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entry Dec 2008
Why was it called the “Two Sicilies”?The triskelion,
the symbol of Sicily.
The original kingdom of Sicily—with its capital at Palermo, on the island of Sicily, itself—was founded in the 1100s by the Normans and included the island and all of the southern part of the mainland (the Italian peninsula) up to the Vatican States, just south of Rome. Sicilian map-makers of the day called the northern part of their kingdom “Continental Sicily.” That original kingdom then passed intact from the Norman founders to the succeeding dynasty, the house of Hohenstaufen (or Swabia), the most prominent monarch of which was Frederick II. When he died in 1250, conflict embroiled the kingdom over dynastic succession. The events surrounding the conflict are complicated and involve the enmity between the Papacy and the House of Hohenstaufen as well as the general power struggle in Europe between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines (supporters of the Church and those of the Holy Roman Empire, respectively). These events led Pope Urban IV to excommunicate Frederick's son and heir, Manfred, and offer the Sicilian crown to Charles of the French House of Anjou. (I use 'Angevin'—the adjective of ‘Anjou’—and 'French' as synonyms in what follows. Also note that 'Aragon' was but one Spanish dynasty before uniting with others to form modern Spain in the late 1400s.) The affair was settled on the battlefield when Manfred was killed in 1266 by the Angevin army at the battle of Benevento; the Angevins then became the new rulers of the kingdom of Sicily. So far, there is still only one Sicily, but note that the new French kingdom was set up and supported by—and allied with—the Papacy (the Guelphs). This did not sit well with the Ghibelline supporters of the Empire. The Aragonese landing at Trapani. Peter III (second from left, top ship] directs the landing. Vatican library. Charles of Anjou
then moved the capital of the kingdom of Sicily from Palermo
to the city of Naples, which is why Naples has the great Maschio Angioino fortress at the port—it
was the first royal palace in the city and was
completed in 1282. In March of that same year, an
anti-French revolt broke out in Palermo. Historically, the episode is
called "The Sicilian Vespers."
The Sicilians—no doubt nostalgic for the glorious age of Frederick —
offered the Sicilian crown
to Peter III of Aragon, whose
wife, Constance, was Frederick's
granddaughter. He accepted, and the Aragonese fleet sailed into the
port of
Trapani on Sicily in August, 1282. The
French and the Aragonese were
then at war over the island of Sicily. The treaty of Caltabellotta (a
small town on the south-west coast of Sicily) in 1302 brought peace and
divided the kingdom: the Angevins would
rule the mainland as the "Kingdom of Sicily," and the Aragonese would
rule the island of Sicily as the "Kingdom of Trinacria" (the ancient
Greek name for Sicily. The term means
having “three points" and refers to the triangular shape of the island.
Trinacria also refers to
the still current three-legged symbol—
the triskelion—
of the island. See top photo). There were now two
kingdoms, popularly called "two Sicilies" (for it is dead certain that
Sicilians did NOT start calling themselves “Trinacrians” all of a
sudden After all, they were
the real Sicilians!). That divided situation prevailed for almost 150
years. Alfonso of Aragon
In
the
1430s—follow closely—events in the mainland kingdom of Naples
(officially, the Kingdom of Sicily!) led to a power vacuum that the
island Kingdom of Trinacria (the real Sicily!) swooped in to fill by
going to war with the mainland. It was
the island Aragonese vs the
mainland Angevins; the islanders won, and Alfonso
of Aragon moved to Naples in 1443. Since Alfonso had reunited the
two kingdoms, he designated himself rex
Utriusque Siciliae (king of both Sicilies) commonly called the
Two Sicilies. Voilà.The term quickly became an anachronism, as subsequent Spanish rulers referred to their Neapolitan vice-realm as "Naples." Even the early Bourbon usage preferred the "Kingdom of Naples." It was not until 1815, after the Napoleonic Wars, that the restored King Ferdinand IV of Naples started to style himself as "Ferndinand I of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies." He wasn't too bright, and maybe he thought it sounded bigger that way.
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