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Frederick the Simple
Frederick the Simple
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Frederick IV (or III) (in Italian, Federico; 1 September 1341 – Messina 27 July 1377[1]), called the Simple, was King of Sicily from 1355 to 1377. He was the second son of Peter II of Sicily[2] and Elisabeth of Carinthia. He succeeded his brother Louis. The documents of his era call him the "infante Frederick, ruler of the kingdom of Sicily", without any regnal number.

Key Information

"Frederick the Simple" is often confused with an earlier Sicilian monarch, his grandfather Frederick III, who chose to call himself "Frederick III" even though he was actually only the second King Frederick to occupy the Sicilian throne; his self-appellation was sometimes retained by later generations of genealogists and historians, producing rival numberings of Sicilian kings named Frederick. The first King Frederick on the Sicilian throne was the latter's great-grandfather, King Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor.[3]

Frederick the Simple was born in Catania and succeeded his brother Louis in 1355 under the regency of his sister, Euphemia of Sicily. In his youth the reign was under the control of powerful Sicilian barons, in particular of Artale I Alagona. The beginning of Frederick IV's reign was also plagued by the Black Death, to which his elder brother and predecessor had succumbed. On 25 December 1369, Frederick ordered all Jews to wear a badge indicating their heritage. The badge consisted of a piece of red material, not smaller than the largest royal seal; men were required to wear it under the chin, and women on the chest. In 1372 he was able to come to peace terms with Naples and Pope Gregory XI, obtaining the title of tributary King of "Trinacria".

After the death of his mother's cousin, Margaret of Tyrol in 1369, Frederick remained the sole descendant of the House of Gorizia-Tyrol which had ruled a vast territory in the Eastern Alps, comprising Tyrol, Carinthia and Carniola. However, due to his problems at home, he is not known to have ever raised any claims to those territories which thus passed to the Habsburgs.

Marriages

[edit]

On 11 April 1361, Frederick married firstly Constance of Aragon, daughter of King Peter IV of Aragon.[4] They had only one daughter, Maria.[4]

On 17 January 1372, Frederick married secondly Antonia of Baux.[5] This marriage was designed to seal the Treaty of Villeneuve of 1372, by which Frederick's right to rule Sicily was recognised by Naples and the Papacy. There were no children from this marriage. Frederick was betrothed again to Antonia Visconti, but he died before the wedding and was succeeded by his only child, Queen Maria.

References

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Sources

[edit]
  • Grierson, Philip; Travaini, Lucia (1998). Medieval European Coinage: With a Catalogue of the Coins in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. Vol. 14 (Italy) part 3 (South Italy, Sicily, Sardinia). Cambridge University Press.
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Sicily
1355–1377
Succeeded by
Preceded by Duke of Athens and of Neopatria
1355–1377
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Frederick III, known as the Simple (1 September 1341 – 27 July 1377), was King of Sicily from 1355 until his death, succeeding his elder brother Louis, who died young without issue. The second son of Peter II, King of Sicily, and his wife Elisabeth of Carinthia, he ruled amid ongoing tensions stemming from the Sicilian Vespers revolt and Angevin claims, though his epithet "the Simple" likely reflects a perceived straightforward or unadorned style of governance rather than intellectual deficiency. His reign faced significant challenges, including the Black Death's ravages across the island and the entrenched power of baronial families such as the Alagona, which limited royal authority and contributed to administrative instability. Lacking legitimate sons, Frederick was succeeded by his daughter Mary, whose marriage to Martin the Younger of Aragon ultimately integrated Sicily more firmly into the Crown of Aragon.

Early Life

Birth and Parentage

Frederick the Simple, also known as Frederick IV of Sicily, was born on 1 September 1341 in , . He was the second son of Peter II, King of (1304–1342), who ruled from 1336 until his death and belonged to the Aragonese branch that had held the Sicilian throne since the late . Peter II's reign was marked by efforts to consolidate power amid baronial unrest and Angevin threats from the mainland, though these challenges persisted into his son's era. His mother was Elisabeth of (c. 1298–1352), daughter of Henry of Carinthia and of Anhalt, who married Peter II in 1329 to strengthen ties with Central European nobility and counterbalance Italian factions. This union produced several children, including Frederick's elder brother Louis (1338–1355), who briefly succeeded their father as king before dying without issue, paving the way for Frederick's own accession. Elisabeth's Carinthian heritage linked the Sicilian crown to Habsburg-influenced territories, providing potential diplomatic leverage, though her influence on Sicilian governance remained limited. As a member of the House of Barcelona-Aragon, Frederick's parentage positioned him within a dynasty that had seized during the in 1282, establishing Aragonese rule independent of both the and the Kingdom of . His birth in , a strategic eastern Sicilian port, underscored the family's efforts to maintain control over key island strongholds amid ongoing feudal tensions.

