, a rupture was inevitable.
          The Papacy was consequently obliged to seek support and strength from the
          Norman kingdom.
   Barbarossa
          had been very ill-content at the Greeks’ successes in Italy, but the tidings of
          their reverses removed his uneasiness, and during the years 1156-1157
          negotiations between the two Empires were resumed. Again they failed to reach
          an agreement. Meanwhile William I, having treated with the Genoese so as to
          deprive the Byzantines of the possible support of the Genoese fleet (1157),
          arranged a great expedition to ravage the coasts of the Greek Empire. This took
          place in 1157; the rich ports of Negropont in Euboea and Almira (Halmyrus) in
          Thessaly were pillaged, and according to some chroniclers the Norman fleet even
          appeared outside Constantinople. In the same year Manuel resumed hostilities, sending Alexius, son of the Grand Domestic Axuch, to
            Ancona, where he raised a force and entered into relations with some Normans,
            among whom was Count Andrew of Rupis Canina (Raviscanina, near Alife). The
            Byzantines and their allies attacked the Norman kingdom on its northern
            frontier.
             In the spring of
          1158 peace was signed between Manuel and William I, thanks to the intervention
          of Hadrian IV (1158). After the rupture with Barbarossa (1157), the Pope had
          made friends with the Greek Emperor, and, wishing to form an alliance against
          the Germanic Empire, succeeded in bringing about peace between Byzantium and
          Sicily. Henceforth Manuel Comnenus designed to obtain from the Pope the
          restoration of the unity of the Roman Empire; consequently, with this larger
          scheme in view, the question of the Norman kingdom lost much of its importance
          in his eyes. On the other hand, the new claims of the Basileus were disliked
          at Palermo, where the treaty of 1158 was regarded as a truce which left in
          abeyance all the questions pending between the two states.
               During the
          ensuing years the papal alliance was to be the pivot of the Norman policy, for
          it was well known at the Norman court that Barbarossa had not abandoned his
          designs on South Italy. Henceforward the Pope and the King of Sicily sought to
          create every possible difficulty for Frederick, so as to keep him far from Rome
          and South Italy. When the Milanese revolted in 1159 they were encouraged by
          both Pope and king. As protector of the Papacy William I had great influence at
          the papal Court, and his party secured a conspicuous success in 1159 while the
          Pope was at Anagni; here was formed the league between the Pope, Brescia,
          Piacenza, and Milan to resist the imperial pretensions. During this same visit
          the partisans of William I set about choosing a successor for Hadrian IV, who
          died on 1 September 1159. The strongest proof of the importance of the Sicilian
          party at the papal Court is the number of votes obtained by William’s
          candidate, Cardinal Roland, its leader, who actually received twenty-three
          votes out of a total of twenty-seven. His election as Pope Alexander III was
          therefore a personal triumph for the King of Sicily.
               The disorder
          which prevailed in Italy during 1155 and 1156 had its counterpart in the Norman
          possessions in Africa. On 25 February 1156 there was a massacre of Christians
          at Sfax; then the insurrection spread to the islands of Gerba and Kerkinna, and
          finally to Tripoli. In this city the military commandant had attempted to make
          the imams preach against the Almohades, whose growing power was causing uneasiness
          at the court of Palermo. This order gave rise to a widespread conspiracy. The
          conspirators made an unexpected attack on the Normans (1158), who were driven
          out of Gabes and only succeeded in holding their ground at Mahdiyah until
          January 1160. With the fall of this town perished the Norman dominion of
          Africa. At first sight it seems as though
            William I did little to defend his African possessions. Very probably the
            abandonment of Africa was dictated by political necessity. At Palermo it was
            regarded as inadvisable to undertake a struggle with the mighty Almohad Empire
            at the very moment when war with Barbarossa seemed imminent; and it was
            preferable to keep intact the forces of the kingdom, which might soon have to
            struggle for its very existence.
             At
          the beginning of 1160 the position of the kingdom of Sicily, which was at peace
          with the Greek Empire and allied with the Pope and the Lombard towns, was
          unquestionably much stronger than at the accession of William I, thanks to the
          policy pursued by the Grand Emir, Maio of Bari. It was at the very moment when
          the latter might have hoped to reap the harvest of his skill that he was
          assassinated.
