Kingdoms of Italy - Spoleto (original) (raw)

Independent Duchy of Spoleto c.AD 570 - 1228 The city of Spoleto had been under Roman control since 241 BC and the end of the First Punic War against Carthage. Located just eighty kilometres (fifty miles) to the north of Rome itself, it subsequently fell under the authority of the Byzantine exarchate of Ravenna, but only briefly. During the sixth century, Byzantine authority in Italy suffered badly in the face of sustained attacks by the Germanic Lombards, and Spoleto quickly emerged as an independent duchy, founded as such just two years after the Lombard kingdom itself and not generally subject to its overall authority. Spoleto has a fairly obscure history. It shared three of its rulers with the Lombard kingdom and, as such, was tied more closely to the kingdom than was its rival duchy, the more important Benevento, which bordered it to the south. Its territory took in the southern half of the modern region of Marche and most of Abruzzo. It also included the city of Reate (modern Rieti), a former major settlement of the ancient Sabini tribe which lies immediately to the north-east of Rome itself.
c.570 - 591 Faroald I / Faruald I Lombard chief. Independent from 575/576.
575/576 Following the Lombard seizure of the region of Spoleto in 570, Faroald seizes Nursia and Spoleto to establish his own independent duchy. His fellow Lombard chief, Zottone, goes even further south to found Benevento.
591 - 600/1 Ariulf
590s Ariulf captures Camerino, where it is later claimed that he has seen St Sabinus, the martyr of Spoleto, who helps him to victory. The Lombard chief converts to Roman Christianity as a result. Upon his death, the two sons of Faroald fight to see who will become the next ruler, with Theodelap emerging victorious. He rules apparently entirely independently of the Lombard kingdom. Lombard infantry and cavalry An artist's impression of mixed Lombard infantry and cavalry in action, with the cavalryman's uniform bearing a marked similarity to Late Roman equipment
600/1 - c.650 Theodelap / Theudelapius Son of Faroald.
c.650 - c.665 Atto / Attone
c.665 In return for helping Grimoald to usurp the Lombard throne and reunite a divided kingdom, Count Transamund of Capua is granted the duchy of Spoleto.
c.665 - 703 Transamund I / Thrasimund I Count of Capua. Granted duchy by Grimoald of the Lombards.
703 - 724 Faroald II / Faruald II Son. Deposed by his son after despoiling Classis.
703 - 724 Wachilap Brother and joint ruler.
724 - 739 Transamund II / Thrasimund II Son of Faroald II. Died c.745.
726 - 728 TheLombards take control of the exarchate of Ravenna.Eastern Roman imperial authority is no longer recognised, although it only takes two years for the exarchate to be recovered.
738 - 740 Transamund rebels against Liutprand, king of theLombards and forms an alliance with Pope Gregory III. The pope provides him with shelter while a substitute duke holds power in Spoleto in 739. Transamund kills Hilderic in 740 and regains his duchy, before being captured by Liutprand and sent forcibly to a monastery. The duchy is conferred upon Agiprand.
739 - 740 Hilderic / Ilderic Killed by Transamund II.
740 - 742 Transamund II / Thrasimund II Restored. Forced to enter a monastery.
742 - 744 Agiprand Duke of Clusium. Deposed by Transamund II.
744 - c.745 Being sent to a monastery does not prevent Transamund from regaining the duchy for a second time, but his rule is short-lived. Hereafter, the links forged by Liutprand effectively bind Spoleto closer to theLombard kingdom, with three subsequent dukes also ruling the Lombards at different points in their careers.
744 - c.745 Transamund II / Thrasimund II Restored for a second time.
c.745 - 751 Lupus
752 Unnolf / Unulf
752 - 756 Aistulf of Friuli Duke of Friuli. King of theLombards (749-756).
752 The exarchate of Ravenna is recaptured by the Lombards, permanently ending Eastern Roman influence in Italy.
754 Rome is delivered fromLombard attack by Pepin III, king of the Franks. This fulfils his role as the ordained protector of the church following Pope Stephen's visit to Paris, during which he had re-consecrated the Frankish king. The ex-Eastern Roman exarchate of Ravenna is transferred to the pope in the form of the Papal States, along Spoleto's western border.
755 - 756 The exarchate is briefly re-captured by the resurgent Lombards in 755, but the following year the Carolingian Franks recapture the territory. The ex-Eastern Roman exarchate is handed back to Rome as the Papal States and northern Italy becomes part of the Carolingian empire.
756 - 757 Ratchis / Rachis of Friuli Brother. King of theLombards (744-749). Abdicated.
756 - 757 Having abdicated the Lombard throne after his misconceived siege of Perugia, Ratchis attempts to reclaim the throne after the death of Aistulf. He is defeated by Daufer and retires to a cloister.
757 - 758 Alboin Deposed by Daufer.
758 - 759 Daufer / Desiderius of Brescia King of theLombards (756-774).
759 - 761 Gisulf Vassal of theLombards.
