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FREDERICK (Mod. Ger. Friedrich; Ital. Federigo; Fr. | step-brother Conrad was invested with the Palatinate of the Rhine. Frédéric and Fédéric; M.H.G. Friderich; O.H.G. Fridurih, "king or lord of peace," from O.H.G. fridu, A.S. frith, “ peace,' and rih "rich," "a ruler," for derivation of which see HENRY), a Christian name borne by many European sovereigns and princes, the more important of whom are given below in the following order: -(1) Roman emperors and German kings; (2) other kings in the alphabetical order of their states; (3) other reigning princes in the same order.

FREDERICK I. (c. 1123-1190), Roman emperor, surnamed "Barbarossa" by the Italians, was the son of Frederick II. of Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia, and Judith, daughter of Henry IX. the Black, duke of Bavaria. The precise date and place of his birth, together with details of his early life, are wanting; but in 1143 he assisted his maternal uncle, Count Welf VI., in his attempts to conquer Bavaria, and by his conduct in several local feuds earned the reputation of a brave and skilful warrior. When his father died in 1147 Frederick became duke of Swabia, and immediately afterwards accompanied his uncle, the German king Conrad III., on his disastrous crusade, during which he greatly distinguished himself and won the complete confidence of the king. Abandoning the cause of the Welfs, he fought for Conrad against them, and in 1152 the dying king advised the princes to choose Frederick as his successor to the exclusion of his own young son. Energetically pressing his candidature, he' was chosen German king at Frankfort on the 4th or 5th of March 1152, and crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle on the 9th of the same month, owing his election partly to his personal qualities, and partly to the fact that he united in himself the blood of the rival famílies of Welf and Waiblingen.

The new king was anxious to restore the Empire to the position it had occupied under Charlemagne and Otto the Great, and saw clearly that the restoration of order in Germany was a necessary preliminary to the enforcement of the imperial rights in Italy. Issuing a general order for peace, he was prodigal in his concessions to the nobles. Count Welf was made duke of Spoleto and margrave of Tuscany; Berthold VI., duke of Zähringen, was entrusted with extensive rights in Burgundy; and the king's nephew, Frederick, received the duchy of Swabia. Abroad Frederick decided a quarrel for the Danish throne in favour of Svend, or Peter as he is sometimes called, who did homage for his kingdom, and negotiations were begun with the East Roman emperor, Manuel Comnenus. It was probably about this time that the king obtained a divorce from his wife Adela, daughter of Dietpold, margrave of Vohburg and Cham, on the ground of consanguinity, and made a vain effort to obtain a bride from the court of Constantinople. On his accession Frederick had communicated the news of his election to Pope Eugenius III., but neglected to ask for the papal confirmation. In spite of this omission, however, and of some trouble arising from a double election to the archbishopric of Magdeburg, a treaty was concluded between king and pope at Constance in March 1153, by which Frederick promised in return for his coronation to make no peace with Roger I. king of Sicily, or with the rebellious Romans, without the consent of Eugenius, and generally to help and defend the papacy.

On the 9th of June 1156 the king was married at Würzburg to Beatrix, daughter and heiress of the dead count of Upper Burgundy, Renaud III., when Upper Burgundy or Franche Comté, as it is sometimes called, was added to his possessions. An expedition into Poland reduced Duke Boleslaus IV. to an abject submission, after which Frederick received the homage of the Burgundian nobles at a diet held at Besançon in October 1157, which was marked by a quarrel between pope and emperor. A Swedish archbishop, returning from Rome, had been seized by robbers, and as Frederick had not punished the offenders Adrian sent two legates to remonstrate. The papal letter when translated referred to the imperial crown as a benefice conferred by the pope, and its reading aroused great indignation. The emperor had to protect the legates from the fury of the nobles; and afterwards issued a manifesto to his subjects declaring that he held the Empire from God alone, to which Adrian replied that he had used the ambiguous word beneficia as meaning benefits, and not in its feudal sense.

In June 1158 Frederick set out upon his second Italian expedition, which was signalized by the establishment of imperial officers called podestas in the cities of northern Italy, the revolt and capture of Milan, and the beginning of the long struggle with pope Alexander III., who excommunicated the emperor on the 2nd of March 1160. During this visit Frederick summoned the doctors of Bologna to the diet held near Roncaglia in November 1158, and as a result of their inquiries into the rights belonging to the kingdom of Italy he obtained a large amount of wealth. Returning to Germany towards the close of 1162, Frederick prevented a conflict between Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, and a number of neighbouring princes, and severely punished the citizens of Mainz for their rebellion against Archbishop Arnold. A further visit to Italy in 1163 saw his plans for the conquest of Sicily checked by the formation of a powerful league against him, brought together mainly by the exactions of the podestas and the enforcement of the rights declared by the doctors of Bologna. Frederick had supported an anti-pope Victor IV. against Alexander, and on Victor's death in 1163 a new antipope called Paschal III. was chosen to succeed him. Having tried in vain to secure the general recognition of Victor and Paschal in Europe, the emperor held a diet at Würzburg in May 1165; and by taking an oath, followed by many of the clergy and nobles, to remain true to Paschal and his successors, brought about a schism in the German church. A temporary alliance with Henry II., king of England, the magnificent celebration of the canonization of Charlemagne at Aix-la-Chapelle, and the restoration of peace in the Rhineland, occupied Frederick's attention until October 1166, when he made his fourth journey to Italy. Having captured Ancona, he marched to Rome, stormed the Leonine city, and procured the enthronement of Paschal, and the coronation of his wife Beatrix; but his victorious career was stopped by the sudden outbreak of a pestilence which destroyed the German army and drove the emperor as a fugitive to Germany, where he remained for the ensuing six years. Henry the Lion was again saved from a threatening combination; conflicting claims to various bishoprics were decided; and the

