Marquess of Geraci
The following is a chronological list of the Counts and Marquesses of the County of Geraci, from the Norman Conquest to the suppression of the feudal orders in 1816.
Counts of Geraci
[edit]According to tradition, the County of Geraci originates from the Battle of Cerami, which saw King Roger I of Sicily cede the city and fiefdom of Geraci to Roger's nephew, Serlo II of Hauteville, in 1063.
Hauteville dyanasty
[edit]Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Serlo II of Hauteville | c. 1040 | 1072 | 1063–1072 | ||
Aldruda di Moulins | Before 1072 | ? | 1072–? | Wife |
Serlo II's widow, Aldruda di Moulins, married the Norman soldier Ingelmarius as her second husband, passing the title of Count of Geraci to him. Ingelmarius eventually rebelled against King Roger I, was stripped of his title and fiefdom and the County passed to the dynasty closest to Serlo. Roger I de Craon, Count of Ischia and Geraci, son of Guglielmo de Craon and father of Guerrera de Craon, appears in a document from 1159. The latter inherited the title of Countess and passed the County to her husband. The sources indicate two hypotheses: Guerrera's marriage to Aldoino of Candida or to Elia d'Hauteville of Gesualdo, both already Barons of Candida and Lapio.
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roger I de Craon | Before 1159 | ? | ?–? | ? | |
Guerrera de Craon | Before 1195 | ? | c. 1195–? | Daughter | |
Aldoino of Candida | ? | ? | ?–? | Husband? |
Count of Ischia and Geraci (?–1258)
[edit]Some sources speak of a Roger, son of Elia d'Hauteville of Gesualdo, who in turn married (for the second time) to Guerrera, appointed Count of Ischia by Henry VI, exiled in 1212 perhaps because he rebelled against King Frederick between 1209 and 1211, as can be seen in a letter from the Abbot of Monte Cassino. Roger II of Ischia and Isabella di Parisio were the parents of Aldoino of Ischia. The last Countess was Aldoino's daughter, Isabella of Geraci, who married Henry II of Ventimiglia, introducing the long-lived dynasty of Ligurian origin in the County. However, between the death of Count Aldoino (which occurred before 1240) and the passage of the title to his daughter, the presence of chamberlains appointed by the emperor is documented.
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Elia d'Hauteville of Gesualdo ?[1] | ? | Before May 1206 | ?–? | Husband of Guerrera? |
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Roger II of Ischia | ? | Before 1222 | ?–? | Son |
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Aldoino of Ischia | ? | Before 1240 | ?–? | Son |
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Isabella of Geraci | ? | ? | ?–? | Daughter |
Ventimiglia dynasty (1258–1338)
[edit]The Ventimiglia dynasty, whose first Count of Geraci was Henry II, became the most powerful in the County, elevating it to a Marquessate in 1436. During the long War of the Vespers and the subsequent political instability of the Kingdom, the County was incorporated into the Girgenti valley and experienced a brief period of exclusion of the Ventimiglia family from the fiefdom following an act of rebellion against the crown. In 1271, Charles I of Anjou expropriated the County from Henry and entrusted it to Simon and John de Montfort-Leicester, his cousins, who however did not keep it for long, selling it or giving it to other French vassals. In 1282, King Peter I confirmed Henry as Count of Geraci again, who would co-regency with his son Aldoino. In 1285, Girgenti valley, the County of Geracim and the parts of Termini and Cefalù were created and, in 1289, Henry, finding himself in Liguria, returned to his old fiefdom on the occasion of the funeral of his son, who had died that year; in 1292 he managed to regain the title of Count which he would maintain until his death in 1308. In the first half of the 14th century, Peter II confiscated the County of Geraci from Francesco I Ventimiglia, after a military siege. The County was incorporated into the possessions of the Crown of Aragon for a long time and was only redeemed by Emanuele Ventimiglia in 1354.
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Henry II of Ventimiglia | c. 1230 | 1308 | 1258–1271 | Husband |
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Simon de Montfort-Leicester | ? | ? | 1271 | None |
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John de Montfort-Leicester | ? | ? | 1271 | Brother |
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Aldoino Ventimiglia (together with his father Henry II) |
? | 1289 | 1282–1285 | None (Son of Henry II) |
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Henry II Ventimiglia | c. 1230 | 1308 | 1292–1308 | Father |
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Francesco I Ventimiglia | ? | 1338 | c. 1311–1338 | Grandchild |
The county confiscated from the Ventimiglia family was granted to Elizabeth of Carinthia, Queen of Sicily, remaining in the royal chamber until at least July 1348. Part of the fiefdom was granted to Matteo Palizzi, already husband of the cousin of Francis I, while Damiano Palizzi, brother of Matteo, obtained Collesano and Gratteri. In 1340 the counties passed to the vicar Giovanni d'Aragona who in 1344 sold them to the soldier Giovanni Lombardo. Two years later Pietro Siragusa appeared as Count of Geraci. Finally, upon the death of the Queen around 1350, the County of Geraci was assigned to the infant Giovanni "John" of Aragon, and upon his death, around 1352, to his brother Frederick.
