- Enzio of Sardinia
Enzio or Enzo (
Italianisation of Heinz, diminutive of Heinrich) (c. 1218 – 1272) was an illegitimate son of Emperor Frederick II andKing of Sardinia .Life
Enzio was an illegitimate son of Frederick II by a certain Adelaide (of Urslingen?). He was the eldest of the illegitimate sons of the emperor, and allegedly the favourite one [According to [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/GERMANY,%20Kings.htm#FriedrichIIGermanydied1250B this site] , Frederick II's eldest illegitimate son was Frederick di Pettorana] .
He had a pleasant personality and a strong physical resemblance to his father. He fought in the wars between his father, the pope, and the Northern Italian communes.
When
Ubaldo of Gallura died in 1238, theDoria family of Genoa, in order to secure theGiudicato of Logudoro from Pisan domination, convinced the emperor to marry Enzio to Ubaldo's widow,Adelasia of Torres [Bedürftig Friedemann: p. 63 "Taschenlexikon Staufer"] [Decker-Hauff Hansmartin: Band III p. 367] . By marrying her, Enzio would accede to half of the island ofSardinia "jure uxoris". He was created a knight inCremona and granted the title "King of Sardinia". He travelled to the island to marry Adelasia in October that year.In July 1239, he was assigned as imperial
vicar general inLombardy , as well as General-Legate inRomagna , and left Sardinia never to return. In 1241, he took part in the capture of a papal fleet atGiglio Island in theTyrrhenian Sea . His first successful move as military leader was the reconquest ofJesi , in theMarche , which was Frederick's birthplace. Later he was captured in a skirmish against the Milanese atGorgonzola , but soon released. In 1245 or 1246 his marriage was annulled. In 1247, he took part in the unsuccessful siege ofParma .He continued to fight the Guelph Lombards, assaulting the Guelphs of Reggio and conducting an assault in the surroundings of Parma.
During a campaign to support the
Ghibelline cities ofModena and Cremona against GuelphBologna , he was defeated and captured on26 May 1249 at theBattle of Fossalta . Enzio was thenceforth kept prisoner in Bologna, in the palace that came to bear his name. Every attempt to escape or to rescue him failed, and he died in prison in 1272: after the murder ofConradin in 1268, he was the last of theHohenstaufen .Enzio shared the father's passion for
falconry , and was thus nicknamed "Falconello" ("little falcon" [Mühlbacherer Josef: p. 205] ). He was the dedicatee of a French translation of a hunting treatise byYatrib . Like his brother Manfred, he presumambly grew fond of poetry at Frederick's court: during his long imprisonment Enzio wrote several poems, and his pitiful fate was itself a source of inspiration for several poets [Lexikon des Mittelalters: Band III, p. 2030] .The powerful
Bentivoglio family of Bologna andFerrara claimed descent from him.ee also
*
Palazzo Re Enzo
*Wars of the Guelphs and Ghibellines References
ources
*cite book|last=Ferrabino|first= Aldo (ed)|title=Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani: I Aaron – Albertucci|location=Rome|year=1960
*cite book|last=Mühlbacherer |first=Josef|title=Lebenswege und Schicksale staufischer Frauen
*cite book|last=Sperle|first=Christian|title=König Enzo von Sardinien und Friedrich von Antiochia. Zwei illegitime Söhne Kaiser Friedrichs II. und ihre Rolle in der Verwaltung des Regnum Italiae|year=2001|id=ISBN 3-631-37457-7
* [http://www.bartleby.com/65/en/Enzio.html Columbia Encyclopedia: Enzio.]
*1911Footnotes
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