201 - Spanish Italy in the early 1500’s - Sardinia and Sicily

201 - Spanish Italy in the early 1500’s - Sardinia and Sicily

Episode Overview

Having raced through the early 1500s following the Italian Wars, the Medici popes, Leonardo da Vinci, and the creation of the Medici duchy in Florence, it’s time to slow down and look at the parts of Italy we’ve left slightly out of focus.

In this episode, we take a tour of the Italian peninsula’s two great islands — Sardinia and Sicily — and the Kingdom of Naples’ wider Mediterranean context. Though often treated as peripheral, these territories were central to Spanish power in Italy and deeply affected by war, rebellion, piracy, and imperial ambition.

A Geographic Reset: Italy Beyond the Mainland

  1. Italy consists of the mainland “boot” and two major islands: Sardinia (to the west) and Sicily (to the southwest).
  2. Both islands are today among Italy’s 20 administrative regions, along with many smaller islands such as Capri, Elba, and Stromboli.
  3. Unlike many mainland states, these islands experienced a very different political and social evolution under Spanish rule.

Sardinia Under Spanish Control

  1. By the early 1400s, Sardinia was firmly under Aragonese—and later Spanish—control, remaining so until 1720.
  2. The island was governed by a viceroy, often drawn from powerful local feudal families.
  3. Two families, the Carroz and Cubello, dominated nearly half of the island’s feudal income.

Power, Cities, and Administration

  1. Unlike mainland Italy, Sardinian cities never achieved full autonomy.
  2. Urban centers such as Cagliari, Sassari, Alghero, Iglesias, and Oristano developed influential merchant and professional classes.
  3. Only Cagliari and Sassari possessed formal statutes, inherited from earlier Pisan and Genoese influence.

Stability and Growth

  1. Ferdinand and Isabella restored parliamentary assemblies and introduced a lottery-based electoral system that allowed limited participation by non-nobles.
  2. Sardinia enjoyed a period of relative peace and modest economic growth.
  3. Charles V visited only briefly, leaving governance largely to the viceroy.

A Quiet Role in the Italian Wars

  1. Sardinia was mostly spared the violence of the Italian Wars, with one brief French occupation of Sassari in 1527.
  2. The island served primarily as a strategic logistical hub between Spain and Italy.

Sicily: A More Volatile Island

  1. Sicily had a larger population than Sardinia but remained under tight noble control.
  2. Roman infrastructure was decaying, and political power was firmly in baronial hands.
  3. Early attempts at power-sharing, such as in Messina, failed under noble pressure.

Spanish Rule and Rising Tensions

  1. Sicily was ruled by a powerful viceroy, combining civil and military authority.
  2. Under Ugo de Moncada, the island became a frontline bastion against North African Muslim powers.
  3. Costly military campaigns, rising taxation, the arrival of the Spanish Inquisition, and endemic piracy increased social tension.

The Palermo Uprising of 1511

  1. In August 1511, unrest exploded following an incident involving a Spanish soldier stealing bread from a young woman named Nina.
  2. Her fiancé, Giovanni “Surciddu” Pollastra, chased the soldier, triggering a city-wide rebellion.
  3. Hundreds of Spanish soldiers were killed, and their commander fled disguised as a woman.
  4. Despite Surciddu’s attempts to calm the situation, he was arrested and executed, sparking further violence.

A Cycle of Revolts (1512–1522)

  1. New taxes in 1512 ignited another rebellion, again violently suppressed.
  2. After King Ferdinand’s death in 1516, Sicily entered a prolonged period of unrest marked by:
  3. Anti-noble sentiment
  4. Banditry in the countryside
  5. Intensifying Arab raids along the coast

Leaders and Failures

  1. Several short-lived administrations failed to restore order.
  2. The rebel leader Gianluca Squarcialupo briefly seized power but proved incapable of governing.

Plague, Piracy, and Temporary Stability

  1. Plague outbreaks from 1522 weakened both rebels and authorities.
  2. The fall of Rhodes heightened fears of external invasion.
  3. Viceroy Ettore Pignatelli, Count of Monteleone, eventually restored a fragile stability that lasted until his death in 1535.

Charles V Visits Sicily (1535)

  1. In 1535, Emperor Charles V visited Sicily for the first time in 14 years.
  2. He entered Palermo through a newly redesigned Porta Nuova, stayed in the city, and was reportedly captivated by it.
  3. The visit boosted imperial prestige and momentarily soothed tensions—at least on the surface.

Closing Thoughts

Sardinia and Sicily reveal two very different faces of Spanish rule in Italy: one relatively stable and quietly strategic, the other restless, rebellious, and perpetually on edge.

Both islands remind us that the Italian Wars were not only fought on famous mainland battlefields but also shaped the lives of people far from Florence, Rome, or Milan—on islands that were anything but peripheral.

And as always, peace in early modern Italy rarely lasts long.

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