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Easy Steps
to the Dark Ages in Naples
The
Battle of Mons Lactarius by German artist, Alexander
Zick (1845-1907).
The battle in 553 marked the final defeat of
the Goths in Italy.
As a young
citizen of Naples in 475 a.d., you rightfully
mumble in your mead about how the Empire has gone to hell recently, but
you’re
not necessarily aware of the hellish event, itself—that is, the Goth
invasion
of northern Italy in that year, which leads to the fall of the Western
Empire.
That is a long way from Naples, but sooner or later, you hear the name
“Theodoric” (your new Goth king) and are aware that the last of your
Roman
emperors, Romulus Augustus, has not been executed but merely put out to
pasture right in your own backyard, on the nice small island of
Megaride,
where the Castel dell’Ovo
will one
day stand. But your life is otherwise much the same; no one forces you
to
change your religion (probably Christianity) and no one makes you speak
Goth. (Even
the Goths give that up for Latin. Maybe you are amused that the Goths
will now have to wait another 1,200 years—after they are
all dead!— for
someone
named Horace Walpole to write something called The Castle
of Otranto—a so-called “Gothic (!) novel” in a language
called “English”. Strange, indeed.) In any event, you do not
necessarily feel that
you are about to embark on The Dark Ages.
You find out a few years later, though, when
the Greek Byzantine
emperor Justinian invades Italy
in 535 to restore the Roman empire. That particular Gothic War lasts 20
years
and
devastates the Italian peninsula, including the city of Naples. The
Greeks finally defeat the Goths on
the slopes of Vesuvius at the battle of Mons
Lactarius (painting, above), the Latin name for
what is now Mt. Lettere, not far from
the town of Angri, between Castellamare
and Salerno.
It is, however, a short-lived
success and leaves the Byzantine victors so spent that they are unable
to
resist the Longobard (or “Lombard”) invasions of a scant two decades
later.
However, for that brief period after 555, with Naples
once again a Greek city—under Byzantium—you
have a much calmer life, perhaps even enjoy somewhat of a Greek
renaissance,
they say. Greek is again spoken, translation centers thrive, and those
delicately
lettered illuminated manuscripts become a bit of a cottage industry in Naples. (Every
time you
stop your cart, some kid runs out, cleans your horse’s eyeballs and
tries to
sell you a beautiful letter "S".) Not too unpleasant—again, so
they say.
By now you are getting well up there in
years, but maybe you
live to see the Longobards invade Italy in 568. They set up a
kingdom
that will last 200 years, but it is not
a monolithic kingdom; it is rather a loosely-knit confederation,
somewhat
of a
patchwork. Though it extends most of the length of Italy,
it leaves Byzantine enclaves intact, including the Exarchate of
Ravenna, the center of what is left of Greek power in Italy; Naples remains another
Greek enclave, as do
other areas in the south. Even
as the Longobards
spread
through the adjacent area, Naples
manages to hold out and declare
itself an
independent Duchy (with nominal allegiance to Byzantium) in 661. The first Duke is
a
certain Basilio, born and bred in Naples.
Longobard
Italy was at its greatest extent in about 750, after the
Byzantine Exarchate around Ravenna had ceased to exist and before
the creation of the Papal States.
For about a
hundred years thereafter, Naples
see-saws between being a Byzantine enclave and an independent duchy;
each
change, however, weakens the hold of Constantinople on Naples. By around
750, the Duchy of Naples comes into its own and has
developed into
the main port for African and Spanish wares on the way to Rome.
In the north, the stage is now set
for the Lombards to pass from history: they invade the Greek exarchate;
the Greeks then call for help from the Germanic Franks and one of them,
Pepin, helps retake the exarchate but then gives it to the church of
Rome, a gift that is called "The Donation of Pepin." That territory
merges with the Duchy of Rome to form the
Papal States, a large
chunk
of central Italy that will separate north and south for the next 1000
years. Pepin's son, Charlemagne, then finishes mopping up the north,
and the Holy Roman Empire is born in the year 800. That, however, does
little to affect the south. Charlemagne effectively leaves the south to
pursue its own course—to remain southern Longobards, as it were.