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Elizabeth of Carinthia | 1303 | c. 1352 | c. 1330–1348 | None |
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Matteo Palizzi | ? | 1353 | ?–1340 | None |
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Damiano Palizzi | ? | ? | ?–1340 | Brother |
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John of Aragon | 1317 | 1348 | 1340–1344 | None (Brother-in-law of Elizabeth) |
Giovanni Lombardo | ? | ? | 1344–1346 | None | |
Pietro Siragusa | ? | ? | 1346 | None | |
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John of Aragon | 1340 | 1353 | 1346–1352 | None (Son of Elizabeth) |
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Frederick IV of Sicily | 1341 | 1377 | 1352–1354 | Brother |
Ventimiglia dynasty (1353–1436)
[edit]The County was redeemed by Emanuele Ventimiglia in 1353 who obtained the fiefdom again, although the previous year Emanuele and his brother Francesco II, both sons of Francesco I, had already regained possession of their father's assets. Their County would last until his nephew Giovanni I Ventimiglia, who would obtain the elevation of the County to Marquessate.
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Emanuele Ventimiglia | ? | Before 1365 | 1353–1361 | None (Son of Francesco I Ventimiglia) |
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Francesco II Ventimiglia | ? | 1387 | 1361–1387 | He dismisses his brother Emanuele and grants him an annual income of 100 gold ounces |
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Henry III Ventimiglia | ? | 1398 | 1387–1398 | Son |
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Giovanni I Ventimiglia | 1383 | 1475 | 1398–1436 | Son |
Marquesses of Geraci
[edit]In 1436 Giovanni obtained the elevation of the County to a Marquessate. The Marquessate of Geraci existed until 1816, when, as a result of the Sicilian Constitution of 1812, feudalism was abolished. For the four centuries of the marquessate, the ruling family remained that of the Ventimiglias. For five years, from 1485 to 1490, the Count of Geraci - at the time Henry IV - was exiled on charges of rebellion, with his father still in exile, it was his son Filippo who redeemed the County. The last Count of Geraci was Luigi Roger II Ventimiglia.
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Period (from-to) |
Relationship with predecessor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Giovanni I Ventimiglia | 1383 | 1475 | 1436–1475 | – |
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Antonio Ventimiglia Prades | c. 1405 | 1480 | 1475–1480 | Son |
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Henry IV Ventimiglia | ? | 1493 | 1480–1485 | Son |
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Filippo Ventimiglia | ? | ? | 1490–? | Son |
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Simone I Ventimiglia | ? | 1544 | ?–1544 | Son |
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Giovanni II Ventimiglia | ? | 1553 | 1544–1553 | Son |
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Simone II Ventimiglia | 1528 | 1560 | 1553–1560 | Son |
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Maria Ventimiglia e Alliata | 1539 | 1585 | 1560–? | Wife |
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Giovanni III Ventimiglia | 1559 | 1619 | ?–1619 | Son |
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Giuseppe Ventimiglia | ? | 1620 | 1620 (died before investiture) |
Son |
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Francesco III Ventimiglia | ? | 1648 | 1620–1648 | Son |
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Giovanni IV Ventimiglia | ? | 1675 | 1648–1675 | Son |
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Francesco IV Rodrigo Ventimiglia | ? | 1688 | 1676–1688 | Son |
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Giovanni V Ventimiglia | 1680 | 1689 | 1688–1689 | Son |
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Blasco Ventimiglia | ? | ? | 1689–1712 | Brother |
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Giovanni VI Ventimiglia | ? | 1748 | 1712–1748 | Brother |
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Luigi Roger Ventimiglia | 1705 | 1771 | 1749–1771 | Son |
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Luigi Roger II Ventimiglia | ? | ? | 1771–1816 | Son |
References
[edit]- ^ Accepting the hypothesis of the marriage with Guerrera da Craon, the inheritance of the title of Count of Geraci by Elia would be admitted.