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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Medieval & Modern Coins| > |Crusaders| > CR96931
Crusaders, Frankish Greece, Principality of Achaea, William of Villehardouin, 1246 - 1278
|Crusaders|, |Crusaders,| |Frankish| |Greece,| |Principality| |of| |Achaea,| |William| |of| |Villehardouin,| |1246| |-| |1278|,
William of Villehardouin became Prince of Achaea when his brother Geoffrey II died in 1246. He conquered the remaining Peloponnese territory and built the fortress of Mistra near Sparta. In 1249 he accompanied Louis IX of France on the Seventh Crusade, joining him in Cyprus with 400 knights and 28 ships. Louis gave him a license to mint coins in the style of royal French money. William defeated Venice in the War of the Euboeote Succession and defeated the Duke of Athens in 1258, reaffirming his power over the duchy. In 1259 he formed an alliance with the Byzantine Despotate of Epirus against Nicaea. He led the Achaean forces against the Nicaeans, but the Epirote army deserted and William was defeated. He fled and hid under a haystack, but was captured. He remained captive until 1262 and permanently lost all his power.Arms_of_Achaea
CR96931. Billon denier tournois, Metcalf Crusades GV 201, pl. 39, 932; Malloy CCS 9 var. (no pellets flanking castle, stops); Schlumberger pl. XII, 11 var. (same), F, uneven strike with parts of legends weak, edge cracks and splits, Corinth mint, weight 0.884g, maximum diameter 18.5mm, die axis 270o, 1245 - 1278; obverse G PRINCEPS (no stops), cross pattée within inner border; reverse CLARENCIA (R with a wedge foot = Corinth mint, no stops), castle tournois, spire in the form of Λ, surmounted by cross dividing legend, castle flanked by a pellet on each side; from the Louis G Estate; rare; SOLD




  






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