Comita III (circa 1160 –
1218) was the giudice of Logudoro, with its capital at Torres
, from 1198 until 1218. He was the youngest
of four sons of
Barisone II
and Preziosa de Orrubu. He ruled at a time when the great families,
usually foreign, were superseding the
giudici in power and
influence on
Sardinia.
Circa
1180, he married Ispella (daughter of Barisone II of Arborea by his first,
divorced, wife Pellegrina de Lacon), herself widow of Hug de Cervera and mother of Ugone de Bas, co-giudice of Arborea
. By
her he had four children: Maria, who married Boniface, heir of
Manfred II of Saluzzo;
Preziosa;
Marianus, his heir;
and Giorgia, who married Manuele Doria. He himself married as his
second wife Agnes, the sister of Boniface.
In December 1198, his elder brother
Constantine II died heirless in
battle with
William I of
Cagliari. Comita succeeded to the
giudicato. Both
Constantine (and subsequently Comita) and William were at war with
Peter I of Arborea over the
co-rule of Arborea. At the time of his succession to the
pro-
Genoese state of Logudoro,
Goceano was in William's hands.
In exchange for
Goceano, Comita considered siding with Pisa
and
expelling the Genoese from his giudicato, as well as
relinquishing his claims to Arborea. In an ensuing peace
treaty with Cagliari, Marianus, Comita's heir, married Agnes of
Massa, William's daughter, who brought with her Goceano as a
dowry.
Soon, however, Comita accused William to
Pope Innocent III of aggression and other
breaches of their accord. Arborea came under papal protection. In
response, William married another daughter of his to Ugone, the
co-judge of Arborea and a stepson of Comita. William effectively
took control of Arborea.
In 1203,
William Malaspina, a
cousin of William of Cagliari, tried to marry the daughter of
Barisone II of Gallura. This
attempt to control the Galluran judgeship was nixed by the pope. In
1205,
Lamberto Visconti married
her. By a treaty confirmed in 1211, Comita allied with Genoa to
conquere the whole island and bring under their control. There were
to be no separate peaces. Together they invaded
Gallura, now ruled by Lamberto. After that, with the
support of Innocent, they invaded Arborea, an invasion which ended
in the partition of the realm: half going to
Barisone III, son of Peter I, and a
quarter each going to Comita and William of Cagliari. The 1212
campaign was interrupted by Pisan repercussions and in 1214,
William died. Lamberto and
Ubaldo I
Visconti took the opportunity that year to launch an offensive
at Gallura, Cagliari, and Arborea, but were beaten off by Comita
and Genoa. The war continued at sea, but was arrested by the
entreaties of
Pope Honorius III,
who forced Comita to come to terms with Pisa (
1 December 1217). Comita died
sometime the next year, when his successor appears first as
giudice on
10 November 1218.
Sources
- Caravale, Mario (ed). Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani:
XXVII Collenuccio – Confortini. Rome
,
1982.