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              THE FALL OF THE HOHENSTAUFFEN,A.D. 1250-1268—
              NAPLES AND SICILY,A.D.1268-1301
              
                 
               
              
                 
               
              THE news
                
                of Frederick’s death was received with great joy by the papal court. Innocent
                
                IV expressed his delight in no measured language, and looked forward to the
                
                entire destruction of the race of Hohenstauffen. The
                
                enemies of the imperial house were urged on by the mendicant orders. In
                
                Germany, Conrad was denounced as a son of Herod; in Italy, the Frangipani now
                
                put themselves at the head of the papal party; quarrels between Guelphs and
                
                Ghibellines were rife in every city. Civil war raged from the Rhine and the
                
                Danube to the southernmost promontory of Sicily. After acknowledging William of
                
                Holland as king of Germany, and giving him hopes of the imperial crown,
                
                Innocent left Germany a prey to destruction, and returned to Rome in a
                
                triumphal procession. But it was easy to see from the strength of the
                
                opposition that it was hopeless for him to attempt to revive the authority of
                
                Innocent III. He hoped to recover his power over the kingdom of the two Sicilies, but here he was met by Manfred, a natural son of
                
                Frederick, who was acting as the viceroy of his half-brother, Conrad IV.
                
                Manfred, now eighteen years old, and one of the most picturesque figures in
                
                history, immortalized by Dante, beautiful, brave, and chivalrous, clever,
                
                cultivated, and generous, drew the hearts of all to his allegiance.
                
               
              The pope
                
                reached Rome by way of Bologna, where Enzio was
                
                imprisoned, and ordered Manfred to surrender all the castles in his possession,
                
                offering him Taranto as a papal fief. Manfred refused, and called Conrad to his counsels. Conrad crossed the Alps and reached Verona,
                  
                  where he met the faithful ally of the empire, Ezzelino da Romano, a monster of cruelty, whose excesses
                    
                    offended even the seared consciences of that blood-stained age. Conrad, sailing from Pola, landed at Siponto, afterwards
                      
                      called Manfredonia, where he was met by Manfred, whom
                      
                      he treated with great honor. But, under the influence of Pietro Ruffo, a minister of humble birth, the emperor of
                      
                      twenty-four gradually became jealous of the viceroy of eighteen, who surpassed
                      
                      him in brilliancy and popularity. Yet the generous and open-hearted Manfred
                      
                      assisted him in all his enterprises, reduced the towns of Apulia, and helped him to conquer Naples, which he
                        
                        entered in triumph on October 1, 1253.
                          
                 
              Innocent intended to oppose to Conrad, as king of the two Sicilies, Henry, the son of Isabella of England, then
                
                seventeen years old, to whom his brother Manfred had already committed the
                
                government of Sicily. But he died suddenly in December 1253, and
                  
                  was soon after followed to the grave by Frederick, the son of the unhappy
                  
                  Henry (VII), so that the only legitimate heirs of the great Frederick were his
                  
                  son Conrad and his grandson Conradin, whom the Bavarian Elizabeth had borne to
                  
                  Conrad during his absence in Italy. During the siege of Naples, Innocent had
                  
                  offered the Neapolitan crown to Charles of Anjou, brother of Louis IX, and to
                  
                  Richard of Cornwall, brother of Henry III, both of whom refused. But in 1255
                  
                  Henry accepted it for his younger son Edmund, the chief result  being to give
                    
                    the Pope an excuse for demanding Conrad large sums from England, and to
                    
                    increase Henry’s embarrassments. Meanwhile, on May 21, 1254, Conrad died suddenly
                    
                    at Bavello, near Melfi,
                    
                    leaving as his heir a baby of two years old in the mountains of Bavaria. The
                    
                    fate of the rival king, William of Holland, need not detain us. He had no real
                    
                    power, and under his weak rule the disruptive forces which always existed in
                    
                    Germany had full play. On January 28, 1256, mounted on a heavy horse and clad
                    
                    in full armour, though more accustomed to walk
                    
                    barefooted to church in a woolen robe, he rode across the ice to attack the Frisians.
                    
                    His horse broke through the ice, and he was killed by the peasants, and buried
                    
                    under the doorstep of a house in Hoogwoude; but in
                    
                    1282 his bones were removed by his son Frederick to a monastery in Middelburg.
                    