Hungary. Friendly relations were entered into with the emperor Manuel, and attempts made to come to a better understanding with Henry II., king of England, and Louis VII., king of France.

The journey to Italy made by the king in 1154 was the pre-imperial authority was asserted over Bohemia, Poland and cursor of five other expeditions which engaged his main energies for thirty years, during which the subjugation of the peninsula | was the central and abiding aim of his policy. Meeting the new pope, Adrian IV., near Nepi, Frederick at first refused to hold his stirrup; but after some negotiations he consented and received the kiss of peace, which was followed by his coronation | as emperor at Rome on the 18th of June 1155. As his slender forces were inadequate to encounter the fierce hostility which he aroused, he left Italy in the autumn of 1155 to prepare for a new and more formidable campaign. Disorder was again rampant in Germany, especially in Bavaria, but general peace was restored by Frederick's vigorous measures. Bavaria was transferred from Henry II. Jasomirgott, margrave of Austria, to Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony; and the former was pacified by the erection of his margraviate into a duchy,, while Frederick's

In 1174, when Frederick made his fifth expedition to Italy, the Lombard league had been formed, and the fortress of Alessandria raised to check his progress. The campaign was a complete failure. The refusal of Henry the Lion to bring help into Italy was followed by the defeat of the emperor at Legnano on the 29th of May 1176, when he was wounded and believed to be dead. Reaching Pavia, he began negotiations for peace with Alexander, which ripened into the treaty of Venice in August 1177, and at the same time a truce with the Lombard league was arranged for six years. Frederick, loosed from the papal ban, recognized Alexander as the rightful pope, and in July 1177 knelt before him and kissed his feet. The possession of the vast

estates left by Matilda, marchioness of Tuscany, and claimed by both pope and emperor, was to be decided by arbitration, and in October 1178 the emperor was again in Germany. Various small feuds were suppressed; Henry the Lion was deprived of his duchy, which was dismembered, and sent into exile; a treaty was made with the Lombard league at Constance in June 1183; and most important of all, Frederick's son Henry was betrothed in 1184 to Constance, daughter of Roger I., king of Sicily, and aunt and heiress of the reigning king, William II. This betrothal, which threatened to unite Sicily with the Empire, made it difficult for Frederick, when during his last Italian expedition in 1184 he met Pope Lucius III. at Verona, to establish friendly relations with the papacy. Further causes of trouble arose, moreover, and when the potentates separated the question of Matilda's estates was undecided; and Lucius had refused to crown Henry or to recognize the German clergy who had been ordained during the schism. Frederick then formed an alliance with Milan, where the citizens witnessed a great festival on the 27th of January 1186. The emperor, who had been crowned king of Burgundy, or Arles, at Arles on the 30th of July 1178, had this ceremony repeated; while his son Henry was crowned king of Italy and married to Constance, who was crowned queen of Germany.

The quarrel with the papacy was continued with the new pope Urban III., and open warfare was begun. But Frederick was soon recalled to Germany by the news of a revolt raised by Philip of Heinsberg, archbishop of Cologne, in alliance with the pope. The German clergy remained loyal to the emperor, and hostilities were checked by the death of Urban and the election of a new pope as Gregory VIII., who adopted a more friendly policy towards the emperor. In 1188 Philip submitted, and immediately afterwards Frederick took the cross in order to stop the victorious career of Saladin, who had just taken Jerusalem. After extensive preparations he left Regensburg in May 1189 at the head of a splendid army, and having overcome the hostility of the East Roman emperor Isaac Angelus, marched into Asia Minor." On the 10th of June 1190 Frederick was either bathing or crossing the river Calycadnus (Geuksu), near Seleucia (Selefke) in Cilicia, when he was carried away by the stream and drowned. The place of his burial is unknown, and the legend which says he still sits in a cavern in the Kyffhäuser mountain in Thuringia waiting until the need of his country shall call him, is now thought to refer, at least in its earlier form, to his grandson, the emperor Frederick II. He left by his wife, Beatrix, five sons, of whom the eldest afterwards became emperor as Henry VI.

