The Ghibellines had been supported by Conrad…
1258 CE
The Ghibellines had been supported by Conrad IV after the death of Frederick II in 1250, and from 1258 by Manfred of Sicily, while the Guelphs are supported by Charles of Anjou.
Though the Guelphs and Ghibellines at least nominally supported the Papacy and the Holy Roman Empire respectively, in practice the divide between these factions often has more to do with local rivalries than with the hostility between papacy and empire.
In the middle of the thirteenth century, the Guelphs hold sway in Florence while the Ghibellines control Siena.
The Guelphs succeed in expelling from Florence in 1258 the last of the Ghibellines with any real power; they follow this with the murder of Tesauro Beccharia, Abbot of Vallombrosa, who had been accused of plotting the return of the Ghibellines.