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Guy III of Spoleto

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Guy III of Spoleto
Emperor of the Romans
Guy depicted as emperor in the 12th-century cartulary of San Clemente
Emperor in Italy
Reign891–894
Coronation21 February 891, Rome
PredecessorCharles III
SuccessorLambert
King of Italy
ReignFebruary 889 – 894
PredecessorBerengar I
SuccessorLambert
Died12 December 894
Taro River, Italy
Burial
SpouseAgeltrude
Issue
Lambert
Arnaldo of Spoletto (Arnaldo de Baião)
Bernardo of Spoletto
Guy IV of Spoletto
HouseGuideschi
FatherGuy I
MotherItta of Benevento

Guy III of Spoleto (German: Wido, Italian: Guido; died 12 December 894) was the Margrave of Camerino from 880 and then Duke of Spoleto and Camerino from 883. He was crowned King of Italy in 889 and emperor in 891. He died in 894 while fighting for control of the Italian Peninsula.

Guy was married to Ageltrude, daughter of Adelchis of Benevento, who had a son with him named Lambert.

Early life

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Guy was the second son of Guy I of Spoleto[1] and Itta, daughter of Sico of Benevento. Guy I was the son of Lambert I of Nantes and his second wife, Adelaide of Lombardy, who was a daughter of Charlemagne's second eldest son, Pepin of Italy. In 842, the former Duchy of Spoleto, which had been donated to the Papacy by Charlemagne, was resurrected by the Franks to be held against Byzantine catapans to the south, as a Frankish border territory by a dependent margrave.

Consequently, Guy’s family had been important players in Italian politics since the early ninth century.[2] Although in 876 Guy and his elder brother, Lambert, Duke of Spoleto, had been commissioned by Charles the Bald to accompany Pope John VIII on a trip to Naples in order to break up the alliances that many of the southern Lombard states had made with the Saracens,[3] the family’s interests were generally hostile to the papacy, a policy that Guy initially followed.[4]

With Lambert’s death in 880, he bequeathed to Guy the march of Camerino, and in 882 Guy supported his nephew Guy II of Spoleto's invasion of the Papal States.[5] This brought him into conflict with the Emperor Charles the Fat, and in 882, at an assembly at Verona, the emperor dispossessed him of his fiefs, together with a significant number of other important, but minor, Italian nobles.[6] Rising up in rebellion, Guy allied himself with the neighbouring Saracens and began acquiring further territory. At this point, at a diet at Ravenna, the emperor declared him guilty of high treason, and Berengar of Friuli was commanded to strip him of his fief by force.[7]

In 883, Guy inherited his nephew's title of Spoleto and reunited the dukedom, henceforth as the "Duchy of Spoleto and Camerino" bearing the title of dux et marchio (and gaining his regnal number III), and by the end of 884, Emperor Charles III was forced to make peace with Guy, where he formally recovered his titles.[8] Then in 885, he fought his occasional allies, the Saracens of the Garigliano.

Rule as emperor

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A Spoletan denarius from the reign of Guy III

After the deposition of Charles the Fat in 887, by virtue of being a relative of Archbishop Fulk of Rheims,[9] he had hopes of being crowned King of West Francia,[citation needed] and in fact travelled as far as Langres, where the bishop crowned him as such. But because of Odo's coronation that year (888), he turned and went back with designs on the crown of Italy and the emperorship, having won the support of Burgundian nobles such as Anscar of Oscheret.[10]

Guy of Spoleto was opposed by Berengar of Friuli for the Iron Crown of Lombardy.[11] Although Berengar had the advantage of being allied with the Carolingian family,[12] and of having been crowned as king of Italy in 887, from 888 Guy was closer to Rome, and had already allied himself with Pope Stephen V, who had described Guy “as his only son”.[citation needed] Fighting between the rival contenders began, and it was Guy who had himself proclaimed king of Italy in a diet held at Pavia at the end of the year 888.[13] He was formally crowned King of Italy by Pope Stephen V in 889 in Pavia, in the Basilica of San Michele Maggiore,[14] and this was followed by his coronation as Roman Emperor on 21 February 891,[15] together with the crowning of his son Lambert II as King of Italy.