   Since
          the revolt in 1156, Maio’s influence had constantly increased, to the great
          dissatisfaction of the nobles, who regarded the minister as responsible for the
          severe measures taken after William’s victory, and were profoundly irritated
          because they were not allowed a share in the government of the State. Maio was
          equally unpopular with the inhabitants of the large towns, where he was blamed
          for the royal decisions which had attacked their municipal liberties, and also
          for the increase of the financial burdens which weighed on the bourgeois. A
          plot against the all-powerful minister was organised, in which the principal
          part was assigned to the Italian vassals of the King of Sicily. Richard of
          Aquila, Count of Fondi, Gilbert, Count of Gravina, and Roger, Count of Acerra,
          were the leaders of the movement. They came to an understanding with the exiled
          Norman nobles and with the inhabitants of certain towns. When the revolt broke
          out, the leaders of the movement declared that they desired only to deliver the
          king from an imprudent minister who aspired to usurp the throne. In reality the
          conspirators were equally hostile to William I, whom they wished to replace by
          his son Roger. On 10 November 1161 one of the conspirators, Matthew Bonnel, assassinated
          the Grand Emir. For some time William did not dare to take vengeance on the
          guilty, but was forced to entrust the government to Henry Aristippus,
          Archdeacon of Catania, who was friendly with Maio’s murderers. Emboldened by
          their impunity, the conspirators succeeded in taking possession of the royal
          palace of Palermo, where they seized the person of the king (9 March 1161), who
          only owed his deliverance to the popular riots excited by the bishops then
          present at court. Even when set at liberty, the king had still to disguise his
          wrath and to treat with the rebels. But as soon as he felt himself strong
          enough, William I arrested Matthew Bonnel, whose eyes were put out. Immediately
          after Easter (16 April) 1161, the king marched against the Sicilian rebels, who
          were forced to treat with him; they only obtained pardon on condition that they
          left the kingdom. Sicily being subdued, the king crossed to Italy, where the
          revolt headed by Robert of Loritello had spread on all sides. Calabria, Apulia,
          and the Terra di Lavoro were forced in turn to recognise the royal authority.
            Anxious to make examples, the king imposed on all the towns a supplementary
            tax called redemption moreover he ordered Salerno to be razed to the
            ground, and it was only saved by the intervention of Matthew of Ajello, one of
            the principal officials at court, who was a native of the city. This successful
            campaign enabled the king to punish the most highly-placed culprits; on his
            return to Palermo he threw Henry Aristippus into prison, and pursued all the
            supporters of Matthew Bonnel with the utmost severity.
             After the arrest
          of Henry Aristippus, William entrusted the government to Count Silvester of
          Marsico, to Richard Palmer, the Bishopelect of Syracuse, and to the Master
          Notary, Matthew of Ajello; after Silvester’s death the Grand Chamberlain Peter
          was associated with the other two. Trained in the school of Maio, Matthew of
          Ajello was the inheritor of his political traditions, and up to the end of
          William’s reign Norman policy pursued the same course.
               The great aim of
          this policy was to prevent Barbarossa from invading South Italy. Frederick
          indeed had not abandoned his plans of intervention. The alliance with Sicily
          was one of his chief grounds of complaint against Alexander III, and in 1160 he
          resumed negotiations to gain the support of Manuel Comnenus. After the fall of
          Milan he formed a treaty with Pisa and Genoa to conquer the Norman kingdom (March
          1162). The expedition, which was constantly postponed, appeared at last about
          to start in 1164; but the league of Verona prevented Barbarossa from realising
          his designs.
               Meanwhile the
          King of Sicily remained obstinately faithful to the cause of the Pope and
          benefited by the progress made by him. From 1159 to 1161 Alexander III, who had
          not been able to hold his own in Rome, remained almost continually close to the
          Norman frontier ready to apply for shelter to William in case of need. After
          his return from France in 1165, the Pope landed at Messina, and it was Norman
          troops who, on 23 November 1165, established him in the Lateran.
               The reinstatement
          of the Pope in Rome was the last success achieved by William I, who died on 7
          May 1166. Even to the last the King of Sicily was faithful to the papal
          alliance, and on his death-bed he bequeathed to the Pope a considerable sum.
               Judged as a
          whole, William’s reign was not devoid of greatness, and it is evident that he
          has been unfairly treated by historians. Placed in particularly difficult
          circumstances, he succeeded in averting the dangers which threatened his
          dominions. He undoubtedly displayed excessive severity in repressing rebellions
          by his subjects, but it must not be forgotten that these occurred when the
          enemy was at the very gates of his kingdom. There are consequently many excuses
          to be found for him, and it must also be remembered that even his bitterest
          enemy, the chronicler Hugo Falcandus, was forced to regret him when he contemplated
          the anarchy which followed his reign.
               Duke Roger, the
          king’s eldest son, had been killed by a stray arrow on the
            occasion when the king was liberated by
              the people; the crown consequently devolved on the second son William. On his death-bed William
                I entrusted the regency to his wife
                  Margaret, daughter of Garcia VI Ramirez, King of Navarre, and recommended his chosen counsellors as worthy of her
                    confidence.
