The Western Mediterranean Kingdoms_ The Struggle for Dominion, 1200-1500

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THE \h'ESTERN MEDITERRANEAi\ KINGDOMS 1200-1.~00

papal diplomacy prevented a Genoese-Hungarian military
alliance being created. The arrival of bubonic plague coin-
cided with Joanna's own decision to travel to Provence and
supplicate the help of Pope Clement VI at Avignon, early in


  1. The price for favour was an agreement to sell Avignon
    to the pope, lord already of the neighbouring Comtat Ven-
    aissin; no longer would the papacy have to be an honoured
    guest on the soil of Angevin Provence, but to the Provenyaux
    this was a venditio maledicta, an 'accursed sell-out' .'^1 Joanna
    sought public exculpation for the murder of her first hus-
    band, as well as papal approval for her second marriage
    which had recently been contracted with Louis of Taranto,
    leader of the powerful Angevin faction that had been restive
    while Andrew was alive. (She was in fact already pregnant
    when she arrived at the curia.) Her absence from the Regno
    while it was being torn apart by Hungarian invaders, as well
    as by predatory mercenary bands, had little effect on the
    outcome of Louis the Great's invasion: as well as the ravages
    of plague, Venetian agitation in his rear threatened to pre-
    judice his survival, for on control of Dalmatia depended
    Louis' ability to create a vast Angevin domain stretching
    from the borders of Lithuania to the Straits of Messina. The
    struggle for the Adriatic, which was to culminate in the loss
    of Venetian Dalmatia in 1352, now preoccupied him. The
    pope opposed his expedition. The south Italians themselves
    were restive. It was time for Louis of Hungary to go home.
    This did not mean that the Hungarians evacuated the
    Regno. Louis of Taranto was active in the suppression of Hun-
    garian units. He also purged the court of Joanna's own sup-
    porters, elevating to high office the Acciaiuoli of Florence.
    For Louis of Taranto's marriage to Joanna had been an
    attempt to secure the kingdom for Louis, more than it was
    an attempt at compromise between the opposing factions
    in the house of Anjou. A second Hungarian invasion, with
    Genoese support, in 1350 resulted by 1352 in a narrow victory
    for Louis of Taranto; but Louis' real victory lay within the
    Regno, where he was crowned king in May 1352, with papal
    approval, subject to the proviso that he held the throne in
    right of Joanna (none of whose children in fact survived).

  2. D. Wood, Clement VI. The jmntijimtf' and ideas of an Avignon pope (Cam-
    bridge, 1989), pp. 48-50.

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