Bianca Lancia | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1210 Agliano Terme, County of Savoy, Holy Roman Empire |
Died | c. 1248(1248-00-00) (aged 37–38) Monte Sant'Angelo or Gioia del Colle, Kingdom of Sicily |
Spouse | Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor |
Issue | Constance Anna of Hohenstaufen Manfred, King of Sicily Violante of Hohenstaufen |
Father | Bonifazio d'Agliano or Manfred I Lancia |
Mother | Bianca Lancia |
Bianca Lancia d'Agliano (also called Beatrice, c. 1210 – c. 1248), was an Italian noblewoman.[1] She was the mistress and later, possibly the last wife of the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick II.[1] The marriage was conducted while she was on her deathbed, therefore it was considered non-canonical.
The exact filiation and even the name of King Manfred's mother, traditionally called Bianca Lancia, are unknown.[2] Historians have different versions about the identification of her parents, there was no clarity among contemporaries either:
Thus, the chroniclers mentioned her maternal origin from the Lancia family, and the name Bianca was called not by Manfred's mother, but by his maternal grandmother.[2][6] The family received the surname Lancia because Manfred I (fl. 1160–1214), the alleged grandfather or father of Manfred's mother, has been lancifer (pikeman) of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa.[2] The first indication of the name Bianca in relation to Manfred's mother goes back to Bartholomew of Neocastro,[b] who wrote only 40 years after Manfred's death. Perhaps the name Bianca was borne by two women: the daughter of the Marquis Manfred I and his granddaughter, the daughter of the first Bianca. In the Lancia family, the repetition of names was a tradition. The same confusion among the chroniclers was caused by the name Manfred in three generations of men in the family.[6] Tommaso Tosco also expressed the popular hypothesis that Emperor Frederick II could have had a relationship with both the elder Bianca and her two daughters, one being Manfred's mother.[6]
Contemporary chroniclers do not mention Manfred's mother's father, which means that his origin is less noble than that of her mother.[6] Even Manfred in 1247 is called "Manfred Lancia" in a document. Niccolò di Jamsilla, who lived at the court of Manfred, mentions that his maternal relatives were the Counts of Agliano,[c] and this may indicate Bianca's father, Bonifazio d'Agliano.[2][6]
It is assumed that Manfred's mother was born around 1210. It may have happened in Agliano Terme (Piedmont), the family's estate.[2]
Bianca lived most of her life at the Castello di Brolo, the ancestral seat of the Lancia family. It is not known when her relationship with Frederick II began and how long it lasted. It is widely believed that her meeting with the Emperor took place in 1225, when he married Isabella II of Jerusalem. According to Renato Bordone, it is unlikely that the Emperor met her in Agliano in 1225; in fact their meeting would have taken place between 1226 and 1230 in Sicily.[6][7] In any case, the children of Bianca and Frederick II were born in the period after the death of Isabella II of Jerusalem in 1228, and before the Emperor's third marriage to Isabella of England, which took place in 1235.[2][6]
Both the chronicles of Salimbene di Adam and Matthew Paris wrote that a "marriage ceremony at the moment of death" (Latin: confirmatio matrimonii in articulo mortis) took place between Bianca Lancia and Emperor Frederick II when she was dying. As Matthew Paris writes, Bianca wanted to marry for the salvation of her soul and the safety of her children's future,[6][8][9] who were subsequently legitimated (Latin: legitimatio per matrimonium subsequens). With this, the Emperor probably also wanted to increase the number of his legitimate descendants and possible successors.[10] The Church did not recognize this marriage as canonical. Matthew Paris also writes that the circumstances of the marriage were kept secret: there are neither witnesses nor any records.[9]
There is only circumstantial evidence that this marriage took place.[7] In 1250, in Frederick II's will, Manfred was recognized and mentioned as a legitimate son. At the same time, on 21 April 1247, when he married, was under the name of "Manfred Lancia".[2][6] This means that Manfred was legitimized between 1247 and 1250.[2][6]
Bianca and Frederick II had three children together:
Contemporary sources, such as the Annales ianuenses, dated Bianca's death between 1234 and 1246. For example, Matthew Paris reported that Bianca died 20 years after the first meeting with Frederick II. This gives approximately 1246. Elsewhere, the chronicler wrote that this was 20 years before 1256, indicating around 1236. However, since marriage to the Emperor was a necessary condition for legitimizing his children, it must be admitted that she died no earlier than 1247. At the same time, Bianca probably died before Frederick II, since the castle of Monte Sant'Angelo, located in the cities of Vieste and Siponto (which, according to King William II of Sicily's will, was the traditional possession of the Queens of Sicily as a "gift morning" after the wedding night and would remain in their possession as a dower), was granted by the Emperor to his son Manfred.[2][6][7][9]
According to a legend recorded by the monk Bonaventure da Lama and found by the historian Pantaleo, Frederick II was jealous of his mistress and locked her in the tower of the Castello Normanno-Svevo in Gioia del Colle. She was pregnant with Violante at the time. Bianca could not endure this humiliation and, having given birth to a child, cut off her breasts and sent them to the Emperor on a tray. Then she died. Since that day, every night in the castle tower, now called the Tower of the Empress, a faint, heartbreaking cry is heard.[14]
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