But southern hegemony shatters
quickly:
the
towns of Amalfi and Sorrento
declare themselves independent and become seafaring trading centers on
their
own; there is also the Duchy of Benevento and its breakaway southern
half, the
Duchy of Saleno. The independent Duchy of Naples in
the year 800 extends from Lago Patria to Amalfi. If
you live in the mid-800s, you can watch them build
what is
now the ruined medieval castle
of Lettere right
at the
spot where the Goths were beaten centuries earlier. The castle is part
of a
chain of forts to promote the general “good fences make good neighbors”
policy
of the age. Empire is out; feudalism is in.
In
the first half of the 800's, the southern Longobards wage bitter
attacks in an
attempt to take the city of Naples.
The Neapolitans turn to the Arabs—the newest members of the cast—who
are now
prowling the waters of southern Italy and who have already taken the
island of
Ponza to use as a base from which to raid the mainland. (They would
also take
all of Sicily
by 902.) The Arabs help Naples hold off
the
Longobards; in return, the Neapolitan fleet a few years later helps
the Arabs
take the city of Bari on the Adriatic,
which remains a Moslem stronghold for thirty years. By 836 there
is an
alliance between the Arabs of Palermo and Naples.
Neapolitan assistance to the Arabs weakens Byzantine sea power in the
Tyrrhenian sea, and the Arabs are thus able to carry out successful
raids on
the Aeolian islands and elsewhere
along the southern
coast. By the second half of the 800s Byzantine power has withered even
further
in southern Italy, and Naples—still in the face of Lombard antagonists
in the
area—succeed in installing Sergio, Duke of Cuma, as the Duke of
Naples. This
is the beginning of a true duchy, independent of Constantinople.
Although
Naples helped the Moslems take Bari in 841 and Messina shortly
thereafter, Arab
freebooters continue to interfere with Neapolitan commerce; Naples
then forms
an alliance with Amalfi, Gaeta and Sorrento to defeat the Moslem
pirates,
forcing them to abandon Ponza, and in 846 a united Campanian fleet
helps thwart
the Arab invasion of Rome. This, however, does not prevent these same
Campanian
sea cities from developing friendly commercial relations with Arab
Sicily a few
years later. Sergio II, who ruled as Duke of Naples from 870 to
877 is
said by Pope John VIII to have turned the city "into another Palermo.” Sergio
is
excommunicated.
Roger the
Norman
The
Arabs are finally pushed off the mainland by a combined Byzantine and Holy Roman Empire force. Except for the
anomalous case of
Lucera, a Moslem settlement on the Adriatic which survives into the
13th
century, the last Arab stronghold on the mainland is a cove of pirates
at
Garigliano, near Naples.
It is wiped out in 915 by a joint Holy Roman Empire, Byzantine, Papal,
Neapolitan and
Gaetan force. For the Duchy of Naples the rest of the 900's are full of
wars
with neighboring Longobards, die-hard Byzantines and Arab pirates.
By the
1000's the Normans have arrived.
They retake Sicily;
in
1059 Robert
Guiscard becomes
a Papal vassal, and his younger brother Roger builds a Norman
state out of remnant Longobard holdings in the South. By 1076 Amalfi
has
accepted
Norman rule. By 1100 the days of the southern Longobards, the Byzantine
Empire, and Islam in southern Italy are through. In 1130,
Roger II, "the Norman," crowned
king of Sicily, claims Naples. He
enters the city in September, 1140,
incorporating it into the Kingdom
of Sicily (the future Kingdom of Naples).
With that, Naples and Southern Italy shift out of the orbit of the
classical world of southern
Mediterranean cultures and into the "European" one of the future.
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