Tancred dies on February 20, 1194. …
Years: 1194 - 1194
Tancred dies on February 20, 1194.
His younger son assumes the throne as William III of Sicily under the regency of their mother Sibylla of Acerra, but the Emperor Henry VI claims the throne of Sicily in right of his wife Constance, who was William's great-aunt.
Even before Tancred's death, he had been laying plans to invade, and his resources have been further augmented by the ransom paid by Richard I of England.
Sibylla is unable to organize much effective resistance.
By the end of October 1194, Henry has conquered all the mainland parts of the kingdom and crossed over into Sicily.
Henry VI enters Palermo on November 20, 1194.
He offers Sibylla generous terms: William is to retain the county of Lecce, which had been his father's before he had become king, and is also to receive the Principality of Taranto.
With that agreement reached, William, his mother and his sisters watch while Henry is crowned King of Sicily on December 25 (Constance is not crowned due to being in labor).
Four days later, a conspiracy against the new king is uncovered, and many of the leading Sicilian political figures are arrested and sent to prison in Germany, including William and his family.
While his mother and sisters will eventually be released and live in obscurity in France, nothing is known for certain of William's subsequent fate.
He is said to have been blinded, castrated, or both.
Some say he died in captivity a few years later, others that he was released and became a monk.
Another theory is that he later returned to Sicily under the alias Tancredi Palamara, and that Henry's son, Emperor Frederick II (who was also king of Sicily) discovered Tancredi Palamara in Messina and had him executed in 1232.
The date generally accepted for his death is 1198.
Locations
People
Groups
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Italo-Normans
- Sicily, Kingdom of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Angelid dynasty
- Sicily, Hohenstaufen Kingdom of