   The accession of the new king aroused great hopes in all
          his subjects, and his youth caused everyone to regard him with sympathy. It.
          was expected that the queen-regent would be more lenient than her husband, and
          that she would be forced to make concessions to the nobles and the cities.
          Margaret wished to call a new man to her assistance in governing, and having
          summoned her cousin, Stephen of Perche, from France, she bestowed on him the
          appointments of Chancellor and Archbishop of Palermo. This choice was unpopular
          with everyone, and the new chancellor encountered formidable opposition. The
          leading nobles of the kingdom and the councillors of the queen-regent combined
          against him, and were joined by all those who considered themselves injured by
          the reforms which the new chancellor attempted to introduce into the
          administration, or by the favours granted to the Frenchmen who had come in his
          train. Stephen of Perche succeeded in foiling the first plot; but the conspirators contrived to obtain
            possession of Messina, and on receipt of these tidings an insurrection broke
            out at Palermo. Stephen was besieged in the campanile of the cathedral, and was
            obliged to treat with the rebels. His life was spared on condition that he left the kingdom.
   The
          coalition which achieved Stephen’s downfall was the logical consequence of the
          aristocratic attempts to reduce the royal power. A common hatred of foreigners reconciled
            all the parties which had hitherto striven with one another in rivalry. For
            some time the queen-regent was entirely deprived of any exercise of authority,
            as the rebels established a council consisting of ten members of the royal
            Curia—Richard
              Palmer, Bishop of Syracuse; Gentile, Bishop of Girgenti; Romuald, Archbishop of
              Salerno; John, Bishop of Malta; Roger, Count of Geraci; Richard, Count of
              Molise; Henry,
                Count of Montescaglioso; Matthew of Ajello; Richard the Kaid; and Walter Ophamil, Dean of Girgenti
                  (like Palmer, an
                    Englishman), who was the king’s tutor and was consecrated Archbishop of Palermo
                    in September 1169. He soon played a very important part, and appears to have deprived the
                      Council of Ten of the powers which they had usurped. Supported by Matthew of Ajello, Walter excluded the representatives of the
                        aristocracy from the council, and very soon reverted to the governmental
                        tradition of Roger II and William I. And when William II reached
                          his majority, the Archbishop of Palermo still retained his confidence.
                           Under William II
          Norman policy as regards the Papacy and the Germanic Empire for many years remained identical with that of the previous reign. The
            King of Sicily was the more inclined to support the papal cause, because in
            1166, when Barbarossa invaded Italy, everyone thought that the Emperor intended
            to attack the Norman kingdom in the following year. But when Frederick was
            about to advance towards the south, he was summoned to Rome by the victory of
            Christian of Mayence at Monteporzio. In these critical circumstances Alexander
            III found support from the Normans, and the Sicilian galleys penetrated the
            Tiber as far as Rome. Alexander III did not take advantage of the proffered
            assistance, preferring to remain in the Eternal City, but a little later, when
            he took refuge at Benevento, he was again protected by Norman troops. The
            formation of the Lombard League prevented Barbarossa from interfering in South
            Italy, as before he could deal with the Norman kingdom he had to conquer North
            Italy, the whole of which was in arms. William II on his side did not stint his
            subsidies to the League; and in 1173, when Frederick tried to detach him from
            the papal alliance, the Norman king refused to fall in with the imperial views.
            At the Peace of Venice the Norman envoys played a leading part in the
            negotiations which preceded the conclusion of peace, and it was owing to their
            support that Alexander III succeeded in overcoming the difficulties raised by
            the Emperor and the Venetians. By the Peace a truce of fifteen years was
            assured between the Norman kingdom and the Germanic Empire. But henceforward
            William II modified his attitude towards the Papacy. When Lucius III, who
            succeeded Alexander III, was in his turn on bad terms with the Emperor (1184),
            William refused to side with the Pope. Intent on distant conquests of which we
            shall presently speak, the King of Sicily saw no use in risking a struggle with
            the Empire. The Treaty of Constance (1183) had put an end to the Lombard
            League, and William II was faced by the possibility of being the Pope’s only
            champion in a conflict; he preferred to come to terms with Barbarossa, who had
            recently approached him to obtain the hand of Constance, Roger IPs daughter,
            for his son Henry. As William II was childless, the Emperor hoped that the
            Norman kingdom might be secured for his son, Constance being the legitimate
            heir. On 29 October 1184 the betrothal was announced at Augsburg, and on 28
            August 1185 Constance was handed over to the imperial envoys at Rieti.
   His alliance with
          Alexander III had enabled William II to play an important part in the great
          events which occupied European diplomacy during his reign. He was brought into
          relations with the King of England in connexion with Henry II’s quarrel with
          Thomas Becket, and eventually in 1176 he married Henry’s daughter Joan. This
          marriage brought the two countries closer together, and many Englishmen came to
          settle in Sicily.