Frederick's reign, on the whole, was a happy and prosperous time for Germany. He encouraged the growth of towns, easily suppressed the few risings against his authority, and took strong and successful measures to establish order. Even after the severe reverses which he experienced in Italy, his position in Germany was never seriously weakened; and in 1181, when, almost without striking a blow, he deprived Henry the Lion of his duchy, he seemed stronger than ever. This power rested upon his earnest and commanding personality, and also upon the support which he received from the German church, the possession of a valuable private domain, and the care with which he exacted feudal dues from his dependents.

Frederick I. is said to have taken Charlemagne as his model; but the contest in which he engaged was entirely different both in character and results from that in which his great predecessor achieved such a wonderful temporary success. Though Frederick failed to subdue the republics, the failure can scarcely be said to reflect either on his prudence as a statesman or his skill as a general, for his ascendancy was finally overthrown rather by the ravages of pestilence than by the might of human arms. In Germany his resolute will and sagacious administration subdued or disarmed all discontent, and he not only succeeded in welding the various rival interests into a unity of devotion to himself against which papal intrigues were comparatively powerless, but won for the empire a prestige such as it had not possessed since the time of Otto the Great. The wide contrast between his German and Italian rule is strikingly exemplified in the fact that,

while he endeavoured to overthrow the republics in Italy, he held in check the power of the nobles in Germany, by conferring municipal franchises and independent rights on the principal cities. Even in Italy, though his general course of action was warped by wrong prepossessions, he in many instances manifested exceptional practical sagacity in dealing with immediate difficulties and emergencies. Possessing frank and open manners, untiring and unresting energy, and a prowess which found its native clement in difficulty and danger, he seemed the embodi ment of the chivalrous and warlike spirit of his age, and was the model of all the qualities which then won highest admiration. Stern and ambitious he certainly was, but his aims can scarcely be said to have exceeded his prerogatives as emperor; and though he had sometimes recourse when in straits to expedients almost diabolically ingenious in their cruelty, yet his general conduct was marked by a clemency which in that age was exceptional. His quarrel with the papacy was an inherited conflict, not reflecting at all on his religious faith, but the inevitable consequence of inconsistent theories of government, which had been created and could be dissipated only by a long series of events. His interference in the quarrels of the republics was not only quite justifiable from the relation in which he stood to them, but seemed absolutely necessary. From the beginning, however, he treated the Italians, as indeed was only natural, less as rebellious subjects than as conquered aliens; and it must be admitted that in regard to them the only effective portion of his procedure was, not his energetic measures of repression nor his brilliant victories, but, after the battle of Legnano, his quiet and cheerful acceptance of the inevitable, and the consequent complete change in his policy, by which if he did not obtain the great object of his ambition, he at least did much to render innoxious for the Empire his previous mistakes.

In appearance Frederick was a man of well-proportioned, medium stature, with flowing yellow hair and a reddish beard. He delighted in hunting and the reading of history, was zealous in his attention to public business, and his private life was unimpeachable. Carlyle's tribute to him is interesting: "No king so furnished out with apparatus and arena, with personal faculty to rule and scene to do it in, has appeared elsewhere. A magnificent, magnanimous man; holding the reins of the world, not quite in the imaginary sense; scourging anarchy down, and urging noble effort up, really on a grand scale. A terror to evildoers and a praise to well-doers in this world, probably beyond what was ever seen since."

The principal contemporary authority for the earlier part of the reign of Frederick is the Gesta Friderici imperatoris, mainly the work of Otto, bishop of Freising. This is continued from 1156 to 1160 by Rahewin, a canon of Freising, and from 1160 to 1170 by an anony mous author. The various annals and chronicles of the period, among which may be mentioned the Chronica regia Coloniensis and the Annales Magdeburgenses, are also important. Other authorities for the different periods in Frederick's reign are Tageno of Passau, Descriptio expeditionis asiaticae Friderici I.; Burchard, Historia Friderici imperatoris magni; Godfrey of Viterbo, Carmen de gestis Friderici I., which are all found in the Monumenta Germaniae historica. Scriptores (Hanover and Berlin, 1826-1892); Otto Morena of Lodi, Historia rerum Laudensium, continued by his son, Acerbus, also in the Monumenta; Ansbert, Historia de expeditione Friderici, 1187-1196, published in the Fontes rerum Austriacarum. Scriptores (Vienna, 1855 fol.). Many valuable documents are found in the Monumenta Germaniae selecta, Band iv., edited by M. Doeberl (Munich, 1889-1890).

im Zeitalter der Hohenstaufen (Berlin, 1893); W. von Giesebrecht, The best modern authorities are J. Jastrow, Deutsche Geschichte Geschichte der deutschen Kaiserzeit, Band iv. (Brunswick, 1877): H. von Bünau, Leben und Thaten Friedrichs I. (Leipzig, 1872); H. Prutz, Kaiser Friedrich I. (Dantzig, 1871-1874); C. Peters, Die Wahl Kaiser Friedrichs I. in the Forschungen zur deutschen Geschichte, Band xx. (Göttingen, 1862-1886); W. Gundlach, Barbarossalieder (Innsbruck, 1899). For a complete bibliography see DahlmannWaitz, Quellenkunde der deutschen Geschichte (Göttingen, 1894), and U. Chevalier, Répertoire des sources historiques du moyen âge, tome iii. (Paris, 1904).