761 - 762/3 Gisulf is a vassal of Daufer of Brescia who is appointed by him to govern Spoleto in his name. When Gisulf dies, there is an interim period of about a year or eighteen months until Daufer appoints a replacement. Daufer of the Lombards Daufer, or Desiderius, achieved the final conquest of Ravenna only to lose the entire Lombard kingdom to the Carolingian Franks
762/3 - 773 Theodicius Vassal of theLombards.
774 - 788 Hildeprand Frankish vassal (from 776).
776 The duchy falls to the Franks under Charlemagne and is mostly subsumed by them, retaining little independent identity or control. Hildeprand remains on the throne, but now as a vassal. He is married to Regarde, daughter of the late Duke Godefred of Alemannia (died 709).
789 - 822 Winiges / Winichis Frankish vassal, and possibly a Frank himself.
c.790 - 791 Claimed both by the Carolingian Franks of Italy and Eastern Roman, the principality of Benevento is now attacked by the latter. Byzantine troops under the command of Adelchis, son of the last king ofLombardy, land on the coast around 790, but are almost immediately faced by a coalition of troops from Benevento, Spoleto and the Franks. The attack is successfully repelled, and the Franks think that they have retained nominal control over the region. However, Duke Grimoaldo of Benevento also resists them successfully, probably in the following year, and maintains the independence of his principality.
822 - 824 Suppone I / Suppo I Frankish vassal and nobleman.
824 Adelard / Adalhard Frankish vassal. Died after 5 months.
824 - 836 Mauring / Moringus Son of Suppone. Frankish vassal.
836 - 841 Berengar Frankish vassal.
840 - 855 Louis I wills the Frankish empire to his sons, but tries to ensure that the eldest gains the biggest share, in order to avoid the fragmentation of territory which so weakened the Merovingians. Lothar receives Francia Media (the Rhine corridor including the kingdom of[Burgundy](FranceBurgundy.htm#Frankish Kingdom of Burgundy), and Italy). Spoleto is resurrected by the disintegrating empire as a dependent margraviate in 842, in order to help secure Italy against Saracen attacks.
842 - 860 Guy I / Guido I First Frankish-dependent margrave.
855 Upon Lothar's death, Francia Media is divided between his three sons. Louis II receives Italy and the imperial crown. Native vassals remain in place in Spoleto, governing in the Frankish emperor's name.
860 Guy's death sees the duchy divided in two, with Lambert gaining Spoleto, and his brother, Guy II, gaining Camerino, which is raised to a duchy. The pair continue the fight against the Saracens, but Lambert is also guilty of massacring Eastern Roman subjects, and is deposed in 871, restored in 876, and subsequently excommunicated by Pope John VIII.
860 - 871 Lambert I Son. Deposed.
860 - 882 Guy II / Guido II / Vito Brother. Duke of Camerino.
871 - 874 Suppone II / Suppo II
875 - 879 Lambert I Restored, and ruling jointly with Guido II.
876 - 882 Guy II / Guido II Brother. Ruling jointly, first with Lambert I and then with Guy III.
880 - 894 Guy III / Guido III / Wido HRE (889-894).
883 Upon the death of Guy II, the duchy of Spoleto is reunited, with the new title of the duchy of Spoleto and Camerino.
888 - 889 Berengar of Friuli is challenged by his chief rival in Italy, Guy of Spoleto, both of whom aspire to control the two halves of the former Frankish Empire. Guy has failed in his attempt to gain overlordship of the[Western Franks](FranceFranks.htm#Western Franks), and now wants the Eastern Frankish throne. They engage in battle near Brescia and Berengar emerges as marginal victor, albeit with casualties large enough to force him to sue for a peace that lasts until 889. With the truce having expired, Guy attacks Berengar at the Battle of the Trebbia, and this time is successful, taking the Italian throne.
894 - 898 Lambert II Son. HRE (894-896). Shared the rule of Spoleto with Guy IV.
895 Sharing power in Spoleto with his brother, Guy IV conquersBenevento from the Eastern Roman empire and takes the title of prince for himself. He offers the regency of the conquered principality to Guaimar I of Salerno, his brother-in-law by his sister, Itta. Guaimar is captured en route to Benevento by Adelfer, the gastald of Avellino, and Guy is forced to besiege Avellino to secure his release. However, his control of Benevento is brief, with the native princes being restored in 897.
895 - 898 Guy IV / Guido IV Co-ruler. Prince ofBenevento (895). Margrave of Camerino (889).
897 Perhaps acting under pressure from Guy IV of the powerfulRoman Spoleto family, Pope Stephen convenes the Cadaver Synod, in which the corpse of Pope Fromosus is disinterred.
898 - 922 Alberic I / Alberico Duke of Camerino (897). Killed by theRomans.
904 This is a period in which powerful women of the nobility play politics and influence papal rule inRome.Consul Theophylact, count of Tusculum, and his wife, Senatrix Theodora, are the parents of Marozia. She is reputedly the concubine of Pope Sergius and gives birth to a son (the later Pope John XI). She also succeeds her father in being the power behind the papal 'throne'. Through Marozia's marriage to Alberic I of Spoleto, the family is able to continue the numbering started here with their son, Alberic II (932-954).