               Norman policy
          towards the Greek Emperor underwent a series of changes during William II’s
          reign. About 1167 Manuel Comnenus definitely demanded from Alexander III the
          restoration of imperial unity, with himself as sole Emperor of East and West.
          As he feared that the King of Sicily would oppose this plan, he at once
          approached the court of Palermo with an offer to marry his daughter Maria,
          heiress to his dominions, to the young King William II. Nothing further is
          known as to the relations between the two courts until 1171, when owing to his
          quarrel with the Venetians Manuel reverted to this proposed marriage, and it
          was agreed that the Byzantine princess should arrive in Taranto in the spring
          of 1172. But when William went to meet his bride on the appointed day, she was
          not there. Probably by that time Manuel had entered on fresh negotiations with
          a view to arranging the marriage of his daughter to Barbarossa’s son.
               William II was
          deeply offended at the insult offered him, and resolved to be avenged. He began
          by forming an alliance with the Venetians (1175) and the Genoese (1174), thus
          depriving the Byzantines of possible allies, and as soon as a favourable
          opportunity occurred he dispatched troops to conquer Constantinople. When after
          Manuel’s death Andronicus Comnenus dethroned Alexius II (1184), the King of
          Sicily took advantage of thfe disturbances which broke out in the Greek Empire
          to declare war. As in bygone days Guiscard had used a pseudoMichael VII, so
          William now made use of a spurious Alexius to gain partisans among the
          Byzantines. From the Norman kingdom an army of, it is said, eighty thousand men
          was gathered under the command of a certain Baldwin and of Richard, Count of
          Acerra. The fleet was commanded by Tancred of Lecce. In June 1185 the Normans
          took Durazzo and advanced on Salonica, which was invested at the beginning of
          August. After the fall of this town, they marched on Constantinople and
          proceeded as far as Seres and Mosinopolis. Near the latter town was fought the
          decisive battle, wherein the Normans, treacherously attacked while negotiations
          were proceeding, were overwhelmed by the Byzantines. All the conquered cities
          were quickly recaptured from the invaders, only Durazzo remaining in their
          hands for a time. William II indeed carried on the war by sending his fleet
          under the command of the Admiral Margaritus to support Isaac Comnenus who had
          been proclaimed Emperor; but he came to terms with the Emperor Isaac Angelus
          before 1189, although we do not know the exact date when the war ended.
               In sending his
          troops to attempt the conquest of Constantinople, William II was reverting to
          the grandiose policy of expansion formerly pursued by Robert Guiscard and Roger
          II. His Moorish policy was derived from the same sources. It is, however,
          specially in these matters that we can trace the personal influence of the
          king, for we know that his ministers were opposed to these distant expeditions;
          moreover, when he dispatched his ships to attack the Moorish possessions,
          William II was not only considering the Sicilian trade, he was not only seeking
          to assure communications between the Western world and the Holy Places, but he
          was ambitious to pose as the protector of the Christian communities of the
          Levant. This explains why in his reign the Norman fleets specially directed
          their attacks against the Muslims of Egypt. Only the Normans supported the King
          of Jerusalem in his proposed campaign against Egypt, which was prevented by his
          death (1174). In like manner during the ensuing years, even while William was
    treating with the Almohades, he continued to send his sailors to lay waste the
    coasts of Egypt and to pillage Tinnis (1175-1177). These naval expeditions
    were interrupted by the war with the Greeks, but were resumed when the
    Christians of the Levant appealed to the West. The King of Sicily was one of the
    first to assume the cross on the occasion of the Third Crusade. He aspired to
    lead the expedition, and the engagements he entered into with some of the
    leaders of the Crusade caused serious embarrassment to his successor. Death
    prevented William II (18 November 1189) from realising his design, but the
    Norman fleet had already set sail for the East, and the exploits of its admiral
    Margaritus off the coast near Laodicea (Latiqiyah) cast a halo of glory round
    the last days of his reign.
             Of all the Norman
          sovereigns William II is the one of whose character we know least. He seems to
          have been devoid of the vigorous qualities of his race, for he never took
          personal command of his army and preferred a life of ease and pleasure in the
          seclusion of his palace to the life of the camp. But it was precisely this
          contrast to his predecessors which caused his popularity. People were weary of
          the despotic authority exercised by Roger and William I; they breathed a sigh
          of relief at the accession of William II, and the tranquillity of his reign was
          almost too much appreciated, while deep gratitude was felt towards the sovereign
          who had bestowed these benefits. Regretted by his subjects, William “the Good”
          continued to be regarded in Italy as the ideal type of king,
               Rex ille magnificus,
           Pacificus,
                Cuius vita placuit
           Deo et hominibus;
               and when Dante
          gave him a place in Paradise he was only echoing popular sentiment.
