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Video Summary

Data

Name: Military Campaigns of Ladislaus I

Type: Event

Start: 1409 AD

End: 1414 AD

All Statistics: All Statistics

Icon Military Campaigns of Ladislaus I

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Were the military campaigns of Ladislaus I of Hungary during his reign.

Chronology


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  • January 1411: The weak Neapolitan garrisons left to defend Rome were unable to repel the attack of the allied forces of Florence and Siena and the city was handed over to them in early 1410, followed by other castles in the area including Tivoli.
  • August 1414: Struck by an illness, King Ladislaus I left Rome and returned to Naples, where he died on August 6, 1414 at the age of just 38.
  • November 1413: With a certain ease, King Ladislaus I took possession of the entire State of the Church.
  • July 1412: In June 1412 the pope gave up supporting Louis of Anjou and invested Ladislaus with the Kingdom of Naples. Ladislaus left the territories occupied by his troops in the Papal States.
  • July 1413: In June 1413, King Ladislaus of Naples led his army, commanded by Lucanian mercenary captain Angelo Tartaglia, to sack Rome. The city fell almost effortlessly to the Angevin Kingdom of Naples.
  • January 1409: In 1408 Ladislaus of Hungary besieged Rome. In short, the city was forced to surrender to the sovereign, as other important strongholds such as Perugia would later fall. Before long, the king of Naples had effectively extended his control as far as Umbria.
  • January 1409: Ladislaus of Naples expanded the northern border of the Kingdom of Naples up to the Talamone fortress on the Tyrrhenian Sea, where the State of Presidi would later develop.

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