           
              Innocent
                
                was not less delighted at the death of Conrad than he had been when Frederick
                
                perished. After the emperor had been buried in the cathedral of Messina,
                
                Manfred went with an embassy to the pope at Anagni, to ask for the recognition
                
                of the child Conradin as successor to his father. Instead of taking the
                
                opportunity of securing the power of the  church by accepting the guardianship of the infant whom his father had
                
                left to his care, Innocent excommunicated Manfred and all the most powerful Hohenstauffens, and sent his nephew, Cardinal William Fieschi, as legate to Sicily, with orders to seize it for
                
                the Holy See. The Ghibellines were driven to resistance, and had no alternative
                
                but to place Manfred at their head. Once more Manfred offered peace, but the
                
                pope met him with duplicity, proposing to make him prince of Taranto and count
                
                of Andria, and to recognize Conradin as duke of Swabia and king of Jerusalem,
                
                when he had already given Taranto to the Frangipani, and Sicily to the English
                
                Edmund. The pope now left Anagni with a crowd of fugitive Guelphs and entered
                
                Apulia at Ceprano. Manfred held his stirrup as he
                
                crossed the bridge over the Garigliano, and on
                
                October 27, 1254, he entered Naples. Nobles came to take the oath of
                
                allegiance, but there was no mention of the rights of Conradin. Manfred saw
                
                that he was surrounded by treachery and intrigue, and fled for his life through
                
                the mountains to Lucera, where he found the
                
                protection of his faithful Saracens, and an abundant treasure. He attacked the
                
                papal troops, and drove Cardinal William back to Naples, where he heard that his
                
                master, Innocent, was dead. The pope, with his heart broken by the defeats of
                
                Foggia and Troja, died on December 7, 1254, in the
                
                palace of Pietro delle Vigne. He was a man of ability, energy, and ambition, but
                
                was devoid of piety and of elevation of character. He was a bitter partisan,
                
                and deserves neither our respect nor our admiration.
                
               
              After
                
                nine days, a new pope was elected, the bishop of Ostia and Velletri,
                
                of the house of Conti, a nephew of Gregory IX, and in three weeks he was
                
                consecrated under the title of Alexander IV. He continued the old policy, but
                
                not with the same success. The growth of Manfred’s power compelled him to leave
                
                Naples, and to retire first to Anagni and then to Rome. There the rising of the
                
                Roman people, who were anxious to recall their hero, Brancaleone,
                
                the avenger of wrong, the friend of the law, the protector of the people, from
                
                Bologna, drove him to seek refuge in Viterbo, where he remained for the rest of
                
                his life. Manfred occupied first Naples and then Sicily. The pope was obliged
                
                to give up his political plans, as the English would not allow Henry III to
                
                incur the expense of making his son Edmund king of Sicily or his brother
                
                Richard emperor of Germany. The year 1259, which we have now reached, saw the
                
                end of the monster Ezzelino da Romano. Age only
                
                stimulated his evil qualities : the ban of two popes hardened his resolution.
                
                We can only suppose that he was mad, and it was a sign of the times that a
                
                madman should be allowed to rage unfettered. Everyone who aroused his jealousy,
                
                stirred his anger, stimulated his passions, or stood in the way of his
                
                ambition, was so treated that the living envied the dead, and whole families of
                
                nobles were put to death. Race, riches, genius, and virtue were punished as
                
                crimes, and the streets of his dominions resounded with the groans of those who
                
                were being tortured with the rack. Padua and the Marches were as if stricken
                
                with the plague; fugitives, if caught, were deprived of their arms and feet. At
                
                last he was defeated by his enemies at the bridge of Cassano,
                
                and imprisoned in the castle of Soncino. He sat there
                
                brooding over his misfortunes, refusing the ministration of religion,
                
                regretting only that he had not exacted a fuller vengeance from his enemies,
                
                till, at last, on December 7, 1259, he tore the bandages from his wounds and
                
                died. His brother Alberic suffered a worse fate. He
                
                was captured by his former friend, the marquis of Este, together with his wife
                
                Margaret, their six sons, and two lovely daughters. After seeing his family
                
                strangled before his eyes, he was torn to pieces by wild horses and his limbs
                
                were buried. The all-powerful house of Romano
                
               
              In the following year, Manfred, hearing a false report
                
                that Conradin was dead, was crowned king of Sicily
                  
                  and Apulia in the cathedral of Palermo, on August 11,
                    
                    1258. Elizabeth sent to tell him that Conradin was still alive, and to order
                    
                    him to lay aside his crown and acknowledge his nephew; but Manfred replied that
                    
                    the southern nobles would never accept a northern sovereign, that Conradin should succeed him after his
                      