               As William left
          no children, Constance, daughter of Roger II, was legitimate heiress to the
          crown of Sicily. Before her departure for Germany, William II had made his
          vassals swear fealty to her, thus clearly indicating his wishes, which were
          however disregarded. While one party, led by Walter, Archbishop of Palermo, was
          anxious that the royal will should be executed, two other parties, which had
          nothing in common save their hatred of the Germans, wished to elect a king, one
          supporting Roger of Andria, the other Tancred,
            Count of Lecce, illegitimate son of Duke Roger, and thus grandson of Roger II.
            Tancred was chosen (January 1190?), thanks to Matthew of Ajello, who was
            rewarded with the appointment of Chancellor. From the very outset he was faced
            by the most serious difficulties. A Muslim insurrection broke out in Sicily; in
            Italy the partisans of Roger of Andria revolted and espoused Henry Vi’s cause
            out of hatred for Tancred; finally, the arrival of the Third Crusade at Messina
            was the source of the gravest embarrassment to the new king.
             Richard
          of Acerra, Tancred’s brother-in-law, succeeded in restoring order in Italy and
          in seizing Roger of Andria, while Tancred conceded numerous privileges to the
          burghers of the towns and thus sought to secure their support against the
          feudal nobility. At the same time the king was carrying on very troublesome
          negotiations with the crusaders in Italy. Richard Coeur-de-Lion had complained
          even before his arrival in Messina that his sister Joan, widow of William II,
          was detained in captivity and had not received her jointure. Moreover, he
          demanded an important legacy bequeathed by the deceased king to Henry II of
          England, to wit, a golden table twelve feet in length and a foot and a half in
          breadth, a silken tent large enough to contain two hundred knights, twenty-four
          golden cups, a hundred galleys equipped for two years, and sixty thousand loads
          of wheat, barley, and wine.
   Tancred
          met these demands by setting Joan at liberty and giving her a million taris as jointure, but Richard was annoyed because all his claims had not been
          satisfied and, on his arrival at Messina, he occupied Bagnara on the Italian
          coast; subsequently, disagreements having arisen between the English and the
          people of Messina, he took possession of the city by force and built a wooden
          tower which he mockingly called “Mate Grifon” (Slaughter-Greek). In the end
          Tancred came to terms with the irascible King of England; he indemnified Queen
          Joan by giving her another twenty thousand ounces of gold. In return for an
          equal sum Richard I renounced William II’s legacy and agreed to arrange a
          marriage between his nephew Arthur of Brittany and one of the King of Sicily’s
          daughters. Moreover Richard promised to uphold Tancred as long as he remained
          in the latter’s dominions. There is little doubt that the alliance was directed
          against Henry VI, Constance’s husband, but this clause of the treaty was of no
          assistance to Tancred’s interests, for after the departure of the crusaders
          for the Holy Land (March and April 1191) he remained in isolation to confront
          the German invasion.
           Ever
          since 1190 Henry VI had determined to claim his wife’s inheritance by force.
          He was delayed by the death of his father, which took place during the Crusade,
          but was soon in a position to resume his Italian plans. In March 1191 he
          renewed the treaty of 1162 with Pisa; about the same time he entered into
          negotiations with Genoa, which were concluded a little later. He appeared
          outside Rome just after the death of Pope Clement
            III, and the cardinals hastened to elect a successor before the arrival of the
            German troops (30 March 1191). The new Pope, Celestine III, was called upon to
            crown the Emperor the day after his own consecration (15 April). Immediately afterwards
            Henry VI directed his march towards southern Italy. There flocked round him not
            only the exiled Normans but also a large number of the nobles who had taken
            part in the last insurrection. The German expedition advanced with great ease,
            and it was almost without serious fighting that the Emperor laid siege to
            Naples, where the Norman troops had concentrated. While Henry was besieging
            Naples, the people of Salerno made their submission. The Empress Constance then
            repaired to Salerno and established herself in the royal palace of Terracina,
            where she remained when, in the course of the summer, an epidemic forced the
            Emperor to raise the siege of Naples and retire to the north. But he left
            garrisons in all the towns that had adopted his cause, and retained occupation
            of the conquered territory.
           After the
          departure of the Germans, the people of Salerno were much ashamed of their
          disloyalty, and to conciliate Tancred they handed over Constance to him. During
          the summer of 1191 Tancred crossed to Italy; he succeeded in wresting several
          towns from the Germans, among them Capua. He could not however drive out
          Henry’s troops; hostilities continued for some years, and the Germans managed
          to hold their ground in the district of Monte Cassino, while on the other hand
          the King of Sicily established his authority in the Abruzzi.