FREDERICK II. (1194-1250), Roman emperor, king of Sicily and Jerusalem, was the son of the emperor Henry VI. and Constance, daughter of Roger I., king of Sicily, and therefore grandson of the emperor Frederick I. and a member of the Hohenstaufen

family. Born at Jesi near Ancona on the 26th of December | 1194, he was baptized by the name of Frederick Roger, chosen German king at Frankfort in 1196, and after his father's death crowned king of Sicily at Palermo on the 17th of May 1198. His mother, who assumed the government, died in November 1198, leaving Pope Innocent III. as regent of Sicily and guardian of her son. The young king passed his early years amid the terrible anarchy in his island kingdom, which Innocent was powerless to check; but his education was not neglected, and his character and habits were formed by contact with men of varied nationalities and interests, while the darker traits of his nature were developed in the atmosphere of lawlessness in which he lived. In 1208 he was declared of age, and soon afterwards Innocent arranged a marriage, which was celebrated the following year, between him and Constance, daughter of Alphonso II. king of Aragon, and widow of Emerich or Imre, king of Hungary. The dissatisfaction felt in Germany with the emperor Otto IV. came to a climax in September 1211, when a number of influential princes met at Nuremberg, declared Otto deposed, and invited Frederick to come and occupy the vacant throne. In spite of the reluctance of his wife, and the opposition of the Sicilian nobles, he accepted the invitation; and having recognized the papal supremacy over Sicily, and procured the coronation of his son Henry as its king, reached Germany after an adventurous journey in the autumn of 1212. This step was taken with the approval of the pope, who was anxious to strike a blow at Otto IV.

Frederick was welcomed in Swabia, and the renown of the Hohenstaufen name and a liberal distribution of promises made his progress easy. Having arranged a treaty against Otto with Louis, son of Philip Augustus, king of France, whom he met at Vaucouleurs, he was chosen German king a second time at Frankfort on the 5th of December 1212, and crowned four days later at Mainz. Anxious to retain the support of the pope, Frederick promulgated a bull at Eger on the 12th of July 1213, by which he renounced all lands claimed by the pope since the death of the emperor Henry VI in 1197, gave up the right of spoils and all interference in episcopal elections, and acknowledged the right of appeal to Rome. He again affirmed the papal supremacy over Sicily, and promised to root out heresy in Germany. The victory of his French allies at Bouvines on the 27th of July 1214 greatly strengthened his position, and a large part of the Rhineland having fallen into his power, he was crowned German king at Aix-la-Chapelle on the 25th of July 1215. His cause continued to prosper, fresh supporters gathered round his standard, and in May 1218 the death of Otto freed him from his rival and left him undisputed ruler of Germany, A further attempt to allay the pope's apprehension lest Sicily should be united with the Empire had been made early in 1216, when Frederick, in a letter to Innocent, promised after his own coronation as emperor to recognize his son Henry as king of Sicily, and to place him under the suzerainty of Rome. Henry nevertheless was brought to Germany and chosen German king at Frankfort in April 1220, though Frederick assured the new pope, Honorius III., that this step had been taken without his consent. The truth, however, seems to be that he had taken great trouble to secure this election, and for the purpose had won the support of the spiritual princes by extensive concessions. In August 1220 Frederick set out for Italy, and was crowned emperor at Rome on the 22nd of November 1220, after which he repeated the undertaking he had entered into at Aix-la-Chapelle in 1215 to go on crusade, and made lavish promises to the Church. The clergy were freed from taxation and from lay jurisdiction, the ban of the Empire was to follow the ban of the Church, and heretics were to be severely punished. Neglecting his promise to lead a crusade, Frederick was occupied until 1225 in restoring order in Sicily. The island was seething with disorder, but by stern and sometimes cruel measures the emperor suppressed the anarchy of the barons, curbed the power of the cities, and subdued the rebellious Saracens, many of whom, transferred to the mainland and settled at Nocera, afterwards rendered him valuable military service. Meanwhile the crusade was postponed again and again; until under a threat of excommunication, after the fall of

Damietta in 1221, Frederick definitely undertook by a treaty made at San Germano in 1225 to set out in August 1227 or to submit to this penalty. His own interests turned more strongly to the East, when on the 9th of November 1225, after having been a widower since 1222, he married Iolande (Yolande or Isabella), daughter of John, count of Brienne, titular king of Jerusalem. John appears to have expected that this alliance would restore him to his kingdom, but his hopes were dashed to the ground when Frederick himself assumed the title of king of Jerusalem. The emperor's next step was an attempt to restore the imperial authority in northern Italy, and for the purpose a diet was called at Cremona. But the cities, watchful and suspicious, renewed the Lombard league and took up a hostile attitude. Frederick's reply was to annul the treaty of Constance and place the cities under the imperial ban; but he was forced by lack of military strength to accept the mediation of Pope Honorius and the maintenance of the status quo.