Family Background and Upbringing

Frederick IV of Sicily, known as the Simple, was born on 1 September 1341 in as the second son of King and his consort . His father, (1304–1342), ascended the throne in 1337 following the death of his own father, Frederick III, and ruled the Aragonese amid ongoing tensions with the Angevin . Elisabeth, daughter of Otto, Duke of , had married around 1332, strengthening ties between the Sicilian crown and Central European nobility. The family belonged to the , the Aragonese dynasty that had seized control of in 1282 during the , establishing a separate realm from the Iberian crowns after conflicts with the Papacy and Angevins. Peter II's brief reign focused on defending Sicilian independence, but his death from illness in 1342, when Frederick was scarcely one year old, plunged the kingdom into regency governance. Frederick's elder brother, Louis (c. 1330–1355), succeeded as a minor under maternal and baronial oversight, with Elisabeth serving as initial until her death in 1352. Details of Frederick's upbringing remain scant in contemporary records, likely due to the turbulent minority of the royal house and the kingdom's internal strife, including baronial factions and external pressures from . Raised in the royal residences of and , he grew up amid a marked by dynastic insecurity, with education presumably tailored to princely duties but possibly limited by the "the Simple," which attribute to perceived intellectual or administrative shortcomings that persisted into adulthood. His sisters, including (c. 1335–1438) and Constance, played key roles in later regencies, indicating a family dynamic reliant on female oversight during male rulers' incapacities. By 1355, upon Louis's death without issue, the 14-year-old Frederick inherited the throne, but regency by underscored ongoing concerns over his readiness to govern independently.

Ascension to the Throne

Brother's Death and Succession

Louis, the elder brother and predecessor of Frederick, had ascended to the throne of upon the death of their father, Peter II, in 1342, when Louis was only four years old. His minority was governed by a regency council, initially led by their mother Elisabeth of and later by their sister Constance, which concluded in 1354 as Louis approached adulthood. However, his effective rule proved brief; on 16 October 1355, at the age of 17, Louis succumbed to the at the Castle of Aci in eastern , amid a widespread outbreak that ravaged the island. With Louis dying childless, the crown passed by hereditary to his next brother, Frederick, the second surviving son of Peter II and Elisabeth. At 14 years old, Frederick was proclaimed King Frederick III (or IV) of in late 1355, inheriting not only the Sicilian throne but also the ducal titles over and Neopatria, which had been held by the Aragonese branch. The succession faced no immediate dynastic challenges, as the male line of the House of Barcelona-Aragon remained intact, though Frederick's youth necessitated a regency to manage the realm's baronial factions and ongoing threats from Angevin claimants in . This transition occurred against the backdrop of the Black Death's devastation, which had already weakened administrative structures and exacerbated fiscal strains from prior wars.

Establishment of Regency

Upon the death of his elder brother, King Louis, on 16 October 1355 at Aci Castle, Frederick succeeded to the throne of Sicily as the second son of the late King Peter II and Queen Elizabeth of Carinthia. Louis, aged 17 and childless, had ruled since 1342 under prior regencies but left no direct heir, making Frederick, then 14 years old, the undisputed successor under Sicilian Aragonese law of primogeniture among brothers. Given Frederick's minority—he had not yet reached the age of majority customary for royal assumption of power—a regency was promptly established to govern in his name, adhering to precedents set by female relatives in the dynasty. His elder sister, Euphemia of Sicily (born c. 1330), was appointed regent and vicar-general, a role she held from 1355 to 1357, mirroring the earlier regencies of their mother Elizabeth for Louis and other siblings during periods of royal incapacity or youth. The establishment appears to have been a familial and administrative continuity rather than requiring parliamentary election or baronial convocation, as no contemporary records indicate formal assembly involvement at the outset; instead, it leveraged the queen mother's lineage and the dynasty's tradition of maternal or sisterly oversight to maintain stability amid ongoing baronial factions. Euphemia's regency focused on preserving royal authority against latent noble ambitions, though it faced challenges from powerful families like the Chiaramonte, who sought influence through potential marital alliances. The arrangement ended in 1357 when Frederick, approaching 16, began asserting personal rule, prompted by growing baronial pressures that compelled him to wed Constance Chiaramonte to secure loyalty. Euphemia continued advisory roles until her death in 1359, after which Frederick governed independently. This brief regency underscored the fragility of minority rule in Sicily, where dynastic continuity relied on swift interim governance to avert anarchy.