               In expectation of
          the German Emperor making a fresh attack, Tancred sought to secure the aid of
          Byzantium, and arranged a marriage between his son Roger and Irene, daughter of
          Isaac Angelus. At the same time, in order to obtain the protection of Pope
          Celestine III, the King of Sicily agreed by the concordat of Gravina (1192) to
          relinquish the rights which the Treaty of Benevento had granted to the kingdom
          of Sicily. The mediation of the Pope with the Emperor, however, was unsuccessful,
          and Celestine III proffered no other assistance to Tancred. He even gave him
          the unpalatable advice to liberate Constance. Tancred followed this unhappy
          suggestion, and thus deprived himself of the hostage whom chance had placed in
          his hands.
               Tancred, however,
          did not live to witness the victory of Henry VI, for he died on 20 February
          1194. He has been held up to ridicule by Peter of Eboli, who gloats over his
          ugly face and dwarfish stature; but he does not deserve the jibes of this
          poetical adulator of the German conquest, for it cannot be denied that during
          his short tenancy of the throne he displayed rare qualities as a military
          commander, which enabled him to offer resistance under almost hopeless
          conditions.
               The king’s elder
          son and crowned colleague Roger having predeceased him, the crown devolved on
          the second son William III, who was still very young. The regency was in the
          hands of the queen, Sibylla, sister of Count Richard of Acerra. The German Emperor had therefore only a woman
            and an infant to oppose him in the conquest of the Norman kingdom. Henry VI
            indeed had not relinquished his plans; he had been delayed by events in
            Germany, but was ready to take the field in 1194. In January of that year he
            concluded the treaty of Vercelli with the Lombard towns, so as to ensure that
            neither the Pope nor the King of Sicily should find allies among them. Having
            quelled in March 1194 the revolt of the house of the Welfs in Germany, Henry VI
            opened the campaign. He carefully arranged that he should be supported by the
            fleets of Pisa and Genoa.
   The
          characteristic feature of the expedition was the ease of his conquest. There
          does not seem to have been any attempt at resistance, as from the outset the
          cause of William III was regarded as hopeless. As soon as Henry VI appeared
          outside a town, its gates were thrown open to him. Only the people of Salerno,
          who feared chastisement for their treachery, dared to resist, whereupon their
          city was taken by storm. In Sicily Sibylla vainly endeavoured to withstand him;
          she suffered the mortification of seeing the inhabitants of Palermo open the
          gates of the capital to the Emperor (20 November 1194). Having fled to
          Caltabellotta with her son, she accepted the peace proposals made by Henry II,
          who offered William the county of Lecce and the principality of Taranto, and on
          Christmas Day 1194 the Emperor was crowned King of Sicily at Palermo in her
          presence and that of her son. Pour days later, on the pretext of their
          complicity in a plot, the queen and the principal nobles of the kingdom were
          arrested. The Emperor has been severely blamed for these arrests, and has been
          accused of having forged all the documents proving the existence of a plot and
          of having caused the death of the prisoners. He has been partially exonerated
          on this score. In 1194 there was no blood-thirsty repression, and there
          apparently was a plot. On the other hand, there is no doubt that, after the
          great insurrections against the German domination which broke out in 1196 and
          1197, Henry VI did order wholesale executions. He not only punished the
          instigators of the revolt, but also directed that some of the prisoners of 1194
          who had taken no part in it should have their eyes put out. Consequently, even
          if we adopt the most favourable hypothesis, Henry VI’s conduct must appear
          excessively cruel, as he punished individuals who, having been in German prisons
          for two years, must necessarily have been innocent of complicity in the later
          events.
           The
          fate of William III, last of the Norman kings, is unknown; according to some
          reports Henry VI caused him to be mutilated, according to others Tancred’s son
          became a monk.
   The
          administrative organisation established by the Norman kings in South Italy and
          Sicily was not less remarkable than their political achievement. Two facts
          dominate the history of the Norman organisation and
            explain its methods: the very small numbers of the conquerors and the
            sparseness also of the indigenous population. Even after the conquerors had
            been strengthened by a further immigration, still none too large, of their
            compatriots, they were never sufficiently numerous to outweigh the native
            races; they were obliged to attract settlers from all parts to populate vacant
            lands, and to retain their ascendency they were led to concede equal importance
            to the institutions, customs, and characters of all the races they found
            represented in the regions they subjugated.
