County of Sicily explained

Conventional Long Name:County of Sicily
Common Name:Sicily
Government Type:Monarchy
Year Start:1071
Year End:1130
P1:Muslim Sicily
S1:Kingdom of Sicily
Image Map Caption:The county in 1112, before its merger with the mainland Duchy of Apulia and Calabria
Capital:Palermo
Official Languages:Latin
Byzantine Greek
Siculo-Arabic
Languages Type:Other languages
Languages:Italo-Romance languages
Norman
Hebrew
Religion:Roman Catholicism (official), Greek Orthodoxy, Islam, and Judaism
Leader1:Roger I
Year Leader1:1071–1101
Leader2:Simon
Year Leader2:1101–1105
Leader3:Roger II
Year Leader3:1105–1130
Title Leader:Count
Today:Italy
Malta

The County of Sicily, also known as County of Sicily and Calabria,[1] [2] was a Norman state comprising the islands of Sicily and Malta and part of Calabria from 1071 until 1130.[3] The county began to form during the Christian reconquest of Sicily (1061 - 91) from the Muslim Emirate, established by conquest in 965. The county is thus a transitional period in the history of Sicily. After the Muslims had been defeated and either forced out or incorporated into the Norman military, a further period of transition took place for the county and the Sicilians.

History

The County of Sicily was created by Robert Guiscard in 1071 for his younger brother Roger Bosso. Guiscard himself had received the title Duke of Sicily (dux Siciliae) in 1059 from Pope Nicholas II as encouragement to conquer it from the Muslims. In 1061 the first permanent Norman conquest (Messina) was made and in 1071, after the fall of Palermo, the capital of the emirate and future capital of the county, Guiscard invested Roger with the title of count and gave him full jurisdiction in the island save for half the city of Palermo, Messina, and the Val Demone, which he retained for himself. Roger was to hold the county which comprised conquests yet to be made under Guiscard. In February 1091 the conquest of Sicily was completed when Noto fell. The conquest of Malta was begun later that year; it was completed in 1127 when the Arab administration of the island was expelled.

Robert Guiscard left Roger in an ambiguous relationship with his successors of the Duchy of Apulia and Calabria. After the death of Robert in 1085, Roger I obtained from the new duke, Roger Borsa, the whole rights over the castles in Calabria, the lordship of which he had previously shared with Robert Guiscard.[4] In fact, the seat of Roger I's government was the Calabrian town of Mileto.[5] According to historians Agostino Inveges and Matteo Camera, Roger I started to use the title "Great Count of Sicily and Calabria" since 1096.[6] After the death of Roger I the major change was the transfer of the capital: Palermo became the capital in 1112, when Roger II was invested with the county, after the regency of the mother Adelaide del Vasto.[7] With this change, Sicily come to be governed by the central government, while the Calabrian territories became a provincial administrative unit.[8] During the reigns of Roger II of Sicily and William II of Apulia conflict broke out between the two Norman principalities, first cousins through Roger and Robert respectively. Through the mediation of Pope Calistus II and in return for aid against a rebellion led by Jordan of Ariano in 1121, the childless William ceded all his Sicilian territories to Roger and named him his heir.

When William died in 1127, Roger inherited the mainland duchy; three years later, in 1130 in Palermo, he merged his holdings to form the Kingdom of Sicily with the approval of antipope Anacletus II.

List of counts

See also: List of monarchs of Sicily.

Sicily was granted, pending its Christian reconquest, to Robert Guiscard as "duke" in 1059 by Pope Nicholas II. Then Guiscard granted it as a county to his brother Roger.

width=22% Count !width=105px Portrait !Birth width=25% Marriages !width=19% Death
Roger I
1071–1101
1031
son of Tancred of Hauteville and Fredisenda
Judith of Évreux
1061
4 children

Eremburga of Mortain
1077
8 children

Adelaide del Vasto
1087
4 children
1101
Mileto
aged 70
Simon
1101–1105
never married 1105
Mileto
aged 12
Roger II
1105–1130
Elvira of Castile
1117
6 children

Sibyl of Burgundy
1149
2 children

Beatrix of Rethel
1151
1 child
26 February 1154
Palermo
aged 59

See also

Notes and References

  1. Fiore, Giovanni. Della Calabria illustrata, Vol. 3. Rubbettino, 1999. p. 551.
  2. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Roger-I Roger I
  3. Takayama, Hiroshi. The Administration of the Norman Kingdom of Sicily. Brill Publishers: Leiden, 1993. p. 47.
  4. Takayama, p. 25.
  5. Takayama, p. 25.
  6. Camera, Matteo. Annali Delle Due Sicilie, Vol. I, 1841. p. 32.
  7. Takayama, p. 48.
  8. Takayama, p. 48.