William of Loritello
William was an Italo-Norman nobleman, the son and successor of Count Robert II of Loritello in 1137.
He reigned only briefly, because, immediately after his succession, the Emperor Lothair II descended the peninsula to fight the royal pretensions of Roger II of Sicily in the Mezzogiorno. On the river Tronto, William did homage to Lothair and opened the gates of Termoli to him. In this he joined Count Hugh II of Molise.
William did not last long in this state. As the first to openly welcome the emperor to the south, the royal furor landed on him with especial swiftness. His county was seized by the crown. It was not regranted until Roger's death, when William I of Sicily granted it to Robert II, Count of Conversano.
Sources
Preceded by Robert II |
Count of Loritello 1137 |
Succeeded by Robert III |
gollark: You want to make it so that you don't do too much work, regular users aren't inconvenienced much, and on the fence people will find it easier to get it officially than pirate.
gollark: Make a mildly irritating to get around but simple system which won't get in the way probably maybe?
gollark: Oh, and also having to contact you if you switch computers is ridiculously awful.
gollark: <@738361430763372703>, consider; even if the average user cannot thwart your copy protection, one palaiologistic user can deobfuscate it and just release a pirated version.
gollark: It would be hard to ACCIDENTALLY run curl in verbose mode then post the headers.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.