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John of Arborea

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Name
  
John Arborea

Grandparents
  
Peter II of Arborea

Grandchildren
  
Hugh II of Arborea


Parents
  
Marianus II of Arborea

Died
  
March 23, 1304

Role
  
Marianus II of Arborea's son

Children
  
Andrew of Arborea, Marianus III of Arborea

People also search for
  
Marianus II of Arborea, Hugh II of Arborea, Andrew of Arborea, Marianus III of Arborea, Peter II of Arborea

Great grandchildren
  
Peter III of Arborea

John (died 23 March 1304), nicknamed Chiano, was the Giudice of Arborea from 1297 to his death.

He was the son and successor of Marianus II and reigned initially under the tutelage of Tosorat Uberti, a Pisan nobleman. Nino Visconti of Gallura having been deposed in 1288, John was the only judge and Arborea the only giudicato left on the island of Sardinia. Shortly after his succession, Pope Boniface VIII proclaimed a Regnum Sardiniae et Corsicae: Kingdom of Sardinia and Corsica. He named James II of Aragon King and paved the way for the invasion of the two islands.

John prepared to resist. In 1300, he ceded (or sold) to Pisa the third of Cagliari which he ruled, the silver mines, and, perhaps, part of the judicial demesne. This last — the alienation of public land — released the people to revolt (bannus consensus) and they did so, executing John and cutting out his tongue.

He married Giacomina (died 12 February 1329), daughter of Ugolino della Gherardesca, in 1287, on the advice of his father, though he already had sons through a liaison with Vera Cappai, of Villasalto. He was succeeded by his sons Andrew and Marianus. He left a legitimate daughter, Joanna, who died in 1308.

References

John of Arborea Wikipedia