After these events, which occurred early in 1227, preparations for the crusade were pressed on, and the emperor sailed from Brindisi on the 8th of September. A pestilence, however, which attacked his forces compelled him to land in Italy three days later, and on the 29th of the same month he was excommunicated by the new pope, Gregory IX. The greater part of the succeeding year was spent by pope and emperor in a violent quarrel. Alarmed at the increase in his opponent's power, Gregory denounced him in a public letter, to which Frederick replied in a clever document addressed to the princes of Europe. The reading of this manifesto, drawing attention to the absolute power claimed by the popes, was received in Rome with such evidences of approval that Gregory was compelled to fly to Viterbo. Having lost his wife Isabella on the 8th of May 1228, Frederick again set sail for Palestine; where he met with considerable success, the result of diplomatic rather than of military skill. By a treaty made in February 1229 he secured possession of Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth and the surrounding neighbourhood. Entering Jerusalem, he crowned himself king of that city on the 18th of March 1229. These successes had been won in spite of the hostility of Gregory, which deprived Frederick of the assist. ance of many members of the military orders and of the clergy of Palestine. But although the emperor's possessions on the Italian mainland had been attacked in his absence by the papal troops and their allies, Gregory's efforts had failed to arouse serious opposition in Germany and Sicily; so that when Frederick returned unexpectedly to Italy in June 1229 he had no difficulty in driving back his enemies, and compelling the pope to sue for peace. The result was the treaty of San Germano, arranged in July 1230, by which the emperor, loosed from the ban, promised to respect the papal territory, and to allow freedom of election and other privileges to the Sicilian clergy. Frederick was next engaged in completing the pacification of Sicily. In 1231 a series of laws were published at Melfi which destroyed the ascendancy of the feudal nobles. Royal officials were appointed for administrative purposes, large estates were recovered for the crown, and fortresses were destroyed, while the church was placed under the royal jurisdiction and all gifts to it were prohibited. At the same time certain privileges of self-government were granted to the towns, representatives from which were summoned to sit in the diet. In short, by means of a centralized system of government, the king established an almost absolute monarchical power.

In Germany, on the other hand, an entirely different policy was pursued. The concessions granted by Frederick in 1220, together with the Privilege of Worms, dated the 1st of May 1231, made the German princes virtually independent. All jurisdiction over their lands was vested in them, no new mints or toll-centres were to be erected on their domains, and the imperial authority was restricted to a small and dwindling area. A fierce attack was also made on the rights of the cities. Compelled to restore all their lands, their jurisdiction was bounded by their city-walls; they were forbidden to receive the dependents of the princes; all trade gilds were declared abolished; and all official appointments made without the consent of the archbishop or bishop were

FREDERICK II.