Reign

Internal Administration and Baronial Influence

Frederick III reorganized the royal chancellery to enhance administrative efficiency shortly after his on 25 1296. This reform aimed to streamline in a kingdom marked by feudal fragmentation, where royal authority competed with entrenched local powers. In 1315, he introduced monetary policies that boosted the minting of silver denari while restricting gold coin production, stabilizing the economy amid ongoing baronial demands for fiscal concessions. The Sicilian parliament, or curia generalis, played a pivotal role in Frederick's internal rule, evolving into a key institution under his reign. Comprising representatives from the , , and towns, it elected him on 11 December 1295, forging a constitutional pact that bound the to fundamental laws and parliamentary consent for major actions. This body, convened sporadically—often in response to taxation needs—granted subsidies but extracted a "" in exchange, limiting the from departing or initiating war without feudal approval and nominally requiring annual assemblies, though these were irregularly held. The 1302 Peace of Caltabellotta further entrenched this parliamentary framework by securing partial recognition of Sicilian autonomy from external threats, allowing Frederick to prioritize domestic balances. Baronial influence remained potent, as nobles dominated parliamentary proceedings and leveraged their feudal holdings to negotiate privileges. Frederick, nominated by barons wary of Aragon's absentee rule, granted concessions to feudatories to secure loyalty, fostering a hybrid system where royal initiatives required noble assent to avoid unrest. This dynamic reflected Sicily's feudal structure, with barons asserting autonomy in local and urban , yet Frederick maintained equilibrium by relocating the de facto capital to around 1300, diluting Palermo's traditional baronial stronghold. Conflicts arose primarily from external pressures rather than outright internal rebellion, enabling a pragmatic coexistence that preserved monarchical authority while accommodating noble power until his death in 1337.

Religious and Social Policies

During Frederick the Simple's tenure as Duke of from 1348 to 1374, religious authority rested with the Latin Catholic hierarchy established by earlier Crusader rulers, superimposed over the native Greek Orthodox majority. The administration, operating under a regency due to Frederick's youth at succession (aged 17), prioritized stability by limiting aggressive proselytization efforts, allowing Orthodox communities to retain their and rites under nominal Latin oversight to avert rebellions in a territory where formed the bulk of the population. This pragmatic approach echoed broader Latin policies in Frankish , where conversion pressures were relaxed in favor of coexistence to sustain feudal control. Social policies under the regency emphasized reinforcement of the feudal hierarchy inherited from prior Sicilian overlords, with barons and Catalan remnants wielding influence over and labor obligations. No major legislative reforms or welfare initiatives are documented for this period, as focused on countering internal factionalism rather than social restructuring; the peasantry, predominantly Greek serfs, remained bound by customary obligations under Latin lords, with blending Frankish and Byzantine elements to accommodate local norms. Taxation and labor supported ducal revenues, but chronic baronial autonomy limited centralized social interventions.

Foreign Relations and Diplomacy

Frederick's foreign relations, managed by regency councils due to his youth and reputed intellectual limitations, emphasized preservation of the amid internal vulnerabilities in and the distant . The kingdom adhered to the long-standing Peace of Caltabellotta (1302), which had partitioned Sicilian territories between the Aragonese crown and the Angevin , thereby averting major conflicts with Naples despite lingering dynastic rivalries. In , diplomacy focused on retaining nominal over , inherited in 1355 following the death of the childless Frederick I, through appointment of vicars-general such as James Fadrique (1355–1359) and Roger de Lluria (1359–1362, 1367–1370). These efforts faltered amid factional divisions, exemplified by Lluria's 1361 alliance with Turkish raiders against rivals, which necessitated regency-ordered expulsion of the Turks from Thebes by 1363. Tensions with persisted over Aegean trade routes and influence near Negroponte, building on prior truces (1319, 1331) that curtailed Catalan-Aragonese naval expansion; by 1365, Athenian factions openly favored Venetian or Genoese patronage, undermining centralized control. Encroachments by local potentates, including Acciaiuoli's seizure of in 1373, signaled the duchy's de facto independence from Sicilian oversight, with no effective diplomatic recovery.