                      death, but that in the meantime the boy had better
                        
                        come to him and learn how to rule a southern population.
                          
                          Manfred governed with wisdom
                            
                            and success, and established a court in Palermo equal to that of his father in splendour and in the encouragement of art, literature, and science. He even thought of extending his rule over Epirus and Aetolia. But the
                              
                              pope insisted on Sicily being held as a papal fief and on
                                
                                the Saracens being sent back to Africa, and, when Manfred
                                  
                                  proudly refused to surrender
                                    
                                    his independence and summoned more Saracens to help
                                      
                                      him, excommunicated the recalcitrant sovereign as his predecessor had
                                      
                                      excommunicated his father.
                                      
                             
              But the
                
                weapon had become blunt by indiscriminate usage, and the ban only stimulated
                
                Manfred to make himself sovereign of an independent and united Italy. Happily
                
                for him, Ezzelino was dead, and he made Palavicini, the bitter enemy of the monster, his lieutenant
                
                in Lombardy. He made treaties with Venice and Genoa, and appointed a Doria of
                
                Venice his viceroy in Spoleto and the March. The Ghibelline Farinata degli Uberti had been
                
                driven out of Florence by the Guelfs and took refuge in Siena, from which the
                
                Florentines advanced to expel him. Manfred sent his German mercenaries to
                
                assist him, and on September 4, 1260, the Guelfs were entirely defeated in the
                
                battle of Montaperti on the Arbia,
                
                a conflict celebrated in the verse of Dante, who was born five years after it.
                
                The Guelf caroccio was captured, the exiled Ghibellines returned, and their enemies took refuge in
                
                Lucca. Florence and nearly the whole of Tuscany acknowledged Manfred as their
                
                lord. The Guelfs sent to Conradin for assistance, begging him to come to Italy,
                
                upon which he declared war against Manfred; but Alexander IV: died at Viterbo
                
                on March 28, 1261; Florence, Siena, and Pisa formed themselves into a
                
                Ghibelline league with Manfred as their protector; and Perugia and Umbria alone
                
                remained faithful to the Holy See.
                
               
              The
                
                Cardinals in Viterbo elected James Pantaleone, a French
                
                prelate of humble extraction, now patriarch of Jerusalem, to the Papal throne.
                
                He took the name of Urban IV, and pursued the "viper brood" of the Hohenstauffen with as much passion as his predecessors. But
                
                Manfred stood at the height of his power. The excommunicated king reigned in splendor
                