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annulled. A further attack on the Lombard cities at the diet of partisans, Sinibaldo Fiesco, was chosen pope, and took the name Ravenna in 1231 was answered by a renewal of their league, and of Innocent IV. Negotiations for peace were begun, but the was soon connected with unrest in Germany. About 1231 a breach took place between Frederick and his elder son Henry, adjusted, and when the emperor began again to ravage the relations of the Lombard cities to the Empire could not be who appears to have opposed the Privilege of Worms and to have papal territories Innocent fled to Lyons. Hither he summoned a favoured the towns against the princes. After refusing to travel general council, which met in June 1245; but although Frederick to Italy, Henry changed his mind and submitted to his father at Aquileia in 1232; and, a temporary peace was made with the expressed his willingness to treat, sentence of excommunication sent his justiciar, Thaddeus of Suessa, to represent him, and Lombard cities in June 1233. But on his return to Germany and deposition was pronounced against him. Once more an Henry again raised the standard of revolt, and made a league interchange of recriminations began, charged with all the violent with the Lombards in December 1234. Frederick, meanwhile, hyperbole characteristic of the controversial style of the age. having helped Pope Gregory against the rebellious Romans and Accused of violating treaties, breaking oaths, persecuting the having secured the friendship of France and England, appeared church and abetting heresy, Frederick replied by an open letter in Germany early in 1235 and put down this rising without rebutting these charges, and in equally unmeasured terms difficulty. Henry was imprisoned, but his associates were treated denounced the arrogance and want of faith of the clergy from leniently. In August 1235 a splendid diet was held at Mainz, the pope downwards. The source of all the evil was, he declared, during which the marriage of the emperor with Isabella (1214- the excessive wealth of the church, which, in retaliation for the 1241), daughter of John, king of England, was celebrated. A sentence of excommunication, he threatened to confiscate. In general peace (Landfrieden), which became the basis of all such vain the mediation of the saintly king of France, Louis IX., was peaces in the future, was sworn to; a new office, that of imperial invoked. Innocent surpassed his predecessors in the ferocity and justiciar, was created, and a permanent judicial record was first unscrupulousness of his attacks on the emperor (see INNOCENT instituted. Otto of Brunswick, grandson of Henry the Lion, IV.). War soon became general in Germany and Italy. duke of Saxony, was made duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg; and Henry Raspe, landgrave of Thuringia, was chosen German war was declared against the Lombards. his successor, William II., count of Holland, was successful in king in opposition to Frederick in May 1246, but neither he nor driving the Hohenstaufen from Germany. In Italy, during the emperor's absence, his cause had been upheld. by Enzio and by the ferocious Eccelino da Romano. In 1246 a formidable conspiracy of the discontented Apulian barons against the emperor's power and life, fomented by papal emissaries, was discovered and crushed with ruthless cruelty. The emperor's power seemed more firmly established than ever, when suddenly the news reached him that Parma, a stronghold of the imperial authority in the north, had been surprised, while the garrison was off its guard, by the Guelphs. To recover the city was a matter of prime importance, and in 1247 Frederick concentrated his forces round it, building over against it a wooden town which, in anticipation of the success that astrologers had predicted, he named Vittoria. The siege, however, was protracted, and finally, in February 1248, during the absence of the emperor on a hunting expedition, was brought to an end by a sudden sortie of the men of Parma, who stormed the imperial camp. The disaster was complete. The emperor's forces were destroyed or scattered; harem and some of the most trusted of his ministers, fell into the the treasury, with the imperial insignia, together with Frederick's hands of the victors. Thaddeus of Suessa was hacked to pieces by the mob; the imperial crown was placed in mockery on the head of a hunch-backed beggar, who was carried back in triumph into the city.

Frederick was now at the height of his power. His second son, Conrad, was invested with the duchy of Swabia, and the claim of Wenceslaus, king of Bohemia, to some lands which had belonged to the German king Philip was bought off. The attitude of Frederick II. (the Quarrelsome), duke of Austria, had been considered by the emperor so suspicious that during a visit paid by Frederick to Italy a war against him was begun. Compelled to return by the ill-fortune which attended this campaign, the emperor took command of his troops, seized Austria, Styria and Carinthia, and declared these territories to be immediately dependent on the Empire. In January 1237 he secured the election of his son Conrad as German king at Vienna; and in September went to Italy to prosecute the war which had broken out with the Lombards in the preceding year. Pope Gregory attempted to mediate, but the cities refused to accept the insulting terms offered by Frederick. The emperor gained a great victory over their forces at Cortenuova in November 1237; but though he met with some further successes, his failure to take Brescia in October 1238, together with the changed attitude of Gregory, turned the fortune of war. alarmed when the emperor brought about a marriage between the The pope had become heiress of Sardinia, Adelasia, and his natural son Enzio, who afterwards assumed the title of king of Sardinia. But as his warnings had been disregarded, he issued a document after the emperor's retreat from Brescia, teeming with complaints against Frederick, and followed it up by an open alliance with the Lombards, and by the excommunication of the emperor on the 20th of March 1239. A violent war of words ensued. Frederick, accused of heresy, blasphemy and other crimes, called upon all kings and princes to unite against the pope, who on his side made vigorous efforts to arouse opposition in Germany, where his emissaries, a crowd of wandering friars, were actively preaching rebellion. It was, however, impossible to find an anti-king. In Italy, Spoleto and Ancona were declared part of the imperial | dominions, and Rome itself, faithful on this occasion to the pope, was threatened. A number of ecclesiastics proceeding to a council called by Gregory were captured by Enzio at the seafight of Meloria, and the emperor was about to undertake the siege of Rome, when the pope died (August 1241). Germany was at this time menaced by the Mongols; but Frederick contented himself with issuing directions for a campaign against them, until in 1242 he was able to pay a short visit to Germany, where he gained some support from the towns by grants of extensive privileges.

The successor of Gregory was Pope Celestine IX. But this pontiff died soon after his election; and after a delay of eighteen months, during which Frederick marched against Rome on two occasions and devastated the lands of his opponents, one of his

while with success. But his old confidence had left him; he had Frederick struggled hard to retrieve his fortunes, and for a grown moody and suspicious, and his temper gave a ready handle to his enemies. Pier della Vigna, accused of treasonable designs, blinded now and in rags, was dragged in the emperor's train, as a was disgraced; and the once all-powerful favourite and minister, warning to traitors, till in despair he dashed out his brains. Then, in May 1248, came the tidings of Enzio's capture by the Bolognese, and of his hopeless imprisonment, the captors refusing all offers of ransom. This disaster to his favourite son broke the emperor's spirit. He retired to southern Italy, and after a short illness died at Fiorentino on the 13th of December 1250, after having been loosed from the ban by the archbishop of Palermo. tomb may still be seen. By his will he appointed his son Conrad He was buried in the cathedral of that city, where his splendid to succeed him in Germany and Sicily, and Henry, his son by Isabella of England, to be king of Jerusalem or Arles, neither of which kingdoms, however, he obtained. Frederick left several Frederick, who was made the imperial vicar in Tuscany; and illegitimate children: Manfred, his son by the beloved Bianca Lancia or Lanzia, who Enzio has already been referred to; by his will prince of Tarento and regent of Sicily. was legitimatized just before his father's death, and was appointed

