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Siege of Capua

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Eadmer also gives us an interesting portrait of the Arabs, whose brown tents Anselm found "innumerable." According to Eadmer, many Arabs, impressed by tales of Anselm's holiness, visited his tent for food and other gifts. The biographer goes on to say that the count, whose soldiers the Saracens
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faith. "With what policy—if one can use that word—he did this, is no concern of mine: that is between God and himself." The policy, so inconceivable to Eadmer, is probably explained in this way: by maintaining a third religious and cultural party (other than
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of Sicily, though Roger himself was holding it. Embroiled in such controversy, the pope came down to discuss it with Roger, who released Robert. The pope's presence caused the saintly
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or Greek oppose him, a Latin. It also assured the presence of an "outlet for the military instincts and talents of his Muslim subjects," according to historian
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When the city surrendered, Richard was reinstated, Roger Borsa accepted his homage, and the pope and Roger of Sicily retired to
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Christian) on the island, he assured that he could always have an ally, should either
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were, would not allow them, though many would readily have done so, to convert to the
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until, reaching his majority, he requested the aid of his great uncle, the
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This article is about the siege in 1098. For the 1734 siege during the
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and the latter for Richard's recognition of Apulian suzerainty.
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was a military operation involving the states of medieval
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Roger of Sicily had lately arrested Robert, bishop of
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Index

War of the Polish Succession
Siege of Capua (1734)
list of references
related reading
external links
inline citations
improve
introducing
Learn how and when to remove this message
Capua
southern Italy
Norman
Saracen
Richard II
prince of Capua
Lando IV
count of Sicily
Roger I
duke of Apulia
Roger Borsa
Naples
Troina
Messina
Pope Urban II
legateship
archbishop of Canterbury
Lombard
Anselm of Aosta
William II of England
Eadmer

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