Maine,
Ermentrude
van, (echtgenote
van) Fulco V van Anjou.
Malik
Shah,
Sultan
of Baghdad, d1092 |
Malta
(Medieval):
Normans
(1090-1194), Hohenstaufens
(1194-1266), and Angevins
(1266-1282). During the eleventh century, Christians and Muslims
battled over land throughout the Mediterranean. In Spain, the Christians
and Muslims fought over Valencia, Barbastro and Toledo. The First
Crusade captured Jerusalem in 1099. Malta also became a battlefield.
Muslim pirates, using Malta as a base, raided southern Europe. Roger
I, king of Sicily, retaliated
and gained control of Malta in 1090. Thus Malta came under
the rule of the Norman kings of Sicily. Norman control of the island
did little to change the way of life of Malta's inhabitants. The
Muslims on the island continued to live much as they did before,
but now they paid tribute to the Normans. Roger I and Roger
II built and enhanced Christian
churches in Malta, but the worship of Islam continued on the islands
during the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Constance,
daughter and heir of Roger II, married Frederick
II's son Henry
under the terms of a treaty signed in 1184. Sicily and Malta became
part of the domains of the Hohenstaufen dynasty after Henry succeeded
his father as Henry VI
in 1194. The death of Henry VI in 1197 began a period of civil war
in Germany marked by disputes with the papacy. His widow, Constance,
named Pope Innocent III
guardian of their young son, Frederick,
upon her death in 1198. Frederick became Holy Roman Emperor (and
ruler of the Kingdom of Sicily, including Malta) in 1220. Frederick
II went on Crusade in 1227 and secured the return of Jerusalem by
treaty. He married Isabella,
heir to the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The papacy opposed his plans to
impose Hohenstaufen rule over Italy, and Frederick died excommunicate
in 1250. His legitimate son, Conrad
IV, died in 1254. His illegitimate
son, Manfred,
then tried to reconstitute the Hohenstaufen realms. But Pope
Clement IV supported the French
candidate, Charles of Anjou,
who took control of Sicily by defeating Manfred in 1266. Two years
later, Charles of Anjou ended the male lineage of the Hohenstaufen
dynasty with the execution of Conradin, the son of Conrad IV. Charles
of Anjou invaded Italy with papal support. He successfully took
control of Sicily, but the Angevin rule of Sicily did not last long.
Charles was unpopular because of high taxes and his reliance on
French officials. In 1282, the revolt known as the Sicilian Vespers
seriously impaired Angevin government. Peter
of Aragon, son-in-law of the
late Manfred, offered aid to the revolt. On 4 December 1282 the
Sicilian parliament acclaimed Peter of Aragon the new king. The
Angevins retained control of the Italian mainland but the Aragonese
now controlled Sicily and Malta.
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