Infante Fadrique of Castile
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Fadrique (Frederick), Infante of Castile (1223–1277), was a younger son of St. Fernando III, King of Castile by his first wife, Elisabeth of Hohenstaufen.
Unhappy under the rule of his brother Alfonso, he may have participated in the rebellion of his brother Enrique in 1255; in any case, he was exiled from Castile in 1260 and joined Enrique as a mercenary in Tunis. He joined the service of Manfred of Sicily, and fought at the Battle of Benevento (1266). He escaped the defeat there and returned to Tunis. An anti-Angevin revolt in Sicily in 1267 provided an opportunity for him to cross over again, and he helped raise the island for Conradin, while Enrique (now Senator of Rome) also declared for Conradin on the mainland. He fought on in Sicily with Frederick Lancia after the defeat of Conradin and imprisonment of Enrique, but they were forced to surrender at Girgenti in 1269. However, they were allowed to escape to Tunis again rather than being imprisoned. There they served the Tunisians against the soldiers of the Eighth Crusade (1270).
In 1272, he was reconciled with Alfonso, returned to Castile, and became one of his advisors. However, he involved himself in a plot regarding the succession and was secretly executed by Alfonso in 1277.
[edit] References
- Runciman, Steven (1958). The Sicilian Vespers. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43774-1.