                at Palermo; his voice was more powerful than that of the Pope on the Tiber, the
                
                Arno, and the Po; and Peter of Aragon was not prevented Urban IV by pious
                
                scruples from marrying Constance, the daughter of Manfred by his first
                
                marriage. Urban, in despair, turned to his countryman, Charles of Anjou, the
                
                brother of St. Louis, the husband of Beatrice of Provence, whose three sisters
                
                had married sovereigns, and a treaty was signed between them in 1263. But
                
                Urban’s satisfaction was diminished by Charles being elected by the Roman
                
                Guelfs as senator of Rome for life. In the midst of these troubles, Urban IV,
                
                who had never set foot in Rome, died at Perugia on October 2, 1264,
          
         
              In the
                
                conclave opinions were divided, but the French party finally won the day, and
                
                Guido le Gros, of St. Gilles in Languedoc, a
                
                Provencal by birth, was consecrated pope in the cathedral of Perugia on
                
                February 22, 1265, with the title of Clement IV. He had lived long as a layman,
                
                but, on the death of his wife, had become a Carthusian,
                
                then bishop of Puy, archbishop of Narbonne, and
                
                cardinal of Santa Sabina. He was reluctant to receive the throne at his
                
                advanced age, but, being a personal friend of Charles and being promised the
                
                assistance of Louis IX, he consented, and inaugurated a crusade against Manfred
                
                "the usurper and the sultan". In April 1265, the year of Dante’s
                
                birth, Charles sailed from the coast of Provence first to Pisa and then to
                
                Ostia, where, owing to the stormy weather, he landed in a small boat, and
                
                entered the Holy City on Whitsunday, May 23. The Romans of all classes—nobles,
                
                clergy, and people—received him with acclamation; he was invested as senator in
                
                the Capitol on June 21, and seven days later was crowned in the Lateran as king
                
                of Sicily, receiving the kingdom as feudatory of the pope. On October 14, he
                
                founded a university in Rome as a memorial of his new reign. He had, however,
                
                come to Rome without money and without troops, to take the crown from the head
                
                of a rival who was well provided with both. He was forty-six years of
                
                age,—strong, tall, and dignified, —stern, dark, and terrifying. He never
                
                smiled, and slept but little. He was a hard man, stubborn, cruel, and
                
                ambitious. He was pitted against the paragon of chivalrous manhood, generous,
                
                affable, and cultured, an enemy to craft and passion. But when Clement IV
                
                publicly announced that the Church had found in the count of Provence a
                
                champion against the poisonous brood of a dragon of poisonous race, and gave
                
                absolution to all those who should take the cross or assist the Church with
                
                money—when swarms of friars spread over the country, declaring it to be a
                
                Christian duty to attack the condemned heretic king of the Mohammedans — many
                
                answered to the summons.
                
               
              The
                
                French crusaders who crossed the Alps numbered 30,000 men. Those who had fought
                
                on the side of the church against the Albigenses now
                
                turned their swords against Manfred. In December 1265, the Provençals reached Rome. On Epiphany Day, 1266, Charles and his wife, Beatrice, were
                
                crowned in St. Peter's as king and queen of Sicily. Manfred desired a reconciliation,
                
                but the pope answered, "Tell Manfred that the day of mercy is passed, the
                
                armed hero is at the door, the axe is laid at the root of the tree". The
                
                decisive battle took place on February 26,1266, on the Field of Roses,
                
                north-west of Benevento. The battle was one between French and Germans. The
                
                German knights, amongst whom was Rudolf of Hapsburg, fought bravely, but the
                
                French killed their horses with their short swords, and, when the riders fell, knocked
                
                them on the head with their clubs. When the Apulians saw the Germans defeated, they ran away. The silver eagle fell from Manfred’s
                
                helmet ; he recognized the token of disaster, and, saying, “All is lost”, rode
                
                with Theobald Asinibaldi into the thick of the melée, and met the death he sought. His naked body, covered
                
                with wounds, a great gash on his forehead, was found two days later, and was
                
                buried at the head of the bridge of Benevento. As each French soldier passed by
                
                his grave with reverence, he cast a stone upon it, and raised a cairn, but the
                
                bishop of Consenza, Manfred’s bitter foe, at the
                
                bidding of the pope, dug the body up, and threw it across the border, out of
                
                the dominions of the church, where it lay exposed to rain and wind. Even today
                
                the peasants of that solitary valley think of the young king, beautiful, gifted
                
                and unfortunate, dying at the age of thirty-three, heroic in his death as in
                
                his life.
                
               
              At this
                
                time, the crown of Germany was disputed between Richard of Cornwall, brother of
                
                Henry III, and Alfonso X of Castile, known as the Wise. Money was the decisive
                
                factor in the choice. On January 13, 1257, Richard was elected king at
                
                Frankfort, and on April 1 Alfonso was elected to the same office at Trier.
                
