Italy - City-States, Renaissance, Unification | Britannica
Table of Contents
References & Edit History Facts & Stats

The states of Italy in the 15th century

The southern monarchies and the Papal States

In the south, Alfonso V of Aragon (1416–58) used the island kingdom of Sicily mainly as a base for his conquest of Naples. Thereafter Sicily was governed by viceroys who subjected its interests to those of Aragon, which became part of Spain in 1479. Examples of Sicily’s incorporation into the Spanish state were the establishment there of the Inquisition (1487) and its expulsion of the Jews (1492). So too the Kingdom of Naples, conquered by Alfonso between 1435 and 1442, underwent an unpromising development, its peace continually threatened by the rival claims of the Angevin and Aragonese dynasties. On his death in 1458, Alfonso left Naples to his illegitimate son, Ferdinand I (1458–94). Ferdinand maintained his rule only with difficulty, suppressing baronial revolt with an extreme severity that served to further alienate his subjects.

Ferdinand at least was able to retain control until the days of the French invasion (1494). The Papal States, on the other hand, had virtually dissolved at the time of the Great Schism. Southern Emilia, the Romagna, the Marche, and Umbria were given up to numerous signori acting as “papal vicars,” among whom the most celebrated were the Este of Ferrara and the Montefeltro of Urbino. In the cities of Bologna and Perugia, the Bentivoglio and Baglioni families, respectively, retained predominance, though without obtaining the vicariate. The church still ruled some territories directly, notably Ancona and much of southern Umbria, but in Lazio strong baronial families threatened its power—in Rome itself antipapal and republican sentiment still survived. Not until the reign of Pope Alexander VI (1492–1503) did the papacy make a determined attempt to assert authority over the whole state. Until then the popes enjoyed the worst of all worlds, condemned for the deep involvement in secular politics that their position as temporal rulers had thrust upon them while, at the same time, remaining largely powerless to extract obedience from their principal vassals.