- John IV of Naples
:"This article is about the duke, secular ruler of the city, for the patron saint and bishop, see
John IV, Bishop of Naples ".John IV was the mostly absenteeduke of Naples from 997 to after 1002. He was the son and successor of Sergius III. John IV originally recognised the suzerainty of theByzantine Emperor .In 999, he was captured and taken a prisoner first to
Capua , then back toGermany byOtto III , theHoly Roman Emperor , who had just visitedSaint Nilus the Younger inGaeta . During his absence, Naples seems to have continued in allegiance to the Greeks, though it was technically governed byAdhemar of Spoleto . In 1002, John reappears in his duchy, probably released by Otto's successor, Henry II.John had one son, Sergius, who succeeded him, and two daughter. The elder was Sichelgaita (whose name may imply that John had a Lombard wife), who married
John IV of Gaeta and thus cemented alliance between her brother and DukeJohn V of Gaeta . A second daughter is recorded unnamed byAmatus of Montecassino as having been widowed by the count of Gaeta and remarrying soon after toRanulf Drengot , the Normancount of Aversa . This latter account is confusing, but not impossible.ources
*Chalandon, Ferdinand. "Histoire de la domination normande en Italie et en Sicilie".
Paris , 1907.
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