           Hence although
          French remained the court language, the Norman Chancery made use of Greek,
          Latin, or Arabic, according to the nationality of those to whom they
          dispatched the royal diplomas. The same principle recurs in private law, and in
          the preamble of the Assises of Ariano in 1140 the greatest Norman king decreed
          as follows: “The laws newly promulgated by our authority are binding on
          everyone...but without prejudice to the habits, customs, and laws of the
          peoples subject to our authority, each in its own sphere...unless any one of
          these laws or customs should be manifestly opposed to our decrees.” We find an
          expression of the same spirit in the manner in which Roger II and his
          successors borrowed from various legal systems those elements of public law
          which they considered most advantageous to their dynasty and most easily
          applicable to the conquered country. Thus Norman public law seems to be a
          mixture partly of Justinianean and Byzantine, partly of feudal law. Recently H.
          Niese has endeavoured to prove that in Sicilian law there was an element of
          Norman law, the importance of which he may have exaggerated.
               The greatest
          social change which the Normans introduced into their new domain was, perhaps,
          feudalism in the true sense of the word. Neither the Lombards of the south nor
          the Byzantines had known vassalage or fiefs, however much hereditary counts
          and nobles may have formed a fitting prelude to feudalism proper. But by the
          reign of Roger II we find a feudal hierarchy of princes, dukes, counts, and
          barons, holding fiefs by military tenure under homage and fealty, and usually
          enjoying feudal jurisdiction, at least in civil causes. Below and beside them
          stand the simple knights with or without fiefs. Roger II, by decreeing that only
          the son of a knight could himself be knighted, endeavoured to form the whole
          feudal body into a kind of caste. In its general outlines this system was not
          different from that of Normandy. The mass of the peasantry were either actual
          serfs, bound to their plots, many of whom (the defensati), not unlike
          the German ministeriales, were specially liable to military service, or
          men who, though personally free, held their land by servile tenure. The new
          settlers, called in to people vacant lands, were naturally favoured by their
          own customs. But there were also large, if diminishing, survivals of non-feudal
          freeholders, mostly townsmen, who fully owned their property absque
            servitio. Slaves were not very numerous, and no Christians, save Slavs
          only, could by custom-law be bought and
            sold as such. The non-noble population as a whole were liable to the angariae,
              i.e. the repair of roads and castles and the like. The peasants had already
            adopted the habit of living together in small towns for the sake of safety,
            and, just as happens today in Sicily, a man’s plot of ground might lie some
            miles from his dwelling-place. The burdens on the peasant were indeed heavy and
            his lot was hard, but it was mitigated by the growth of custom, favoured by his
            value to his lord and by the strictness of the royal administration.
             From
          a religious point of view the Norman kings borrowed their conception of a
          theocratic monarchy from Byzantium, but their spirit of tolerance mitigated the
          exaggerated results which might have attended this principle. The “pious” king,
          the “defender of the Christians,” insisted that he was “crowned by God” and is
          shewn in the mosaics of the churches receiving the diadem from Christ. It was,
          said Roger II in his Assises, “equal to sacrilege to cavil at his judgments,
          his laws, deeds, and counsels.” Further, the privilege of the Apostolic
          Legateship conferred on the Norman sovereigns an authority over part of the
          Latin clergy in their dominions such as was possessed by no other monarch of
          that period. Nevertheless they allowed free exercise of their religion to the
          Muslims from the start, and to the Greeks after a comparatively short interval
          from the conquest.
           The
          administrative organisation established in their states was the most
          characteristic creation of the Norman rulers. At the heart of this skilfully
          constructed system was the king, who governed with the assistance of the Curia
            Regis, in whose hands were concentrated all powers. Gradually there came
          into being various departments, a Court of Justice, side by side with a
          Financial Council (Archons of the Secretum) which was itself divided into
          several sections, equipped with official registers, according to the
          business with which it had to deal. In the Curia we find both lay and
          ecclesiastical vassals, as well as chosen counsellors of the king, the familia
            res, from whom were recruited the members of the Privy Council, known
          as the Lords of the Curia (Domini Curiae). Among them the great
          officials of the kingdom held the chief place. The Emir of Emirs or Admiral (ammiratus
            ammiratorum) had at first perhaps the charge of the Muslim population as
          well as the command of the fleet, a duty from which the modern title Admiral for
          a naval commander is derived, but under Roger II the Admiral George of Antioch
          became practically a prime minister or Grand Vizier. The office was left
          unfilled after the death of Maio, and the Chancellor, whose office was also
          often left vacant, was, when nominated, the chief royal minister. Over the
          finances was set the Grand Chamberlain, who became the chief of the Financial
          Council when that emerged. Dependent on one or other of the two great bodies—
          the Court of Justice or the Financial Council—there were ranked the officials
          of the provinces. These by the time of William II consisted of the Master Justiciaries, Master Chamberlains, and Master Constables (all
            over groups of provinces), and the older posts of Justiciars (for justice),
            Chamberlains (for finance), and Constables (for troops), each for a single
            province. They had under their orders local subordinates, e.g. catapans,
            strategi, viscounts, baiuli, cadis, judges, many of whom still retained
            the old Greek, Lombard, or Saracen titles.
