Duke of Amalfi

Medieval Amalfi was ruled, in the tenth and eleventh centuries, by a series of dukes (Latin: duces), sometimes called dogi (singular: doge), corresponding with the republic of Venice, a maritime rival throughout the Middle Ages. Before the title of Duke of Amalfi was formally established in 957, various patricians governed the territory. Amalfi established itself as one of the earliest maritime trading powers renowned throughout the Mediterranean, considered for two centuries, the most powerful of the maritime republics.

Arms of the Spanish Dukes of Amalfi

The title of Duke of Amalfi was reestablished as a Spanish ducal title in 1642 by King Philip IV of Spain for Prince Ottavio Piccolomini, a Field Marshal of the Holy Roman Imperial Army. Of noble Tuscan descent, two Popes were scions of the Piccolomini family, and the first duke's younger brother, Dom Ascanio, served as Archbishop of Siena from 1628 until 1671.

King Alfonso XIII of Spain revived the dukedom in 1902, and the title is extant.[1]

Early rulers

Prefects (839–914)

The prefecture's establishment is not certain, but the first elected Prefect of Amalfi was in 839.

  • Peter
  • Marinus (first time)
  • Sergius (I)
  • 860–866 Maurus
  • 870–876? Marinus (second time)
  • 872–879 Pulcharius (co-ruled with Marinus)
  • 883 Sergius (II)
  • 898 Stephen
  • 898–914 Manso (I)

Patricians (914–957)

The time of the patricians (or judges) is not well known. The numbering of the rulers of Amalfi usually begins again with the judgeship. Mastalus was elected judge upon his succession in 914.

Dukes

Independent dukes (957–1073)

Mastalus was elected duke on his coming of age, but died the next year. A new dynasty was then inaugurated. It reigned uninterrupted for the next 115 years, except during the period 1039–1052, when the duke of Salerno conquered the duchy.

House of Musco Comite

House of Salerno

  • 1039–1052 Guaimar I, also Prince of Salerno (10271052)
    • 1043–1052 Manso II (III), under overlordship of Guaimar, deposed
    • 1047–1052 Guaimar II, son, co-ruled with his father Manso, deposed

House of Musco Comite

Norman governance

Amalfi was conquered by Robert Guiscard, duke of Apulia. Nevertheless, Amalfi rebelled twice, once electing the former prince of Salerno, Gisulf, and once electing a Neapolitan of that ducal family.

A certain Manso ruled Amalfi—minting his own currency—under the title of vicedux (Vice-duke) sometime between 1077 and 1096, most probably during the reign of Robert's son Roger Borsa. Manso recognised Norman overlordship and was most probably a Norman appointee.

Neapolitan dukes (1388–1673)

The title of Duke of Amalfi (Duca di Amalfi in Italian) was revived under the Kingdom of Naples in the late 14th century, passing to the Piccolomini family in 1461.

Spanish dukedom (1902–present)

The title was revived as Duque de Amalfi by Alfonso XIII of Spain in 1902.

  • 1902–1912 Fulgencio Fuster y Fontes
  • 1912–1945 Antonio de Zayas y Beaumont
  • 1945–1959 Luis Moreno y Zayas
  • 1959–1996 María del Carmen Cotoner y Cotoner
  • 1996–2004 Íñigo Seoane y Cotoner
  • 2004–present Íñigo Seoane García

Succession

As with other Spanish noble titles, the dukedom of Amalfi initially descended according to cognatic primogeniture, meaning that females could inherit the title if they had no brothers (or if their brothers had no issue). That changed in 2006, since when the eldest child (regardless of gender) can automatically succeed to noble family titles.

See also

References

  1. "Almanach de Gotha (2014)". Archived from the original on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2018-02-14.

Sources

  • Chalandon, Ferdinand. Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie. Paris: 1907.
  • Gay, Jules. L'Italie méridionale et l'empire Byzantin, vol. 2. New York: Burt Franklin, 1904.
  • Skinner, Patricia. Family Power in Southern Italy: The Duchy of Gaeta and its Neighbours, 850–1139. Cambridge University Press, 1995.
  • Skinner, Patricia. Medieval Amalfi and Its Diaspora, 800–1250. Oxford University Press, 2013.
  • Stasser, Thierry. "Où sont les femmes?" Prosopon: The Journal of Prosopography (2006).
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