                Richard was crowned at Cologne on May 17. This begins the period of the German
                
                Interregnum. Alfonso never visited his kingdom, Richard confined himself to
                
                spending money, and the English objected to the extravagance of the prince whom
                
                they called King of the Romans. Richard was German king for fifteen years, but
                
                exercised no influence over the country. After being imprisoned at home by the
                
                discontented barons, he visited Germany for the last time, and held a diet at
                
                Worms in March 1269. In June 1267 he had married, at the age of fifty-eight,
                
                the youthful Beatrice of Folkenstein, but died in
                
                1271, mourned chiefly by those who had fattened on his bounty. Whilst Germany
                
                was in this state of weakness and confusion, Ottokar of Bohemia was consolidating his dominions and endeavoring to extend them. He
                
                first attacked Bavaria, but was defeated in the battle of Mühldorf on August 25, 1257, and then turned his attention to Salzburg and Styria, and
                
                also fought against Hungary. He greatly increased his power. The struggle
                
                between Richard and Alfonso gave him hopes of obtaining the German throne, but,
                
                for the moment, he attached himself to Richard, and, on August 9, 1262,
                
                appeared before him at Aachen, and asked to be invested with his Austrian
                
                dominions. He further strengthened his position by divorcing his wife, from whom
                
                he could expect no heir, and marrying a Hungarian princess in October 1261. He
                
                also made another war against Bavaria, and acquired Carinthia and Carniola in
                
                1268 and 1269, so that at the beginning of the seventies he was the most powerful
                
                sovereign in Germany, and there was great likelihood that the crown of the Teutons would be placed on the head of a Slav when the
                
                death of Richard of Cornwall made a new election imminent. The peace of Pressburg, signed in July 1271, recognised Ottokar as lord of Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, and the Wendish mark, upon which Duke Henry of Bavaria
                
                deserted his Hungarian friends and made an alliance against all the world with Ottokar. In Hungary, after the untimely death of Stephen V,
                
                the crown was disputed between his young son Ladislaus, the Kuman,
                
                and Bela, brother-in-law of Ottokar.
                
                This produced a civil war, which made Ottokar more
                
                powerful than ever. He ruled over a well organised and well governed kingdom, while the rest of Germany was a prey to weakness and
                
                disunion. The commanding position held by the Bohemian sovereign before the
                
                election of Rudolf of Hapsburg, although it is recognized by Dante, is too much neglected by historians.
          
         
              Pope Clement IV heard of the victory of Benevento with mixed feelings. Although a Frenchman, he could not
                
                look with satisfaction on the position which his friend
                  
                  Charles had now attained, nor could he approve of the immorality and cruelty
                  
                  which the French exhibited in the country which they had conquered. When Manfred’s
                  
                  wife, Helena, heard in Lucera of her husband’s death, she determined to retire with her children to her
                    
                    relations in Epirus. But she was seized at Trani and imprisoned at Nocera, where she died, after five years’ miserable existence,
                      
                      at the age of twenty-nine. Her daughter Beatrice languished
                        
                        for eighteen years in the Castello dell' Uovo at Naples, till she was set at
                          
                          liberty by the Aragonese. Manfred's three young
                          
                          sons  —Henry, Frederick, and Enzio—innocent  boys,
                          
                          grew up in prison, fettered and half starved. The two younger soon died, but eldest, now blind, prolonged his miserable
                          
                          life for many years. Meanwhile, Charles entered Naples in triumph. Romans had
                          
                          triumphed over Teutons : the church had vanquished
                          
                          the Hohenstauffens. Frederick of Antioch and his son
                          
                          Conrad submitted to Charles, and retired into obscurity. Enzio languished in prison; the scaffold disposed of the rest of Manfred’s party who
                          
                          were not in prison or in banishment; the French continued an unrestrained
                          
                          career of robbery and lust. The condition of Sicily was as bad as that of
                          
                          Italy.
                          
                 
              The
                
                Ghibellines, in their distress, looked to Conradin, the youthful grandson of
                
                the great Frederick. Since the marriage of his mother in 1259 with Meinhard of Gorz, who also
                
                possessed the Tyrol and Carinthia, he had lived quietly, either with his uncle,
                
                Duke Louis of Bavaria, at Donauworth, or with his tutor, Bishop Eberhard, at Constance, nourishing his gifted soul on the
                
                songs of minnesingers, legends of Tannhauser, Lohengrin, and the Nibelungen,
                
                and stories of the greatness of his house. When ambassadors came to ask his
                
                assistance from Apulia and Sicily, calling on the king of Sicily, Apulia, and
                
                Jerusalem, and duke of Swabia to help them, he rose to the cry of woe, in spite
                
                of his mother’s warning, like a young eagle, scarcely old enough to imp his
                
                wings.
                
