Escaping from the field of battle, Conradin had reached Rome but, acting on advice to leave the city, he proceeds to Astura in an attempt to sail for Sicily.
Here, however, he had been arrested and handed over to Charles, who has imprisoned him in the Castel dell'Ovo in Naples, together with Frederick of Baden, his inseparable companion since childhood.
He is tried as a traitor, and on October 29, 1268, he and Frederick are publicly beheaded.
The death of the sixteen-year-old Conradin extinguishes the Hohenstaufen family’s male line.
Following their defeat by Angevin-Guelph forces at Tagliacozzo, the name Ghibelline applies chiefly to local factions or even families.
Some northern Italian cities, such as Verona under the Scala and Milan under the Visconti, will remain Ghibelline, because their rulers are imperial vicars.