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William III of Sicily

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Coronation
  
January/February 1194

Role
  
King of Sicily

Died
  
1198, Hohenems, Austria


Successor
  
Constance with Henry I

House
  
Hauteville family

Name
  
William of

William III of Sicily

Reign
  
December 1193 – October 1194

Co-monarch
  
Tancred (1193 – February 1194)

Father
  
Tancred, King of Sicily

Parents
  
Tancred, King of Sicily, Sibylla of Acerra

Great-grandparents
  
Roger II of Sicily, Elvira of Castile, Queen of Sicily

People also search for
  
Tancred, King of Sicily, Sibylla of Acerra, Roger III of Sicily, Roger III, Duke of Apulia

Predecessor
  
Tancred with Roger III

Grandparents
  
Roger III, Duke of Apulia

William III (c. 1186 – c. 1198), a scion of the Hauteville dynasty, was the last Norman King of Sicily, who reigned briefly for ten months in 1194. He was overthrown by his great-aunt Constance and her husband Emperor Henry VI.

Contents

Life and reign

He was the second son of Count Tancred of Lecce and his wife Sibylla of Acerra. When in 1189 King William II of Sicily died childless, Tancred, an illegitimate son of the Norman duke Roger III of Apulia gained the support of Pope Clement III to be crowned King of Sicily, denying the rights of his aunt Constance, daughter of late King Roger II.

At the age of four, shortly after the death of first his older brother Roger and then a few weeks later of his father (February 20, 1194), William was crowned king by Pope Celestine III in Palermo. His mother Sibylla acted as his regent.

However, Constance's husband, the Hohenstaufen emperor Henry VI claimed the throne of Sicily in right of his wife. Even before Tancred's death he had been laying plans to invade, and his resources had been further augmented by the ransom he had received for the release of King Richard I of England.

Overthrow and death

In August 1194 Henry marched against Sicily. Sibylla was unable to organize much effective resistance. By the end of October Henry had conquered all the mainland parts of the kingdom and crossed over into the island of Sicily. On November 20 Palermo fell, William and his mother fled to Caltabellotta Castle.

Henry offered Sibylla generous terms: William was to retain the County of Lecce, the home territory of his father before he had become king, and was also to retain the Principality of Taranto in turn for renouncing the royal crown. With that agreement reached, William, his mother and his sisters watched while Henry was crowned King of Sicily on December 25 (Constance was not crowned due to being in labour with Henry's son Frederick II in Iesi). Nevertheless, four days later, an alleged conspiracy against the new king was uncovered, and many of the leading Italo-Norman political figures were arrested and sent to prison in Germany, including William and his family.

While his mother and sisters were eventually released and lived in obscurity in France, nothing is known for certain of William's subsequent fate. He is said to have been blinded, castrated, or both. According to some sources he died in captivity at Alt-Ems Castle a few years later, others claim that he was released and became a monk. Another theory is that he later returned to Sicily under the alias Tancredi Palamara. Henry's son, Emperor Frederick II (who was also king of Sicily) discovered Tancredi Palamara in Messina and had him executed in 1232. However, referring to several letters by Pope Celestine III, the date generally accepted for his death is 1198.

Aftermath

William's heir was his younger sister, whose precise name is unclear but has been given variously as Mary, Elvira, Albiria or Albinia, Blanche (died after 1216). Exiled in France, she was married firstly in 1200 to the French count Walter III of Brienne who was sometimes advanced as pretender of the Sicilian throne against Frederick II, and was briefly Prince of Taranto and Count of Lecce in right of his wife. He temporarily gained support by the pope and backed by several Italian nobles (among them the young Francis of Assisi) was able to occupy large parts of Apulia against a Sicilian army under Chancellor Walter of Palearia. However, in 1205 he was finally defeated by Frederick's liensman Dipold of Schweinspeunt at Sarno, was captured and died in prison soon afterwards.

At the same time Elvira (Mary) gave birth to his son, Walter IV, who only received the French County of Brienne, as his Sicilian inheritance had confiscated because of his father's rebellion. He later went to the Holy Land and became Count of Jaffa.

References

William III of Sicily Wikipedia