             Thanks
          to this hierarchy of officials, royal authority was in all parts powerfully
          exercised over its subjects. This is particularly shewn by two facts. None of
          the cities in the Norman kingdom ever succeeded in constituting itself a free
          town; even the greatest of them had at its head an official appointed by the
          king. And, with very rare exceptions, none of the vassals of the Crown, whose
          obligations towards the king were regulated by feudal law, possessed the right
          of trying criminal cases; these the king reserved for himself.
               The power of the
          monarchy at home and abroad was increased by its wealth. From many sources a
          treasure was amassed which was still considerable when Henry VI captured it at
          Palermo. In addition to the revenue derived from the royal demesnes, the
          profits of justice, and the usual feudal aids (called in the Norman kingdom the collecta), including purveyance, the kings raised a variously-named
          tribute analogous to the English Danegeld,
          and drew large sums from tolls and duties, such as the lucrative port-dues
          levied on the ships which thronged their harbours. The kings themselves engaged
          in trade. The manufacture of silk, introduced by Roger II, was a royal
          monopoly, and his royal mantle still preserved shews how exquisite the new art
          could be.
           Even in art we
          find the combination of various elements resulting in a new and harmonious
          whole. As creators or promoters of a civilisation which was enriched on all
          sides by the most varied influences, the Norman kings aspired to leave behind
          them witnesses of their achievements—monuments capable of attesting the power
          and originality of a conception which sought to recognise every living element
          in the races they governed and to represent truthfully the particular nature,
          spirit, and quality of each of these races in the close collaboration of all.
          Although some of the monuments erected under their supervision have a
          definitely Eastern character, such as the palaces of La Zisa or La Cuba, most
          of the buildings which they constructed present a happy combination of Norman,
          Byzantine, and Saracenic art. As the finest examples of this composite art it
          is enough to mention the Cappella Palatina at Palermo, the cathedral of
          Monreale, and the church of Cefalu.
               The mosaic of
          manners and customs due to the juxtaposition of different races was also
          evident in the life of the great cities of the Norman kingdom. Never indeed
          was there any fusion between the races existing therein. Greeks, Italians,
          Normans, Saracens, all continued to dwell in the same towns subject to the same
          authority, but faithful to their own customs and traditions.
               The
          court at Palermo exhibited the same diversity as was elsewhere visible. There
          the king appeared in a costume derived alike from Byzantine ceremonial, from
          Western chivalry, and from the magnificence of the Saracenic East. For his
          protection there were two bodyguards, one of knights, the other of negroes
          under the command of a Muslim. In the army there was the same mixture, Norman
          knights arrayed beside Saracen troops in striking costumes. In the train of the
          sovereign, Latin, Greek, and Muslim officials were in constant intercourse. At
          Roger II's court the Arab geographer Idrisi, the Greek author Nilus Doxapatrius,
          and the Emir Eugenius who translated Ptolemy’s Optics into Latin, might
          be found side by side. Arabic poets composed poems in honour of the royal
          family. Abu-ad-Dah bewailed the death of Duke Roger; ‘Abd-ar-Rahman sang the
          charms of one of the royal palaces. At William I’s court Henry Aristippus
          translated the works of St Gregory Nazianzen by desire of the king, and
          undertook the translation of the Phaedo and the fourth book of
          Aristotle’s Meteorologica.
           Affected
          by contact with Eastern civilisation, the Norman sovereigns allowed themselves
          to adopt the morals of their Moorish courtiers with a facility which was a
          credit to their eclecticism, but which gradually weakened their energy and
          dignity; and their example was undoubtedly followed by most of the nobles at
          court. If the sons of the Norman conquerors all suffered more or less from the
          pernicious influence of these new customs combined with the effect of an
          unaccustomed climate, nowhere was this degeneracy so rapid and so intense as in
          the royal family. Most of the sons of Roger II died young; the number of children
          diminished with William I, and William II was childless. The extinction of the
          royal family only preceded the fall of the Norman domination by a few years; it
          was at once a cause and a sign. Between the various elements which formed the
          Norman kingdom, elements which differed too widely ever to blend into a
          coherent and durable whole, the person of the king supplied the only link, a
          link which necessarily disappeared with his disappearance, for Constance was
          not regarded as the daughter of Roger II but as the German Empress. With Henry
          VI there began a new period in the history of South Italy and of Sicily, and it
          may be said that the conquest in 1194 marked the close of the Norman
          domination.
   
 CHAPTER V.
           THE ITALIAN CITIES TILL c. 1200.
 
 
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