- Philip of Mahdia
Philip of Mahdia, of Greek origin, was the
emir ofPalermo , the second "ammiratus ammiratorum", and successor of the greatGeorge of Antioch . He was aeunuch who rose through the ranks of the royal "curia " inPalermo until he was eventually one of KingRoger II 's most trusted men. On George's death in year 546 of the Hegira (AD 1151 or 1152), Roger appointed him to the highest post in the kingdom.In summer 1153, he was sent on an expedition to
Tunisia . The governor ofBône (ancient "Hippo Regius", modern "Annaba") had appealed to Roger for aid against theAlmohads . Philip captured the city, treated the populace well, and then returned whence he had come. He was welcomed in Palermo as a hero "cum triumpho et gloria" (with triumph and glory) according toRomuald, Archbishop of Salerno . Following Romuald's account, he was then charged with converting toIslam and promptly imprisoned and eventually admitted guilt and the was executed by orders of the king, who would have forgiven such an offence against his person, but not against God. This account is probably a later interpolation and its authenticity is debated. Arab chroniclers, likeIbn al-Athir , suggest that it was because Philip had allowed several prosperous and learned families to leave Bône after capture. Norwich finds that incredible and suggests that Roger, just months away from death, was either prematurely senile (echoingHugo Falcandus ) or incapacitated by poor health and so his ministers had Philip executed, probably forapostasy .Philip was succeeded by the great
Maio of Bari .ources
*Norwich, John Julius. "The Kingdom in the Sun 1130-1194". Longman:
London , 1970.
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