915 As the latest in a series of conflicts with the Saracens, the forces of the newEastern Roman strategos of Bari, one Nicolaus Picingli, assemble alongside those of various other southern Italian princes in the Christian League. It includes Landulf I of Benevento, John I and Docibilis II of Gaeta, Gregory IV and John II ofNaples,Pope John X, Guaimar II of Salerno, and Alberic I of Spoleto. The allied Byzantine-Lombard army fights and defeats the Fatamids at the Battle of Garigliano, a drawn-out combination of fights and a siege. The Saracens find themselves in a worsening situation and eventually attempt to flee, only to be captured and killed. It is a militarily significant victory in the fight against Islamic advances in Italy.
923 - 928 Boniface I Non-dynastic ruler.
924 - 928 Peter Non-dynastic ruler.
928 - 933 ? Non-dynastic ruler, name unknown.
933 - 936 Theobald Non-dynastic ruler.
936 - 940 Anscar Of Ivrea.
940 - 943 Sarlione Non-dynastic ruler.
943 - 946 Hubert / Humbert Illegitimate son of Germanic Roman Emperor Hugh of Arles.
946 - 953 Boniface II
c.949 Berengar II, king of the Italian Franks, and Germanic Roman Emperor, takes control of Spoleto from its margrave. After his accession as Holy Roman Emperor, Otto I later adjoins part of its territory to thePapal States, and he and later emperors hold Spoleto as a gift to be handed out when necessary.
953 - 959 Theobald II
959 - 967 Thrasimund III
967 Spoleto and Benevento are united by the Holy Roman Emperor Otto I, albeit briefly. Following the death of Padulf, he detaches Spoleto again.
967 - 981 Pandulf / Padolfo Ironhead Prince ofBenevento (943-981).
981 Landulf Prince Landulf IV ofBenevento (943-981).
981 The joint principality of Spoleto andBenevento is partitioned amongst the sons of Pandulf, who fight endlessly to gain supremacy. Landulf IV gains Benevento, Capua, and Spoleto, and Pandulf II receives Salerno. However, Roman Emperor Otto I intervenes and hands Spoleto to Thrasimund IV, duke of Camerino. Then Pandulf II is granted Benevento, leaving Landulf with just Capua.
982 - 989 Thrasimund IV Duke of Camerino.
989 Spoleto is granted to Hugo, margrave of Tuscany, with occasional local rulers in place under Tuscany's control, until the duke of Tuscany takes direct control again in 1010.
998 - 999 Ademar / Adhemar Prince of Capua (1000).
999 - 1003 Ademar's brief rule over Spoleto ends and Tuscany takes direct control again. Ademar is also theoretical overlord of Naples during the enforced absence of its duke.
1003 - 1010 Romanus
1010 - c.1020 Rainier Duke of Tuscany (1014-1027). Died 1027.
c.1020 Spoleto is temporarily removed from Tuscany's control with the accession of Hugo II.
c.1020 - 1035 Hugo II
1036 - 1043 Hugo III
1043 - 1056 Spoleto now becomes a constituent part of Tuscany, with no local control over its affairs.
1056 - 1057 The papacy takes a turn at governing Spoleto as part of the Papal States, during the term of office of Pope Victor II. Monteleone di Spoleto On top of the ruins of the ancient city of Brufa, which lie about twenty kilometres south-east of the town of Spoleto itself, the Lombards built Monteleone di Spoleto
1057 - 1070 Godfrey (II) Duke of Lower Lorraine.
1070 - 1082 Following Godfrey's long reign, Spoleto once again becomes a constituent part of Tuscany, with no local control over its affairs.
1082 - 1086 Rainier II
1086 - 1093 Tuscany takes control of Spoleto once more, untilHoly Roman Emperor Henry IV appoints his new ally as ruler of the duchy, Werner of Urslingen.
1093 - 1119 Werner II of Urslingen Margrave of Ancona.
1119 - 1171 Tuscany again assumes direct control of Spoleto.
1172 - 1183 Ridelulf
1183 - 1190 Conrad of Urslingen
1190 - 1195 Pandulf II
1195 - 1198 Conrad of Urslingen Restored.
1198 - 1222 Upon the death of Conrad of Urslingen, the papacy resumes control of Spoleto, this time for a longer period, under the powerful and influential Pope Innocent III.
1222 - 1228 Berthold or Rainald of Urslingen Opinion is divided on which of these ruled.
1228 - 1860 Following the brief interruption of Berthold's rule (or that of Rainald of Urslingen, son of Conrad), Spoleto is drawn back within the Papal States, which retain it until the invasion ofItaly by[French](FranceFranks.htm#First Empire) Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte and his subsequent reorganisation of the Italian political make-up in 1808. France retains Spoleto until the final fall of the empire in 1815, at which time it is returned to the Papal States, but the creation of a single, united kingdom of Italy in 1860 sweeps away the Papal States themselves, and Spoleto becomes part of modern Italy.