Henry VI is at this point the…
September 1197 CE
Henry VI is at this point the most powerful monarch in the Mediterranean and Europe, since the Kingdom of Sicily adds to his personal and imperial revenues an income without parallel in Europe.
Henry feels strong enough to send home the Pisan and Genoese ships without giving their governments the promised concessions in Southern Italy, and even forces Constantinople to collect a large tribute, which, however, is not paid before Henry's death.
He has secured his position in Italy, naming his friend Conrad of Urslingen as Duke of Spoleto and giving the Marche to Markward von Annweiler.
His next aim is to make the imperial crown hereditary.
At the Diet of Würzburg, held in April 1196, he had managed to convince the majority of the princes to vote for his proposal, but in the following one at Erfurt in October he had not achieved the same favorable result.
Emperor Henry VI is intent on dominating Constantinople’s beleaguered Empire and the East.
He is in southern Italy preparing a great expedition to Palestine, when a rebellion against his rule breaks out in the Sicilian kingdom; it is suppressed mercilessly by his German troops.
The thirty-two-year-old emperor dies of malaria on September 28, 1197, although it is also widely believed that he was poisoned.
His son Frederick II is to inherit both the Kingdom of Sicily and the Imperial crown.