Family Life

First Marriage and Heir

Frederick III married Constance of Aragon on 11 April 1361. Constance, born circa 1343, was the daughter of Peter IV, King of , and his first wife, Maria of . The marriage, arranged during Frederick's minority under the regency established after his brother Louis's death in 1355, served to solidify alliances between the Sicilian crown and the Aragonese mainland dynasty, from which the Sicilian branch descended. The union produced a single child, Maria, born on 2 July 1363 in . Constance died on 18 July 1363, less than three weeks later, at age 19 or 20, likely from postpartum complications or the prevailing plague epidemic in . She was interred in . As the only legitimate offspring of Frederick's first marriage—and ultimately his sole surviving heir—Maria was designated successor to the Sicilian throne, a position formalized amid the absence of male issue and Frederick's subsequent childless second marriage. Her status ensured continuity of the Aragonese line in , though it precipitated complex regency arrangements and baronial intrigues following Frederick's death in 1377.

Second Marriage

Frederick III contracted his second marriage on 17 January 1372 to Antonia del Balzo (c. 1355–1374), a member of the Neapolitan noble del Balzo family connected to the Principality of Andria. This union was arranged to formalize the Treaty of Villeneuve, signed in 1372 between Frederick's Aragonese house and Queen Joan I of Naples, thereby securing papal and Angevin recognition of his sovereignty over the island Kingdom of Sicily (Trinacria) and resolving long-standing claims to the mainland territories. The treaty stipulated Frederick's renunciation of the thrones of Naples and Jerusalem, while affirming his ducal titles in Athens and Neopatras, in exchange for peace and the cessation of hostilities that had persisted since the Sicilian Vespers of 1282. Antonia, approximately seventeen years old at the time of the wedding, brought no immediate territorial gains but symbolized reconciliation between the rival dynasties. The remained childless, producing no heirs to bolster Frederick's succession plans, which relied instead on his daughter Maria from his first union. Antonia died on 30 1374, less than three years after the marriage, leaving Frederick a widower once more amid ongoing internal challenges to his rule.

Children and Succession Planning

Frederick's first marriage, to Constance of Aragon—daughter of —occurred on 11 April 1361 and produced his sole legitimate child, a daughter named Maria, born on 2 July 1363 in . Constance died shortly after Maria's birth, possibly from complications related to . On 17 January 1372, Frederick contracted a second marriage with del Balzo (also known as of Baux), a union arranged to formalize the Treaty of Villeneuve and strengthen ties with influential Neapolitan and factions. This marriage remained childless; died in 1374 without issue. No records indicate legitimate offspring from either union beyond Maria, though the absence of male heirs reflected the dynastic challenges facing the Aragonese line in . Succession planning centered on Maria as the presumptive heir, consistent with Sicilian precedents allowing female inheritance in the absence of brothers—a practice rooted in the kingdom's hybrid Norman-Aragonese legal traditions. Frederick's documents and court actions from the 1370s affirm Maria's designation as successor, with preparations including betrothal negotiations to secure her future alliances. Upon Frederick's death on 27 July 1377 in , aged 35, Maria acceded at age 14, initially under the regency of her uncle William II, Duke of Athens, amid baronial rivalries that tested the arrangement's stability. This transition underscored the fragility of Frederick's planning, as factional disputes delayed full consolidation of her rule until later interventions by Aragonese kin.

Death and Immediate Aftermath

Final Years and Demise

In the early 1370s, Frederick pursued diplomatic resolutions to longstanding conflicts, culminating in the Treaty of Villeneuve signed on 28 May 1372, whereby Queen Joan I of Naples renounced the Angevin claim to in exchange for territorial concessions and payments, thereby stabilizing the kingdom's external borders after nearly a century of intermittent warfare stemming from the Sicilian Vespers. This agreement marked a significant achievement, as it formally recognized Aragonese control over the island and reduced the threat of invasion from the mainland. Despite this foreign policy success, Frederick's final years were overshadowed by persistent internal challenges, including baronial factionalism, parliamentary demands for fiscal restraint, and economic strains from prior plagues and wars, which limited his ability to consolidate royal authority. He died on 27 July 1377 in at the age of 35, with no contemporary records specifying the . His untimely demise precipitated a regency for his young daughter Maria, as the absence of surviving male heirs disrupted immediate succession plans.

