Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Art of Southern Italy and Sicily under Angevin and Catalan–Aragonese Rule

View through CrossRef
With the expression “southern Italy and Sicily under Angevin and Catalan–Aragonese rule,” we refer to the period when the Kingdom of Sicily (Regnum Siciliæ) came under control of the Angevin (1266–1442) and the Catalan–Aragonese kings (1442–1501). The Angevin royal house began to rule this kingdom with King Charles I of Anjou, who was chosen by popes Urban IV and Clement IV against the claims of Manfred, son of the emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen. Count of Anjou and Maine, count of Provence and Forcalquier, Charles I was consecrated in Rome at St. Peter’s basilica on January 6, 1266; his son, Charles II, was consecrated on May 29, 1289 in the cathedral of Rieti; and the Charles II’s successor, his third son, Robert, was consecrated in Avignon on August 3, 1309. The tragic events that occurred under the government of Queen Joanna I (1343–1382), granddaughter of Robert, brought to the throne of Naples another branch of the Angevin dynasty, called the Anjou–Durazzo, with Kings Charles III (1382–1386), his son Ladislaus I (1386–1414), and his daughter Joanna II (1419–1435). After the extinction of the Anjou royal house and a long period of wars, Alfonso V of Aragon, III of Valencia, II of Majorca, Sardinia and Corsica, I of Naples, and IV as count of Barcelona, formerly adopted by Joanna II as her son in 1421, became king of Naples in 1442 and reigned until his death in 1458. His son Ferrante I ruled from 1458 to 1494, his grandchild Alfonso II from 1494 to 1495, and his successors until 1501. For most part of the Angevin period, Sicily was separated from the peninsular territories and remained a distinct geopolitical entity. After the revolt against the Angevins in 1282 (the Sicilian Vespers) and following the Peace of Caltabellota in 1302, the Regnum Siciliæ citra Pharum, generally known as the Kingdom of Naples, was governed in fact by the Angevin kings, whereas the Regnum Siciliæ ultra Pharum, corresponding to the Sicilian island, was governed by the Catalan–Aragonese kings as an independent state until it passed under the dominion of the Crown of Aragon in 1409. Under Alfonso the Magnanimous the two kingdoms of Naples and of Sicily were finally reunited. In the last few decades, scholarship investigated the history of the kingdom of Sicily with a modern interdisciplinary approach, where art, literature, and culture were examined as expressions of society, power, and political practice. This kind of approach was favored by a new generation of southern Italian scholars and allowed, for example, to recognize in Catalan–Aragonese Naples the rise of a monarchical Humanism, which was different from the civic Humanism of Florence but not less complex and intellectually grounded.
Title: The Art of Southern Italy and Sicily under Angevin and Catalan–Aragonese Rule
Description:
With the expression “southern Italy and Sicily under Angevin and Catalan–Aragonese rule,” we refer to the period when the Kingdom of Sicily (Regnum Siciliæ) came under control of the Angevin (1266–1442) and the Catalan–Aragonese kings (1442–1501).
The Angevin royal house began to rule this kingdom with King Charles I of Anjou, who was chosen by popes Urban IV and Clement IV against the claims of Manfred, son of the emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen.
Count of Anjou and Maine, count of Provence and Forcalquier, Charles I was consecrated in Rome at St.
Peter’s basilica on January 6, 1266; his son, Charles II, was consecrated on May 29, 1289 in the cathedral of Rieti; and the Charles II’s successor, his third son, Robert, was consecrated in Avignon on August 3, 1309.
The tragic events that occurred under the government of Queen Joanna I (1343–1382), granddaughter of Robert, brought to the throne of Naples another branch of the Angevin dynasty, called the Anjou–Durazzo, with Kings Charles III (1382–1386), his son Ladislaus I (1386–1414), and his daughter Joanna II (1419–1435).
After the extinction of the Anjou royal house and a long period of wars, Alfonso V of Aragon, III of Valencia, II of Majorca, Sardinia and Corsica, I of Naples, and IV as count of Barcelona, formerly adopted by Joanna II as her son in 1421, became king of Naples in 1442 and reigned until his death in 1458.
His son Ferrante I ruled from 1458 to 1494, his grandchild Alfonso II from 1494 to 1495, and his successors until 1501.
For most part of the Angevin period, Sicily was separated from the peninsular territories and remained a distinct geopolitical entity.
After the revolt against the Angevins in 1282 (the Sicilian Vespers) and following the Peace of Caltabellota in 1302, the Regnum Siciliæ citra Pharum, generally known as the Kingdom of Naples, was governed in fact by the Angevin kings, whereas the Regnum Siciliæ ultra Pharum, corresponding to the Sicilian island, was governed by the Catalan–Aragonese kings as an independent state until it passed under the dominion of the Crown of Aragon in 1409.
Under Alfonso the Magnanimous the two kingdoms of Naples and of Sicily were finally reunited.
In the last few decades, scholarship investigated the history of the kingdom of Sicily with a modern interdisciplinary approach, where art, literature, and culture were examined as expressions of society, power, and political practice.
This kind of approach was favored by a new generation of southern Italian scholars and allowed, for example, to recognize in Catalan–Aragonese Naples the rise of a monarchical Humanism, which was different from the civic Humanism of Florence but not less complex and intellectually grounded.

Related Results

Catalan
Catalan
Catalan is a “medium-sized” Romance language spoken by over 10 million speakers, spread over four nation states: Northeastern Spain, Andorra, Southern France, and the city of L’Alg...
Eastward Tectonic Escape of Sicily Microplate: preliminary results
Eastward Tectonic Escape of Sicily Microplate: preliminary results
<p>The complex processes affecting the Tyrrhenian-Apennine System are inevitably reflected in Sicily, here considered as an independent plate starting from 5 Ma and l...
Angevin Dynasty
Angevin Dynasty
The Angevin dynasty in England followed the Anglo-Norman kings, who had ruled since the Norman Conquest in 1066. Henry II, the first Angevin king (r. 1154–1189), was the son of Mat...
Southern Italy, 1300–1500
Southern Italy, 1300–1500
This article treats the south of Italy (Mezzogiorno), exclusive of the city of Naples. For discussion of Naples, see the Oxford Bibliographies in Renaissance and Reformation articl...
Imaging the Angevin Patron Saint: Mary Magdalen in the Pipino Chapel in Naples
Imaging the Angevin Patron Saint: Mary Magdalen in the Pipino Chapel in Naples
In 1279, the Angevin prince, Charles of Salerno, the future Charles II of Naples, discovered the body of Mary Magdalen in Provence. This inextricably linked the Angevins to the Mag...
Angevin Empire (French “Second” Angevin dynasty)
Angevin Empire (French “Second” Angevin dynasty)
AbstractCharles I, brother of the French King Louis IX, conquered southern Italy between 1266 and 1288 and established a dynasty destined to rule a vast Mediterranean empire almost...
Commissione Ornitologica Italiana (COI) - Report 28
Commissione Ornitologica Italiana (COI) - Report 28
Italian Ornithological Commission (COI) - Report 28. This report refers to records from 2018, with the addition of a number of records from previous years which were submitted more...
Juan Marsé: Broadening the Definition of the Catalan Nation
Juan Marsé: Broadening the Definition of the Catalan Nation
<p>This thesis argues that Catalan writer Juan Marsé (1933-2020) proposes, in a number of his novels, a postmodern construction of concepts of national identity in the case o...

Back to Top