-
Pandenulf was the
Count of Capua,
claiming that
title from 862 and
holding it
successfully during the
tumultuous civil war of 879 – 882. He was the son...
-
force seized Bari,
until then a
Lombard gastaldate under the
control of
Pandenulf.
Saracen incursions proceeded northwards until Adelchis of
Benevento sought...
- , deposed) 861–862
Pando il
rapace (uncle of prec., usurper) 862–863
Pandenulf (son of prec., deposed) 863–866
Landulf II il
vescovo (also
Bishop of...
- Teano, and
grandson of
Landulf I of Capua. He kept his
deposed cousin Pandenulf in prison. His
entire reign was
spent defending himself against the Gr****s...
- adolescent,
bishop of Capua.
Pandenulf, however,
seized Capua and
appointed his
brother Landenulf as bishop.
Pandenulf recognised Lando in Caiazzo, but...
-
thereafter (862 or 863) and a
succession crisis broke out. Pando's son
Pandenulf was
shoved aside and Landulf,
though bishop, took the
Capuan throne in...
- was
succeeded by his son
Pandenulf, who was deposed,
while his
younger son
Landenulf became bishop of
Capua in 879.
Pandenulf later became the
first of...
-
contest over the
throne of
Capua and its diocese, he came to the aid of
Pandenulf against his own brother-in-law,
Lando III. However, in 882 he was expelled...
-
between Pandenulf, the
earlier deposed son of Pando, and
Lando III,
another grandson of
Landulf I.
Salerno allied with
Lando and
Benevento with
Pandenulf. A...
- or 62 BCE, abdicated.
Lando II of Capua,
Count of
Capua 861,
deposed Pandenulf of Capua,
Count of
Capua 862–863 and 879–882
Landenulf I of Capua, Count...