Crusade against Francesco Ordelaffi

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The crusade against Francesco Ordelaffi (1356–1359) was an international military campaign to restore the temporal power of the Holy See over part of the Romagna. Resistance was led by Francesco II Ordelaffi, lord of Forlì and Cesena. The crusaders were initially successful in detaching Ordelaffi's allies. The intervention of mercenaries on Ordelaffi's side changed the nature of the war. Papal authority was eventually reimposed with the help of Hungarian troops.

In 1353, Innocent VI, then ruling from Avignon, sent Cardinal Gil de Albornoz to Italy to restore papal authority in the Papal States. He met the greatest resistance from Ordelaffi and Manfredi. In October 1354, he had them declared heretics "on the grounds of contumacy".[1]

On 17 January 1356, Pope Innocent VI pronounced a crusade against Ordelaffi and his allies, Giovanni Manfredi, lord of Faenza, and his brother Guglielmo Manfredi. He accused them of unlawfully occupying Castrocaro, Meldola and Bertinoro and governing tyrannically. The crusade was led by Albornoz, who in February ordered it preached in the archdiocese of Ravenna and the patriarchates of Grado and Aquileia.[2]

Ordelaffi's allies at the start of the crusade were the Lordship of Milan under Bernabò Visconti and the Republic of Venice.[3]

Campaign

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