Battle of Ponza | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of Aragonese conquest of Naples | |||||||
The surrender of Alfonso | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Duchy of Milan Republic of Genoa [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] | Crown of Aragon [2] [4] [5] [7] | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Filippo Visconti Biagio Assereto Jacopo Giustiniani [3] [4] [7] [8] [9] | Alfonso V of Aragon King of Aragon (POW) John II of Aragon King of Navarre (POW) Henry of Aragon Prince Infante (POW) [2] [3] [5] [9] [10] | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Genoese fleet: 3 galleys 13 vessels 2,400 soldiers [10] [11] [12] | Aragonese fleet: 11 galleys 14 vessels 6,000 soldiers [10] [11] [12] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
90 killed [8] | 600 killed [8] ~100 Aragonese nobles captured [1] [10] 13 vessels lost [3] [4] |
The naval battle of Ponza was fought in early August 1435, when the Duke of Milan dispatched the Genoese navy to relieve the besieged town of Gaeta, [13] which was currently under threat from the King of Aragon. [14]
Joan II, Queen of Naples, died on 2 February 1435, [1] and by her will bestowed Rene d'Anjou with the crown of Naples. [14] However, Alfonso, king of Aragon and Sicily, whom Queen Joan II had primarily adopted, claimed the succession, on the ground of this first adoption. [1] Thus the successionist war between the House of Anjou and the House of Barcelona over the Kingdom of Naples ensued. [12] [13]
At this critical moment Rene d'Anjou was currently imprisoned in the Duchy of Burgundy [15] and Alfonso of Aragon lost no time in stirring up his partisans in the Kingdom of Naples, whilst he himself sailed from Sicily with a large fleet to besiege Gaeta. [14]
Gaeta itself was garrisoned by the Genoese [4] who shortly after Queen Joan's death dispatched Francesco Spinola with 800 infantry. [5] [16] The Duke of Milan (to whom the Republic of Genoa had lately submitted) [1] sided with the House of Anjou [16] and dispatched a Genoese fleet [13] in July under Biagio Assereto in order to relieve Gaeta. [16] Alfonso immediately sailed against the Genoese fleet [12] with superior numbers. [15] The two fleets met near the island of Ponza and after a long and gallant conflict, [15] which lasted for ten hours, [13] the Genoese were completely victorious. [6] The royal galley of Aragon was compelled to strike, [15] and Alfonso V, King of Aragon was captured. [2]
The siege of Gaeta was lifted, [12] and the return of the Genoese fleet was met with a triumphant reception at Genoa. [10] The King and all the noble Aragonese prisoners were then brought to Milan before the Duke, [16] and with this one strike the war seemed already over. [9]
However the King of Aragon managed to persuade the Duke of Milan to his side and against Rene d'Anjou, and was set at liberty with all other prisoners. [1] The Genoese were so utterly exasperated by the Duke's decision [4] that they started to rebel against him, drove out the Milanese garrison and overthrew his rule on 27 December 1435. [1]
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