King William had fallen ill and remains…
1155 CE
King William had fallen ill and remains so from September to Christmas.
Maio and Hugh, Archbishop of Palermo, have taken control of the Sicilian kingdom in the meanwhile.
It is now, with revolt spreading in the peninsula, that insurrection begins in the island.
A conspiracy forms to overthrow both Maio and the king.
Maio refuses to panic and the major revolts are soon dead.
However, a revolt led by one Bartholomew of Garsiliato takes Butera, on Sicily, and proceed to declare themselves in armed insurrection.
The rebels demand the king remove Maio and the archbishop from his inner circle.
William refuses.
The rebels stir up riots in the capital of Palermo itself, where the people demand the release of Count Simon of Policastro, whom Maio had imprisoned without trial.
William negotiates himself out of the bind and Maio remains his right-hand man, though Maio's own right-hand, Asclettin, the chancellor, is imprisoned by the king.