Historical records matching Philippe I d'Anjou, Principe di Tarento
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About Philippe I d'Anjou, Principe di Tarento
-http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/filippo-i-d-angio-imperatore-no...
-http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe_Ier_de_Tarente
Philippe Ier d'Anjou, né le 10 novembre 1278, mort à Naples le 26 décembre 1332, prince de Tarente et d'Achaïe, «despote de Romanie» par son premier mariage, et empereur titulaire de Constantinople par son second mariage, fils de Charles II d'Anjou, roi de Naples, et de Marie de Hongrie. Il aurait dû hériter par mariage du despotat d'Épire et prit le titre de «despote de Romanie» à la mort du despote Nicéphore I Doukas.
Il fut chargé avec son frère Robert de combattre le roi Frédéric II de Sicile en 1299, mais voulant obtenir la gloire de réussir seul, il s'engagea sans attendre son frère dans un combat à Formicara où il fut blessé et fait prisonnier. Les Angevins de Naples furent ainsi contraint, par sa défaite, de renoncer à leur expédition.
En 1315, Florence, en lutte avec les Gibelins de Pise, demanda des secours au roi de Naples, qui leur envoya Philippe à la tête d'une armée. La bataille entre les deux armées eu lieu à Montecatini et Philippe, malgré son courage et ses efforts, perdit la bataille, son frère, Pierre, comte de Gravina, et son fils aîné Charles.
En 1318, il eut plus de succès au côté de son frère Robert le sage, roi de Naples, lorsqu'ils défendirent Gênes contre les Gibelins.
Il épousa à l'Aquila en 1294 Thamar Ange (1277 † 1311), fille de Nicéphore Ier, despote d'Epire, et d'Anne Cantacuzène. Ils eurent :
1) Charles né en 1296, il accompagna son père en guerre contre Pise et fut tué en 1315 à la bataille de Montecatini;
2) Philippe (1297 † 1330), despote de Romanie, qui épousa Yolande d'Aragon, fille du roi Jacques II d'Aragon;
3) Marguerite (1298 † 1340), mariée en 1325 avec Gautier VI, comte de Brienne († 1356), duc titulaire d'Athènes et seigneur d’Argos;
4) Blanche († 1338), mariée en 1327 avec l'infant Raymond Bérenger d'Aragon, comte d’Empúries;
5) Marie, morte jeune.
Il répudia Thamar en 1309 et épousa en secondes noces à Fontainebleau en 1313 Catherine II de Valois-Courtenay, impératrice titulaire de Constantinople, fille de Charles de France, comte de Valois, et de Catherine de Courtenay (1303 † 1346). Ils eurent:
1) Robert (1315 † 1364), prince de Tarente et d'Achaïe, marié en 1347 à Marie de Bourbon (1315 † 1377);
2) Louis (1320 † 1362), roi de Naples;
3) Marguerite (1325 † 1380), mariée en 1352 à François des Baux (1330 † 1422) , duc d'Andria;
4) Marie († 1368), abesse de Conversano;
5) Jeanne († 1393), mariée en 1316 à Oshim, roi d'Arménie (1282 † 1320);
6) Philippe II de Tarente (1329-1374), prince de Tarente.
Philip I of Taranto (10 November 1278 – 23 December 1332), of the Angevin house, was titular Latin Emperor of Constantinople (as Philip II), despot of Epirus, King of Albania, Prince of Achaea and Taranto, and Lord of Durazzo.
Born in Naples, Philip was a younger son of Charles II of Anjou, King of Naples, and Maria of Hungary, daughter of King Stephen V of Hungary.
On 4 February 1294, his father named him Prince of Taranto at Aix-en-Provence, and on 12 July 1294, Vicar-General of the Kingdom of Sicily. These dignities were a prelude to Charles' plan to bestow upon Philip an empire east of the Adriatic. The day he was invested as Vicar-General, he married by proxy Thamar Angelina Komnene, daughter of Nikephoros I Komnenos Doukas, Despot of Epirus. Threatened by the Byzantine Empire, Nikephoros had decided to seek Angevin patronage, and agreed to the marriage of Thamar and Philip. The two were married in person on 13 August 1294 at L'Aquila. Upon their marriage, Charles ceded to Philip the suzerainty of Achaea and the Kingdom of Albania, and all his rights to the Latin Empire and the Lordship of Vlachia. Nikephoros gave, as his daughter's dowry, the fortresses of Vonitsa, Vrachova, Gjirokastër and Naupactus, in the territory of Aetolia, to Philip, and agreed to settle the succession, on his death, upon his daughter rather than his son Thomas. Upon the death of Nikephoros (c. 1297), Philip took the title of "Despot of Romania", claiming Epirus, Aetolia, Acarnania, and Great Vlachia. However, Nikephoros' Byzantine widow, Anna Kantakouzene, had Thomas proclaimed Despot of Epirus and assumed the regency.
As Vicar-General of Sicily, he was part of the invasion of that island during the latter stage of the War of the Sicilian Vespers. His army was defeated in 1299 at the Battle of Falconara by Frederick III of Sicily, and he was held prisoner until the signing of the Treaty of Caltabellotta in 1302.
