Battle of Brindisi (1156) explained

Conflict:Battle of Brindisi (1156)
Partof:Byzantine–Norman Wars
Date:28 May 1156
Place:Brindisi
Result:Sicilian victory
Combatant1:Byzantine Empire
Commander1:John Doukas
Robert of Loritello
Alexios Komnenos
Commander2:William I

The Battle of Brindisi (1156) was fought by the Byzantine Empire and the Kingdom of Sicily over control of Southern Italy.

The battle was part of a Byzantine campaign orchestrated by the emperor Manuel I Komnenos to recover Apulia and Calabria for the Byzantine Empire by taking advantage of the chaotic political situation in Norman Sicily following the death of Roger II and the succession of the William 'the Bad'. While the Byzantine forces managed to take control of numerous southern Italian cities, including Bari, the defeat at Brindisi, inflicted at the end of a protracted Byzantine siege of the city, effectively put an end to the Byzantine attempt at reconquest.

Following the defeat, the Byzantine diplomat Alexios Axouch arrived at the Byzantine base of Ancona in order to negotiate a favorable treaty with William. He was incredibly successful, and his negotiations allowed Manuel to exit the war with honor, despite a series of large-scale, successful Norman raids of the Aegean coasts of Greece and the consolidation of Norman Sicily under William.

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