Marquess of Montferrat VI William

Male Abt 1173 - 1226  (~ 53 years)


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  • Name VI William 
    Title Marquess of Montferrat 
    Born Abt 1173 
    Gender Male 
    Reference Number 37149 
    Died 17 Sep 1226 
    Person ID I37149  Thompson-Milligan
    Last Modified 12 Apr 2018 

    Children 
     1. II Boniface,   b. Jul 1202,   d. 12 Jun 1253  (Age ~ 50 years)  [natural]
    Last Modified 12 Apr 2018 
    Family ID F12306  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Boniface I's eldest son, and his only son by his first wife, Helena del Bosco, William stood originally to inherit all his father's possessions. He participated in diverse campaigns with his father, including the Battle of Montiglio, in which the men of Asti were defeated in 1191. Between 1193 and 1199, he appeared in many of his father's public acts. On 12 June 1199, he was put in charge of Acqui Terme with twenty knights to combat the Alessandrini, and, on 27 October, he was present near Saluggia for the signing of a pact with the commune of Vercelli.

      War with Asti:

      Boniface I joined the Fourth Crusade as a Christian leader in 1203. In accordance with promises made to Asti and Alessandria, he officially abdicated the marquisate to William before he left. Immediately, William turned towards Asti, then protected by Milan. The Astigiani had a history of rebellion and were growing in power. In August, with his father beside him, he formed an alliance with Alba and Alessandria, another rebellious commune, against Asti. His allies proved of little worth as he had to make many concessions to them and was still defeated in the field. In April 1206, he opened negotiations with Asti. The peace treaty was embarrassing for Montferrat, but it was accepted by all three allies. William promised to get his father's ratification, but his father died on Crusade unaware of any peace back home.
      [edit]War against the Ghibellines

      Traditionally, the Aleramici adhered to the Ghibelline faction, which supported the Hohenstaufen and their Italian schemes. William, however, lent his support to Otto of Brunswick, the Guelph claimant to the imperial title. Though William expected to see the power of an emperor levelled against his foes, the only aid he received from Otto was directed against small local potentates which posed little real threat. The only great success of the alliance was the sack of Cuneo.
      [edit]Relationship with Frederick II

      At the Diet of Lodi, William abandoned Otto finally in favour of Frederick II, the Hohenstaufen claimant. On 15 July 1212, he was in Genoa with the other Ghibelline lords to receive Frederick. William led the young emperor from the city to the road which led to Germany. In 1215, William participated in the Second Lateran Council, there arguing the cause of Frederick against Otto. He travelled many subsequent times into Germany to speak to Frederick and during these absences, his enemies plotted against him. In their attempts to seize his lands, however, they were largely unsuccessful.

      During his times in Italy, William remained at war with Asti and Alessandria, but without result.

      Claims in Greece:

      During the exhausting years battling rebels and Guelphs, William resolved to travel to Greece to defend the conquests of his father, which had been formed into the Kingdom of Thessalonica. To this end he was urged by the churchmen of his realm and also by the troubadour Elias Carel. When he finally decided to take the cross, aware of the insignificance of his contribution to the total effort, he decided to head by way of Egypt, at the suggestion of Pope Honorius III. But the arrival of his half-brother Demetrius, fleeing the onslaught of the Greeks and the conspiracy of the Lombards, led by their kinsman Oberto II of Biandrate, who desired to make William king as his father's successor, convinced him to go to Greece.

      Several times he prepared to head out, but each time was detained by the threats of his enemies in Piedmont or by economic restraints which compelled him to mortgage his marquisate to Frederick II. Finally, he cowed some cities into giving him aid in men. Nevertheless, he was present at Capua, Ferentino, and Sora with Frederick II in February 1223. Delayed again and again, he drank a toast at Brindisi to his setting off in 1225, but he fell ill at the last minute. His fleet remained in port until Spring 1226, when, under urging from Honorius, it finally cast off. The delays had been fatal and William himself died at Almyros on 17 September. The rest of his army was hit by a dysentery epidemic and melted away.