Battle of Gamenario

Summary

The Battle of Gamenario, fought on 22 April 1345, was a decisive battle of the wars between the Guelphs (represented by the Angevins) and Ghibellines (Lombard communes). It took place in north-west Italy in what is now part of the commune of Santena about 15 km southeast of Turin.

Battle of Gamenario

The castle of Gamenario in the 19th century
Date22 April 1345
Location
Result

Ghibelline victory[1]

  • Partition of Piedmont
Belligerents
Kingdom of Naples
and Angevin lands
March of Montferrat
(Ghibellines)
Asti
Pavia
Commanders and leaders
Reforce d'Agoult 
Jean de Cimiers
[2][3]
John II of Montferrat
Otto of Brunswick
[2]

In the spring of 1344 Queen Joan I of Naples sent royal seneschal Reforce (Reforza or Rinforzato) d'Agoult to northern Italy in hopes of putting an end to the war with John II, Marquess of Montferrat, who had also obtained the title of governor of the rich commune of Asti (1339) after expelling the Solaro family.[4] The latter had subjugated Mondovì, Cherasco, and Savigliano, ousted the Falletti from Alba, and later moved against Chieri, a stronghold of the Angevine possessions in Piedmont.[5]

Reforza conquered Verzuolo May 1344.[5] In the following year he took Alba and besieged Gamenario, a castle in the neighbourhood of Santena. Lombard Ghibellines formed an anti-Angevin alliance, choosing John II as their leader. On 22 April, he confronted Reforza d'Agoult and battle was joined. The meeting was brief and bloody. Initially uncertain, the outcome was a victory for the Ghibellines, who recovered the besieged fortress and dealt a severe blow to Angevin influence in Piedmont. To celebrate his victory, John built a new church in Asti in honour of Saint George, near whose feast day the battle was won.

In the aftermath, Piedmont was partitioned between the victors. John received Alba, Acqui Terme, Ivrea, and Valenza. Luchino Visconti received Alessandria and the House of Savoy (related to the Palaiologos of Montferrat) received Chieri. The Angevins lost almost complete control of the region and many formerly French cities declared themselves independent.

The defeat of the Angevins was also a defeat for Angevin-supported Manfred V of Saluzzo and the civil war in that margraviate was ended at Gamenario.

References edit

  1. ^ Cox, Eugene L. (1967). The Green Count of Savoy, Amadeus VI and transalpine Savoy in the fourteenth century. Princeton University: Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press.
  2. ^ a b Comba, Rinaldo (2006). Gli Angiò nell'Italia nord-occidentale, 1259-1382. Milan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Istituto storico italiano per il Medio Evo (1908). Rerum italicarum scriptores: Volume 15, Part 3. Roma.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Ferro, Natale. Gli Astesi alla Battaglia di Gamenario (1345)publisher=Il Platano.
  5. ^ a b Cavallari Murat, Augusto (1969). Antologia Monumentale di Chieri. Turin. p. 44.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Sources edit

  • Storia del Monferrato.
  • Giuseppe Cerrato: "In Atti della Società ligure di storia patria" — S. 2, vol. 17 (1885), p. 382–542
  • Studi Piemontesi: VII (1978), 2, pp. 341–51