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Barons' War

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Barons' War

Civil war begun by the English barons under Simon de Montfort (the Younger), leader of a reform movement against King Henry III of England's government. Success at the Battle of Lewes in 1264 led to the king's capture, but at the Battle of Evesham in 1265 the rebellious barons were brutally massacred.

The Montfortians' power base was around Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire. Marching south, Simon challenged the royalists outside Lewes in Sussex on 14 May. Despite a successful charge by Prince Edward, the royalists were routed by Simon's tactics and Henry was captured.

Deserted by some of his allies, who changed sides in 1265, Simon was outmanoeuvred and drawn into a killing ground at Evesham, where he was killed, along with many other rebel barons. Montfortian castles continued to hold out until 1267. Kenilworth, surrounded by sophisticated water defences, withstood six months' intense siege until forced to surrender in December 1266.



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In both service to the state and the pursuit of letters, his primary model is Giovanni Pontano (1429-1503), an emigre from northern Italy who had presided over the Neapolitan Academy since 1471, had negotiated the peace of Bagnolo in 1484 and the peace of Rome in 1486 that ended the Barons' War, and had become Ferrante I's Prime Minister in 1487, the post that Cariteo would assume under Ferrante II.
The specific invitation to cross the Alps by the duke of Milan, Lodovico Sforza, was only the last in a lengthy list of such appeals: the Venetian republic during the Ferrara war (1484); Pope Innocent VIII during the Barons' War (1486) and again in 1489.
 
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