Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Note
- Abbreviations
- 1 King Harold's Daughter
- 2 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, Identity and the Making of England
- 3 Master Arnulf, Archdeacon of Rouen, Unlicensed Pluralism, and Idoneitas. Defining Eligibility in the Early Thirteenth Century
- 4 The Saint Zenobius Dossal by the Master of the Bigallo and the Cathedral Chapter of Florence
- 5 Discovering the Aquitanian Church in the Corpus of Ademar of Chabannes
- 6 Robert de Londres, Illegitimate Son of William, King of Scots, c.1170–1225
- 7 The Use of Naval Power in the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily
- 8 Apology, Protest, and Suppression: Interpreting the Surrender of Caen (1105)
- 9 Henry Loyn and the Context of Anglo-Saxon England
7 - The Use of Naval Power in the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Note
- Abbreviations
- 1 King Harold's Daughter
- 2 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, Identity and the Making of England
- 3 Master Arnulf, Archdeacon of Rouen, Unlicensed Pluralism, and Idoneitas. Defining Eligibility in the Early Thirteenth Century
- 4 The Saint Zenobius Dossal by the Master of the Bigallo and the Cathedral Chapter of Florence
- 5 Discovering the Aquitanian Church in the Corpus of Ademar of Chabannes
- 6 Robert de Londres, Illegitimate Son of William, King of Scots, c.1170–1225
- 7 The Use of Naval Power in the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy and Sicily
- 8 Apology, Protest, and Suppression: Interpreting the Surrender of Caen (1105)
- 9 Henry Loyn and the Context of Anglo-Saxon England
Summary
In the eleventh century Norman knights, led by the rapacious progeny of Tancred de Hauteville, a minor Norman noble, descended from northern France into southern Italy to seek their fortune. Within a few decades they accomplished what the Byzantine Empire, the German Empire and the Papacy could not: the conquest of southern Italy and Sicily. By the middle of the following century they would extend their authority to Malta, North Africa and the eastern shores of the Adriatic while challenging such great maritime powers as Byzantium, Venice, Genoa, Pisa and Islam. They could have done none of this without some sort of naval capability. It is, thus, the contention of this study that the Normans, famed for their prowess as mounted warriors and castle-builders, forged and wielded a formidable naval presence which enabled them, for a time, to dominate the central Mediterranean, militarily and commercially.
Historiography
Curiously, modern historians have largely overlooked this critical aspect of Norman history. There are only two substantial works on the subject: a 104-page booklet on the Norman fleets of Sicily written in 1910 by Willy Cohn and a few chapters of Camillo Manfroni's three volume study, Storia della Marina Italiana, published in 1899. Both accounts are essentially narrative in nature and offer little information about how the ships were acquired, crewed and deployed. In addition, there are a few short papers like D.P. Waley's ‘“Combined Operations” in Sicily, A.D. 1060–78’ written in 1954 and Matthew Bennett's ‘Norman Naval Activity in the Mediterranean c. 1060–c. 1108’ composed in 1991.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Haskins Society Journal 192007 - Studies in Medieval History, pp. 120 - 136Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2008