Gisulf’s enmity with the Normans had soon …

Years: 1058 - 1058

Gisulf’s enmity with the Normans had soon cost him.

Robert Guiscard had sallied forth from his Calabrian castle at San Marco and captured the Salernitan town of Cosenza and several of its neighbors.

Gisulf had soon raised the ire of Count Richard I of Aversa and, only by alliance with the despised Almafitans, could he retain his throne.

The predations of William, Count of the Principate, a brother of Robert Guiscard, forces him to marry his sister Sikelgaita to Guiscard in return for protection.

(He will eventually marry his sister Gaitelgrima to Jordan, the son of Richard, recently prince of Capua.)

Sikelgaita’s marriage to Guscard takes place after Robert divorces his first wife Alberada, due to supposed consanguinity.

Her sister Gaitelgrima had earlier married Robert's half-brother Drogo.

The divorce from Alberada and the marriage of Sikelgaita are probably part of a strategy of alliance with the remaining Lombard princes, of whom Guaimar is chief.

Alberada, for her part, appears to have had no qualms about dissolving her marriage.

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