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und des Königreichs Sicilien, edited by E. Winkelmann (Innsbruck,
1880); Epistolae saeculi XIII. selecta e regestis pontificum Romano-
rum, edited by C. Rodenberg, tome i. (Berlin, 1883); P. Pressutti,
gestori papae 117. (Rome, 1888); L. Auvray, Les Registres de
IX (Paris,
The best modern authorities are W. von Giesebrecht, Geschichte
der deutschen Kaiserzeit, Band v. (Leipzig, 1888); J. Jastrow,
Deutsche Geschichte im Zeitalter der Hohenstaufen (Berlin, 1893):
1865); Beiträge zur Geschichte Kaiser Friedrichs II." in the For-b
F. W. Schirrmacher, Kaiser Friedrich der Zweite (Göttingen, 1859-
schungen zur deutschen Geschichie, Band xi. (Göttingen, 1862-1886),
and Die letzten Hohenstaufen (Göttingen, 1871); E. Winkelmann,
Geschichte Kaiser Friedrichs II und seiner Reiche (Berlin, 1865) and
Kaiser Friedrich II. (Leipzig, 1889); G. Blondel, Etude sur la
politique de l'empereur Frédéric II. en Allemagne (Paris, 1892);
M. Halbe, Friedrich II. und der päpstliche Stuhl (Berlin, 1888);
R. Röhricht, Die Kreuzfahrt des Kaisers Friedrich II. (Berlin, 1874);
C. Köhler, Das Verhältnis Kaiser Friedrichs II. zu den Päpsten
seiner Zeit (Breslau, 1888); J. Felten, Papst Gregor IX. (Freiburg,
1886); C. Rodenberg, Innocenz IV. und das Königreich Sicilien
(Halle, 1892); K. Lamprecht, Deutsche Geschichte, Band iii. (Berlin,
1891); M. Huillard-Bréholles, Vie et correspondance de Pierre de la
Vigne (Paris, 1865); A. del Vecchio, La legislazione de Federico II
(Turin, 1874); and K. Hampe, Kaiser Friedrich II. (Munich,
1899). to 2bine to bas lood aut odber o(A. W. H.) bas
FREDERICK III. (1415-1493),
5-1493), Roman empero
emperor,-as Frederick
IV., German king, and as Frederick V., archduke of Austria,-
son of Ernest of Habsburg, duke of Styria and Carinthia, was born
at Innsbruck on the 21st of September 1415. After his father's
death in 1424 he passed his time at the court of his uncle and
guardian, Frederick IV., count of Tirol. In 1435, together with
his brother, Albert the Prodigal, he undertook the government
of Styria and Carinthia, but the peace of these lands was disturbed
by constant feuds between the brothers, which lasted until,
Albert's death in 1463. In 1439 the deaths of the German
king Albert II. and of Frederick of Tirol left Frederick the
senior member of the Habsburg family, and guardian of Sigis-
mund, count of Tirol. In the following year he also became
guardian of Ladislaus, the posthumous son of Albert II., and heir
to Bohemia, Hungary and Austria, but these responsibilities
brought only trouble and humiliation in their train. On the 2nd
of February 1440 Frederick was chosen German king at Frankfort,
but, owing to his absence from Germany, the coronation was
delayed until the 17th of June 1442, when it took place at Aix-la-
Chapelle.
do