The situation in Italy began to deteriorate with the election of a new pope, Formosus, in 891. Distrustful of Guy, he began to look elsewhere for support against the emperor, as Guy found it increasingly difficult to end the threat of Berengar who still held out in his Duchy of Friuli.[16] To bolster his overall position, at Ravenna on 30 April 892, Guy forced Pope Formosus to crown Lambert as co-emperor.[17]

The pope therefore took the next opportunity to oppose Guy by supporting Arnulf of Carinthia for the Italian and imperial titles.[citation needed] In 893, Formosus invited Arnulf to come to Trento to overthrow Guy and be crowned himself. Arnulf instead sent his son Zwentibold with an army to join Berengar, the deposed king, and march on Trento. Their joint army surrounded Trento, but Guy probably bribed them to leave him unmolested. The following year, they defeated Guy at Bergamo and took Trento and Milan. Berengar was recognised as king and a vassal of Arnulf. Zwentibold returned to Germany, as fever had wreaked havoc on the German armies.[18] Guy retreated in order to regroup at a fortified place on the Taro and died there suddenly in late autumn, leaving his son under the tutelage of his wife. Both would contest the throne with Berengar and Arnulf.

Legacy

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Seal of king Guy on a paper from his coronation, Pavia, 889 AD

Guy's power never extended over much beyond his hereditary lands, which offered a stark illustration of the fact that the imperial title, with its pretensions of universal rule, had by the end of the ninth century become merely a token of the pope's favour, to be fought over by various Italian nobles. He did not even firmly control the north of Italy, battling other claimants over the throne for much of his reign. He did try to maintain the Carolingian tradition and issue capitularies as former emperors had. In 891, he demanded the traditional service in the army of all arimanni, whether they owned land or not.

Sources

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  • De Manteyer, Georges. Les origines de la maison de Savoie en Bourgogne (910-1060). Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire: 1899.
  • di Carpegna Falconieri, Tommaso. "Guido, conte marchese di Camerino, duca marchese di Spoleto, re d'Italia, imperatore". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, LXI. Rome: 2004, pp. 354–361.
  • Mann, Horace, K. The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages, Vol III: The Popes During the Carolingian Empire, 858–891. 1925
  • Mann, Horace, K. The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages, Vol IV: The Popes in the Days of Feudal Anarchy, 891–999. 1925
  • Comyn, Robert. History of the Western Empire, from its Restoration by Charlemagne to the Accession of Charles V, Vol. I. 1851

References

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  1. ^ Mann III, pg. 303
  2. ^ Mann III, pg. 303
  3. ^ Mann III, pg. 281
  4. ^ Mann III, pg. 318
  5. ^ Mann III, pg. 318
  6. ^ Mann III, pg. 355
  7. ^ Mann III, pg. 356
  8. ^ Mann III, pg. 356
  9. ^ Mann III, pg. 377
  10. ^ De Manteyer, 495
  11. ^ Comyn, pg. 82
  12. ^ Mann III, pg. 377
  13. ^ Mann III, pg. 377
  14. ^ Elliott, Gillian. ""Representing Royal Authority at San Michele Maggiore in Pavia"". Zeitschrift fur Kunstgeschichte 77 (2014). Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  15. ^ Mann III, pg. 378
  16. ^ Mann IV, pg. 50
  17. ^ Comyn, pg. 82
  18. ^ Mann IV, pg. 51
Emperor Guy
 Died: 12 December 894
Regnal titles
Preceded byas unopposed king — DISPUTED —
King of Italy
889–894
Disputed by Berengar I
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Charles III
Holy Roman Emperor
891–894
Preceded by Duke of Spoleto
883–894
Preceded by Margrave of Camerino
880–894
with Guy II (880–894)