               
              Charles
                
                and Clement met at Viterbo to concert measures against the common foe. In the
                
                autumn of 1267, Conradin set out from Augsburg with his cousin, Frederick
                
                of Austria, his stepfather, Meinhard of Tyrol, and
                
                his uncle Louis of Bavaria, and left Swabia, never to return. He took leave of
                
                his mother and youthful wife at Hohenschwangau,—that
                
                spot of unearthly beauty, consecrated by the memory of another Bavarian
                
                Louis,—crossed the Brenner, and descended the valley of the Adige. But in
                
                Verona, where they found that his money was exhausted, most of his followers
                
                left him, even his uncle Louis, and his stepfather, Meinhard.
                
                Only 3000 knights remained faithful to the gallant lad. In Italy things were
                
                better; Galvano Lancia was
                
                received at Rome with honour as his representative;
                
                he was welcomed by embassies from Pisa, Siena, and the Tuscan Ghibellines.
                
                Henry of Castile, knight and troubadour, wrote verses in his honour, which urged him to take possession of the beautiful
                
                garden of Sicily, and to grasp with a firm hand the crown of the Roman empire.
                
                The pope excommunicated him, and laid his interdict on all cities that were favourable to him. Charles and Clement met again at Viterbo
                
                in April 1268. The king wished to engage Conradin in the valley of the Po, but
                
                the pope persuaded him to remove the
                  
                  struggle to Apulia.
            
           
              At the beginning of May 1268, Conradin and Frederick
                
                of Austria united their forces at Pisa. They were
                  
                  received with enthusiasm in Tuscany, and on July 24 Conradin looked down upon Rome
                    
                    from the heights of Monte Mario. In the city itself he was awaited by a host of
                    
                    armed soldiers, with crowns on their helmets, while the people accompanied him
                    
                    with songs, bearing flowers and olive branches in their hands. The houses were
                    
                    decorated with costly carpets. Conradin mounted to the Capitol, where he received
                    
                    the homage of his subjects. On August 10, he marched into the mountains by way
                    
                    of Tivoli in order to effect a junction with his faithful Saracens, whom
                    
                    Charles was besieging in Lucera. The two armies met
                    
                    on August 23, at Scurcola, between Tagliacozzo and Alba, Charles marching northwards, to
                    
                    intercept the march of Conradin towards Solmona. In
                    
                    the shock of the onslaught the troops of Charles were driven back, and it was
                    
                    reported that the king was dead. But, by the advice of Aymer de St. Valery, he had posted a band of 800 chosen knights in ambush behind a
                    
                    hill. Whilst the German troops, secure of victory, were plundering the
                    
                    Provencal camp, this reserve came steadily on, threw the disorderly mass into
                    
                    confusion, and gained a complete victory. Conradin and Frederick escaped the
                    
                    slaughter, and rode away by Vicovaro to Rome, which
                    
                    they reached on August 28, five days after the battle. Finding the capital
                    
                    unsafe, they rode down the Via Appia to the
                    
                    sea-coast, hoping that some friendly ship would carry them to Pisa or to
                    
                    Sicily. They found one in Astura and set sail, but
                    
                    were captured by John Frangipani, whom the pope had invested with the fief of
                    
                    Taranto. Influenced partly by fear and partly by a large sum of money which was
                    
                    offered him, Frangipani, deaf to all sense of honour,
                    
                    delivered his prisoners in chains to Charles at Genezzano.
                    
                    Charles was determined to put the last of the Hohenstauffens to death, but it was difficult to do so with any show of justice. Conradin was
                    
                    formally tried, but acquitted by all but one of his judges. Charles, nevertheless,
                    
                    pronounced the sentence of death upon him. He was executed on October 29, 1268,
                    
                    in the market-place of Naples, where the spot where the scaffold was erected is
                    
                    still shown. The boy, scarcely seventeen, and his cousin, Frederick, a few
                    
                    years older, suffered together. After he had prayed, Conradin said, as his last
                    
                    words, “0 mother, what terrible news you will hear about me!”. Before he died, he
                    
                    cast his glove into the crowd, and it was taken up by one who afterwards
                    
                    stirred up the Sicilian Vespers of 1282. Conradin was buried in the church of
                    
                    the Carmelites close by, where a beautiful statue, erected by Maximilian of
                    
                    Bavaria, commemorates his fate. His life and death have never been forgotten,
                    
                    and it was said in September 1870 that Sedan exacted vengeance for Tagliacozzo.
                    
