Victor proceeds to Rome after celebrating Easter…
June 1087 CE
Victor proceeds to Rome after celebrating Easter of 1087 in his monastery, and when the Normans have driven the soldiers of the Antipope Clement III (Guibert of Ravenna) out of St. Peter's, he is consecrated and enthroned.
Remaining only eight days in Rome, he returns to Monte Cassino, though with the help of Matilda and Jordan, he takes back the Vatican Hill.
Before May is out, he is once more in Rome in answer to a summons for the countess Matilda of Tuscany, whose troops hold the Leonine City and Trastevere, but when at the end of June the antipope once more gains possession of St. Peter's, Victor again withdraws at once to his Monte Cassino abbey.
Locations
People
Groups
Lombards (West Germanic tribe)
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Benedictines, or Order of St. Benedict
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Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
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Tuscany, Margravate of
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Normans
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German, or Ottonian (Roman) Empire
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Italy, Kingdom of (Holy Roman Empire)
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Christians, Roman Catholic
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Capua, Norman Principality of
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