In 1306, Philip of Savoy and Isabella of Villehardouin, the Prince and Princess of Achaea, visited Charles' court in Naples. Philip of Savoy was accused of disloyalty and failure to support Charles in a campaign against Epirus. As Isabelle had not sought her suzerain's consent before marrying him, Charles deprived the two of Achaea and bestowed it directly upon Philip of Taranto on 5 May 1306. He made his only personal visit to Achaea shortly thereafter, accepting the homage of his vassals at Glarentza, and carrying out an unsuccessful campaign against the Despotate of Epirus. He left Guy II, Duke of Athens, as his bailli in Achaea. Meanwhile, Philip and Isabella relinquished their claims on Achaea on 11 May 1307 in exchange for the County of Alba.
Second arms. They are the combination of his previous arms and those of the Latin Empire of Constantinople. In 1309, he accused Thamar of adultery, probably on a falsified charge. This freed him to take part in a complex marital pact. Catherine of Valois, the titular Latin Empress, had been betrothed to Hugh V, Duke of Burgundy, titular King of Thessalonica. This engagement was broken, and she married Philip on 29 July 1313, at Fontainebleau. In exchange, her maternal lands of Courtenay and other estates on the Continent were ceded to Hugh's sister Joan, who married Catherine's half-brother, Philip of Valois. Hugh V was betrothed to Joan, later Countess of Burgundy and Artois. (Hugh died before the marriage could be solemnized; Joan married Hugh's brother and successor Odo IV, Duke of Burgundy instead. Philip ceded the Principality of Achaea (over which he retained suzerainty) to Matilda of Hainaut, who married Hugh's brother Louis of Burgundy on 29 July 1313. This donation was rather restricted: should the couple die without heirs, the Principality was to revert to the house of Burgundy, while Matilda enjoyed the usufruct for life. Nor could Matilda marry again without her suzerain's permission. To complete the separation of Eastern and Western claims, Hugh ceded his rights to Thessalonica to Louis, while Louis renounced his claims on his parents' inheritance in favor of Hugh. The engagement of Philip's eldest son Charles of Taranto to Matilda of Hainault was broken off, and he was engaged to Jeanne de Valois, younger sister of Catherine of Valois; his father also ceded to him the title of Despot of Romania and the claims thereto appertaining.
In 1315, Philip was sent by his brother Robert of Naples to lead an army relieving the Florentines, who were threatened by the Pisans under Uguccione della Faggiuola. The Florentine-Neapolitan army was badly beaten at the Battle of Montecatini on 29 August 1315; Philip's younger brother Peter, Count of Gravina and his son Charles of Taranto were both killed.
The death of Louis of Burgundy without heirs in 1316 upset the Angevin plans for Achaea. Matilda was invited to marry John of Gravina, Philip's younger brother, by their elder brother, Robert of Naples. When she declined, she was kidnapped and brought to Naples. By long persuasion and threats, she was compelled in 1318 to consent to the marriage, whereupon Frederick Trogisio was sent to Achaea as a new baili.[5] In 1320, Eudes IV, Duke of Burgundy, after several protests, agreed to sell his rights to Achaea and Thessalonica to Louis, Count of Clermont for 40,000 livres. However, Philip, financed by Philip V of France, bought the claims to Achaea (only) for the same sum in 1321. In the meantime, the refractory Matilda of Hainaut was brought before the Papal court in Avignon, where she revealed that she had secretly married the Burgundian knight Hugh de La Palice. Her marriage with John was annulled on the grounds of non-consummation, but the revelation of her secret marriage again furnished a pretext for the confiscation of Achaea by the Angevins. It was, of course, bestowed directly upon John of Gravina, in exchange for 40,000 livres, the price paid to the Duke of Burgundy. Matilda spent the rest of her unfortunate life as a prisoner of the Neapolitan state, to prevent the resurgence of her claim.
Philip continued to plot the recovery of the Latin Empire, making an alliance in 1318 with his nephew Charles I of Hungary for that purpose, but to no effect. In 1330, the last of his sons by his first marriage died, returning to him the title of Despot of Romania. All his rights and titles passed on his death two years later to his eldest son by his second marriage, Robert of Taranto.
Children of his first marriage (1294), with Thamar Angelina Komnene, which ended with a divorce (1309):
Charles (1296–1315), Vicar of Romania, killed at the Battle of Montecatini. Joan (1297–1317), married to Oshin of Armenia and then Oshin of Korikos Margarete (1298–1340), married to Walter VI of Brienne, titular Duke of Athens. Philip (1300–1330), Despot of Romania; married Violante daughter of James II of Aragon. Maria (1301/04-1368), Abbess of Conversano. Blanche (1309–1337), married to Infante Ramon Berenguer of Aragon, Count of Prades, son of James II of Aragon. Children of his second marriage (1313), with Catherine of Valois:
Margaret (c. 1325–1380), married Francis of Baux, Duke of Andria. By Francis, she was the mother of James of Baux, Prince of Achaea and titular Emperor of Constantinople.[9] Robert (1326–1364), Prince of Taranto, titular Emperor of Constantinople (as Robert II). Louis (1327/28–1362), Prince of Taranto and King of Naples by right of his wife. Philip II (1329–1374), Prince of Taranto and Achaea, titular Emperor of Constantinople (as Philip III).
Philippe I d'Anjou, Principe di Tarento's Timeline
1278 |
November 10, 1278
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Naples, Napoli, Campania, Italy
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1296 |
1296
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1298 |
1298
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1300 |
1300
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1315 |
1315
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Achaea, Greece
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1320 |
1320
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Naples
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1325 |
1325
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1329 |
1329
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