           
              
                 
               
              Four
                
                weeks later, Pope Clement IV died, the spirit of the murdered Conradin
                
                troubling his last hours. For two years the cardinals in Viterbo neglected to
                
                supply his place, but in September 1271 the choice fell upon Tibaldo Visconti of Piacenza, who was then engaged in a
                
                crusade, and could not be crowned in St. Peter’s till March 1272, when he
                
                assumed the title of Gregory X. He strove to increase the independence of the
                
                Holy See, disregarded the claims of Alfonso of Castile to the imperial crown,
                
                and favoured those of Rudolf of Hapsburg, who was
                
                elected in the following year. He summoned an ecumenical council at Lyons in
                
                the spring of 1274, which placed the conduct of crusades on an orderly footing,
                
                took some steps towards the union of the Greek and Latin churches, and drew up
                
                rules for the election of popes in a secret conclave. Thomas Aquinas and
                
                Bonaventura—the shining lights of the Dominican and Franciscan Orders
                
                respectively—both died at the time of this council, one at Fossa Nuova, on his way to attend it, —the other of plague, in
                
                Lyon itself. After the death of Gregory in 1276 four Popes were enthroned within
                
                two years,—Innocent V, Hadrian V, John XXI, and the Orsini, Nicholas III,
                
                elected in December 1277, who succeeded, with the assistance of Rudolf of
                
                Hapsburg, in putting some check on the overweening power of Charles, which he
                
                did by increasing the power and importance of the papal families. His nepotism
                
                and his avarice induced Dante to find for him a place in Hell. The
                
                worldly-minded pontiff died on August 22, 1280, in his castle at Soriano, and,
                
                after an interval of party strife, was succeeded on February 22, 1281, by
                
                Martin IV, a friend of Charles, so that the French domination was established
                
                on a firmer footing.
                
               
              But soon
                
                a conspiracy against the Angevin monarchy arose in Sicily, headed by John of
                
                Procida, the friend and physician of Manfred, who is said to have taken up the
                
                glove of Conradin in the market-place of Naples. He first addressed himself to
                
                Constance, the daughter of Manfred, and wife of Peter of Aragon, with a letter
                
                of recommendation from Pope Nicholas III; encouraged by her, he travelled
                
                secretly through Sicily, stirring up the island to revolt, with the aid of
                
                money from the court of Byzantium. On March 30, 1282, as a crowded congregation
                
                were gathered in the cathedral of Palermo at the vesper office of Easter
                
                Tuesday, a French soldier insulted an Italian girl, on the pretence of searching for arms. The chance match set light to a flame, a cry arose,
                
                "Death to the French!", the passionate desire for vengeance spread
                
                through the whole island, and thousands perished in the massacre, which still
                
                beaus the name of the Sicilian Vespers. Palermo declared its independence, and
                
                raised the imperial standard; the French garrison of Messina was burnt to death;
                
                and Charles had to face the task of reconquering the whole island.
                
               
              No help could
                
                be expected from Martin IV, so the insurgents applied to Peter. At the end of
                
                August, the fleet of Aragon appeared before Trapani, and after two months the
                
                Spaniard became master of the island. In June 1283, Peter and Constance were
                
                crowned in Sicily. Palermo, and the government of the island was committed to
                
                John of Procida and Roger of Loria.
                
               
              Charles
                
                was in great difficulties. While he was absent in Marseilles, collecting fresh
                
                fleet, his son Charles of Salerno was captured at sea by Roger of Loria, and was saved from the fate of Manfred and Conradin
                
                only by the intervention of Constance and Peter. These misfortunes so broke the
                
                spirit of Charles that he died at Foggia on January 7, 1284, and he was followed
                
                to the grave by Martin IV on March 28, and by Peter of Aragon on November 11,
                
                1285.
                