Transition of Power

Upon the death of Frederick III on 27 July 1377 in , the crown passed to his sole legitimate child and daughter, Mary, then aged 14, who was proclaimed Queen of Sicily by the island's in recognition of her dynastic rights under the Aragonese house of Sicily. This assembly, comprising barons, clergy, and representatives of towns, prioritized internal continuity over claims from mainland , rejecting overtures from , who invoked his kinship as uncle to assert superior title but lacked the support to enforce it. Mary's youth immediately triggered a regency, with the parliament appointing a council dominated by influential barons such as Artale da Sclafani, who maneuvered to control the administration amid competing factions. These divisions exploited the vacuum, as pro-Aragonese elements clashed with those favoring local autonomy, leading to sporadic unrest and weakened royal enforcement of edicts. The regency's instability reflected longstanding baronial leverage in Sicilian governance, where parliamentary consent was essential for legitimacy, yet often devolved into patronage networks that prioritized personal gain over unified rule. To counter the threats, the regents pursued a marital alliance, betrothing Mary in 1379 to Martin, the younger son of Martin I of , whose forces intervened militarily by 1392 to suppress rebellious barons and secure her position. This arrangement, formalized through Martin's as co-king in 1392, gradually consolidated power but prolonged factional tensions until his dominance was assured. The transition thus exposed the kingdom's reliance on parliamentary validation and external validation from , while underscoring vulnerabilities to baronial intrigue in the absence of a capable adult sovereign.

Legacy

Historical Evaluation

Frederick's reign from 1355 to 1377 is assessed by historians as a period of weakened monarchical authority in the , dominated by the influence of powerful baronial families who effectively controlled governance and military affairs. Ascending the throne at age 14 following the death of his nephew Louis on 15 or 16 1355, Frederick initially ruled under the regency of his sister Eufemia until 1357, during which and afterward, nobles such as Artale I Alagona wielded substantial power, holding key fiefdoms and dictating policy. This baronial ascendancy reflected structural challenges in late Aragonese , including fiscal strains from ongoing conflicts with the Angevin and internal factionalism, which Frederick proved unable to resolve decisively. Despite maintaining nominal independence from the Crown of Aragon—unlike his predecessors who had sought closer ties—Frederick's lack of assertive reforms or military campaigns to consolidate power contributed to administrative decentralization and economic stagnation. His two marriages, first to Constance of Aragon in 1361 (who died in 1363 without issue) and second to Antonia of Baux in 1372, produced only a daughter, Maria, born in 1367, ensuring no direct male succession and exposing vulnerabilities in dynastic continuity. Upon his death on 27 July 1377 in Messina, the resulting regency for Maria under baronial oversight accelerated Sicily's drift toward greater subordination to Aragonese interests, marking the effective end of autonomous Sicilian kingship. Overall, contemporary and later evaluations portray Frederick as a ruler whose personal limitations—evident in his reliance on noble intermediaries—exacerbated the kingdom's decline from the more centralized governance of earlier monarchs like his grandfather Frederick III (r. 1296–1337). While he avoided outright rebellion or foreign conquest, his failure to curb baronial autonomy is seen as hastening the erosion of royal prerogatives, paving the way for the island's absorption into a with by 1409. This assessment draws from medieval chronicles emphasizing noble dominance, though primary sources remain sparse, highlighting the challenges of reconstructing his agency amid elite power struggles.

Numeral and Nickname Origins

The regnal numeral for Frederick, king of from 1355 to 1377, was not adopted by the monarch himself but applied retrospectively by chroniclers and historians. Designations vary between Frederick III and Frederick IV, with the former treating him as the successor in name to his grandfather Frederick (r. 1296–1337), who had claimed the ordinal III to evoke continuity with the predecessors, and the latter incorporating the full tally of Sicilian Fredericks: Frederick II (r. 1198–1250 as king) and the intervening Aragonese ruler. This inconsistency reflects differing historiographical approaches to numbering the Aragonese branch of Sicilian kings after the revolt of 1282 separated Trinacria from the mainland crown. The nickname "the Simple" (il Semplice), consistently attached to Frederick in medieval and later accounts, originated as a among contemporaries and chroniclers, likely alluding to perceptions of his candid or unelaborate style amid a regency from 1355 to 1361 and ongoing factional strife, though precise remains tied to traditional attributions rather than explicit documentation.

References

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