Monday, December 14, 2015

Aragonese Crusade

Ah, yes, all those saints! And the Church had to make the world safe for sainthood, so they set about to slay their enemies. Peter III of Aragon (yes, our King Peter in Sicily) was declared one of those enemies by Pope Martin IV. As part of the extension of the war after the Sicilian Vespers, Martin excommunicated Peter and deposed him as king of Aragon, all over a little island in the Mediterranean. You see, Peter's father (PeterII) had ceded Sicily to the Holy See. Martin then gave Sicily to Charles of Valois (the French/Angevin), Martin was unhappy when the Sicilians invited Peter to take over again.

Then, to complicate matters, Peter's brother King James II of Majorca joined the French, thus creating a civil war. James also held the county of Rousillon on the mainland, and it stood between the dominions of the French and Aragonese monarchs. James welcomed the French army into Rousillon in 1284, but the populace rose up against them under the command of the Bastard of Rousillon. The French eventually won, burning the church and massacring the people. The French also took Girona the following year, but their fortunes were soon reversed by the intercession of Peter's Admiral, Roger de Lauria (yes, he's in the book too). A celebrated and feared naval commander, Roger defeated the French fleet at the Battle of Les Formigues. Following a camp epidemic of dysentery, the French army on land was then defeated at the Battle of the Col de Panissars. Historian HJ Chaytor said the Aragonese Crusade was "perhaps the most unjust, unnecessary and calamitous enterprise ever undertaken by the Capetian monarchy." It was to have far-reaching consequences for the history of Europe.

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