               
              As the
                
                eldest son of Charles was a prisoner, the government of Naples was undertaken
                
                by Robert of Artois. James of Aragon, the second son of Peter, was crowned king
                
                of Sicily at Palermo, and Roger of Loria exacted
                
                vengeance for Conradin by destroying the castle of Astura,
                
                and putting the son of the traitor Frangipani to death. Pope Honorius IV died
                
                after a short reign, and, after a year’s interval, a Franciscan friar was
                
                elected as his successor, under the title of Nicholas IV on February 22, 1288.
                
                At last, by the mediation of King Edward of England, the son of Charles of
                
                Anjou was released from captivity, and, in May 1289, was crowned by the pope in
                
                Rieti as king of the two Sicilies, under the title of
                
                Charles II.
                
               
              We must
                
                complete the history of southern Italy before we return to that of Germany.
                
                Nicholas IV saw the power of the Decline of papacy gradually wane. The
                
                crown of Sicily came into the hands of Frederick of Aragon, the youngest son of
                
                Peter, the grandson of Manfred. Rome was torn by the factions of the Guelfs and
                
                Ghibellines, the first represented by the Orsini, the second by the Colonna.
                
                Republican principles and municipal government made their way into central
                
                Italy. After the death of Nicholas, on April 4, 1292, the throne of St. Peter
                
                remained vacant for a year, until it was filled by Celestine V, the son of a
                
                peasant of Molise, who had lived for years as a hermit in a cave in the hill of Murrone, close to Solmona.
                
                He was crowned with great pomp at Aquila, and lived in the palace of Charles II
                
                at Naples. He had been chosen for his piety, but he found himself entirely
                
                unfitted for the position and the business of the pontificate, and, after four
                
                months' phantom rule, he did the best action of his life in a voluntary
                
                abdication in December 1294, although it is a general opinion that Dante placed
                
                him in Hell for having been guilty of the “the great refusal”, the casting-off
                
                of public duties deliberately entrusted to him.
                
               
              He was
                
                succeeded by one of the most vigorous of the Popes, Benedict Gaetani, who took
                
                the name of Boniface VIII.
                
               
              Boniface
                
                immediately went to Rome, carrying with him the abject Celestine as a prisoner.
                
                When he escaped to his cave and the society of the Celestine Order which he had
                
                founded, Boniface dragged him out and imprisoned him in the castle of Fumone,
                
                where he soon afterwards died. Boniface endeavored to restore the power of the
                
                papacy, and began with Sicily, which, however, succeeded in preserving its
                
                independence under Frederick of Aragon. He then attacked the Colonna, whom he
                
                reduced to submission. Unable to conquer Frederick, he summoned to his
                
                assistance Charles of Valois, also count of Anjou, brother of Philip IV, king
                
                of France. Charles met Boniface at Anagni on September 3, 1301, and discussed
                
                with him and Charles II the possibility of subduing Frederick in Sicily. Before
                
                their arrangements were concluded, Charles of Valois marched into Florence and
                
                established there the authority of the Guelf party. At last peace was made between
                
                Charles II and Frederick, on condition that Frederick should marry Charles’
                
                daughter Eleanore and reign for life as "King of Trinacria", and that the island should, after
                
                his death, pass to the house of Anjou, a condition which was never fulfilled.
                
               
              The last
                
                two crusades, which are connected with the name and fortunes of Louis IX of
                
                France, arose from the conquests of the Mongolian leader, Genghis Khan, who,
                
                proclaiming himself emperor (1206), turned his End of the arms against the Charasmians and became master of Palestine. In 1248, Louis
                
                IX landed in Cyprus; next year he advanced to Egypt and took Damietta, but was
                
                afterwards defeated and made prisoner, and had to renounce his conquests. At
                
                last, after five years spent in the East, Louis returned to France in 1254, in
                
                consequence of the strong representations of his mother, Blanche of Castile,
                
                who had conducted the government in his absence. The last expedition of Louis
                
                to the East, in 1270, hardly deserves the name of crusade. It was undertaken with
                
                the object of separating the Saracens in Africa from those in Sicily, and
                
                preventing them from assisting each other. Louis died of fever at Tunis in
                
                August, and Charles of Anjou, who had hastened to assist him, found his brother
                
                a corpse.
                
               
                
            
                
                  
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