The character of Frederick is one of extraordinary interest and
versatility, and contemporary opinion is expressed in the words
stupor mundi et immutator mirabilis. Licentious and luxurious in
his manners, cultured and catholic in his tastes, he united in his
person the most diverse qualities. His Sicilian court was a centre
of intellectual activity. Michael Scott, the translator of some
treatises of Aristotle and of the commentaries of Averroes,
Leonard of Pisa, who introduced Arabic numerals and algebra to
the West, and other scholars, Jewish and Mahommedan as well as
Christian, were welcome at his court. Frederick himself had a
knowledge of six languages, was acquainted with mathematics,
philosophy and natural history, and took an interest in medicine
and architecture. In 1224 he founded the university of Naples,
and he was a liberal patron of the medical school at Salerno.
He formed a menagerie of strange animals, and wrote a treatise
on falconry (De arte venandi cum avibus) which is remarkable for
its accurate observation of the habits of birds. It was at his
court, too, that as Dante points out-Italian poetry had its
birth. Pier della Vigna there wrote the first sonnet, and Italian
lyrics by Frederick himself are preserved to us. His wives were
kept secluded in oriental fashion; a harem was maintained at
Lucera, and eunuchs were a prominent feature of his household.
His religious ideas have been the subject of much controversy.
The theory of M. Huillard-Bréholles that he wished to unite to the
functions of emperor those of a spiritual pontiff, and aspired to be
the founder of a new religion, is insufficiently supported by
evidence to be credible. Although at times he persecuted
heretics with great cruelty, he tolerated Mahommedans and Jews,
and both acts appear rather to have been the outcome of political
considerations than of religious belief. His jests, which were used
by his enemies as a charge against him, seem to have originated
in religious indifference, or perhaps in a spirit of inquiry which
anticipated the ideas of a later age. Frederick's rule in Germany
and Italy was a failure, but this fact may be accounted for by the
conditions of the time and the inevitable conflict with the papacy.
In Germany the enactments of 1220 and 1231 contributed to the
disintegration of the Empire and the fall of the Hohenstaufen,
while conflicting interests made the government of Italy a problem
of exceptional difficulty. In Sicily Frederick was more successful.
He quelled disorder, and under his rule the island was prosperous
and contented. His ideas of government were those of an
absolute monarch, and he probably wished to surround himself
with some of the pomp which had encircled the older emperors of
Rome. His chief claim to fame, perhaps, is as a lawgiver. The Disregarding the neutral attitude of the German electors
code of laws which he gave to Sicily in 1231 bears the impress of towards the papal schism, and acting under the influence of
his personality, and has been described as " the fullest and most Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini, afterwards Pope Pius II., Frederick
adequate body of legislation promulgated by any western ruler in 1445 made a secret treaty with Pope Eugenius IV. This
since Charlemagne." Without being a great soldier, Frederick developed into the Concordat of Vienna, signed in 1448 with the
was not unskilful in warfare, but was better acquainted with the succeeding pope, Nicholas V., by which the king, in return for a
arts of diplomacy. In person he is said to have been "red, bald sum of money and a promise of the imperial crown, pledged the
and short-sighted," but with good features and a pleasing obedience of the German people to Rome, and so checked for a
countenance. It was seriously believed in Germany for about a time the rising tide of liberty in the German church. Taking up
century after his death that Frederick was still alive, and many the quarrel between the Habsburgs and the Swiss cantons,
impostors attempted to personate him. A legend, afterwards. Frederick invited the Armagnacs to attack his enemies, but
transferred to Frederick Barbarossa, told how he sat in a cavern after meeting with a stubborn resistance at St Jacob on the 26th
in the Kyffhäusser before a stone table through which his beard of August 1444, these allies proved faithless, and the king soon
had grown, waiting for the time for him to awake and restore to lost every vestige of authority in Switzerland. In 1451 Frederick,
the Empire the golden age of peace.
bungǝbai sdi nodw
disregarding the revolts in Austria and Hungary, travelled to
The contemporary documents relating to the reign of Frederick II. Rome, where, on the 16th of March 1452, his marriage with
are very numerous. Among the most important are: Richard of Leonora, daughter of Edward, king of Portugal, was celebrated,
San Germano, Chronica regni Siciliae; Annales Placentini, Gibellini; and three days later he was crowned emperor by pope Nicholas.
Albert of Stade, Annales; Matthew Paris, Historia major Angliae; On his return he found Germany seething with indignation.
Burchard, Chronicon Urspergense. All these are in the Monumenta
Germaniac historica. Scriptores (Hanover and Berlin, 1826-1892). His capitulation to the pope was not forgotten; his refusal to
The Rerum Italicarum scriptores, edited by L. A. Muratori (Milan, attend the diets, and his apathy in the face of Turkish aggressions,
1723-1751), contains Annales Mediolanenses; Nicholas of Jamsilla, constituted a serious danger; and plans for his deposition failed
Historia de rebus gestis Friderici II., and Vila Gregorii IX. pontificis. only because the electors could not unite upon a rival king. In
There are also the Epistolarum libri of Peter della Vigna, edited
by J. R. Iselin (Basel, 1740); and Salimbene of Parma's Chronik, 1457 Ladislaus, king of Hungary and Bohemia, and archduke of
published at Parma (1857). Many of the documents concerning Austria, died; Frederick failed to secure either kingdom, but
the history of the time are found in the Historia diplomatica Friderici obtained lower Austria, from which, however, he was soon driven
II., edited by M. Huillard-Bréholles (Paris, 1852-1861); Acta by his brother Albert, who occupied Vienna. On Albert's death
First printed at Augsburg in 1596; a German edition was pub-in 1463 the emperor united upper and lower Austria under his
lished at Berlin in 1896.
rule, but these possessions were constantly ravaged by George

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