Comita II of Arborea

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Comita II (III)
Judge/King of Arborea
Reign1131–1147
PredecessorConstantine I
SuccessorBarisone I/II
Died1147
SpouseElena de Orrubu
IssueBarisone II/I, King of Arborea
Names
  • Comita de Serra
HouseLacon-Gunale (Serra branch)
FatherGonario II or Constantine I, Kings of Arborea
MotherEleanor of Lacon or Anna of Thori

Comita II or III (died 1147) was the

Barison II of Arborea.[1]
The dating and chronology of his reign are obscure.

Comita succeeded his father Constantine I. The date of this succession is assumed to be 1131, when he first appears in a communication with the

archbishop of Pisa. In 1133, Pope Innocent II raised Genoa to archiepiscopal status and divided the island of Sardinia
between the two sees, giving the north to Genoa and the south to Pisa. In the subsequent wars of that decade, Comita was the sole ally of the Genoese.

From 1133 to 1145, there is a gap in the testimony referring to Comita and it is possible that his brother

Baldwin, Archbishop of Pisa. The Pisan prelate, travelling the island as a papal legate, had excommunicated the judge for oppressing the people and warring against Pisa. Bernard of Clairvaux even weighed into island politics and sent a letter to Pope Eugene III
to justify Baldwin's actions. Nominally Arborea was transferred to Logudoro. Comita died soon after.

Notes

  1. Condaghe di Santa Maria di Bonarcado
    , he was the son of Constantine I and Anna de Zori.

Sources

Preceded by
Giudice of Arborea

1131–1147
Succeeded by