This is a list of the rulers of the Principality of Capua.
Lombard rulers of Capua
Gastalds and counts
The gastalds (or counts) of Capua were vassals of the princes of Benevento until the early 840s, when Gastald Landulf began to clamour for the independence which Salerno had recently declared. That caused a civil war in Benevento which did not cease for some ten years and by the end of the 9th century Capua was definitively independent.
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- 840âÂÂ843 Landulf I il vecchio
- 843âÂÂ861 Lando I (son of prec.)
- 861 Lando II Cyruttu (son of prec., deposed)
- 861âÂÂ862 Pando il rapace (uncle of prec., usurper)
- 862âÂÂ863 Pandenulf (son of prec., deposed)
- 863âÂÂ866 Landulf II il vescovo (also Bishop of Capua, uncle of prec., usurper, deposed)
- 866âÂÂ871 Lambert I di Spoleto (also Duke of Spoleto, unrelated, imposed by Emperor Louis II, deposed)
- 871âÂÂ879 Landulf II il vescovo (reinstated)
- 879âÂÂ882 Pandenulf (reinstated)
- 882âÂÂ885 Lando III (cousin of prec., usurper)
- 885âÂÂ887 Landenulf I (brother of prec.)
- 887âÂÂ910 Atenulf I (brother of prec.)
- 901âÂÂ910 Landulf III, co-ruler
Princes
In 910, the principalities of Benevento and Capua were united by conquest (Atenulf's) and declared inseparable. This, and the inevitable co-rule of sons and brothers, causes ceaseless confusion to any historian of the period, even more so to his readers.
- 910âÂÂ943 Landulf III, co-ruled from 901 (see directly above)
- 911âÂÂ940 Atenulf II, co-ruler
- 940âÂÂ943 Landulf IV, co-ruler (perhaps from 939)
- 933âÂÂ943 Atenulf III Carinola, co-ruler
- 943âÂÂ961 Landulf IV the Red, co-ruled from 940 (see above)
- 943âÂÂ961 Pandulf I Ironhead, co-ruler
- 959âÂÂ961 Landulf V, co-ruler
- 961âÂÂ968 Landulf V, co-ruling with his brother (perhaps to 969, see directly below), also co-ruled from 959 (see directly above)
- 961âÂÂ981 Pandulf I Ironhead, co-ruling with his brother (see directly above), also co-ruled from 943 (see above), also Duke of Spoleto (from 967), Salerno (from 978), and Benevento (from 961)
- 968âÂÂ981 Landulf VI, co-ruler
In 982, the principalities were finally ripped apart by Pandulf Ironhead's division of his vast holdings and by imperial decree, but the chronology gets no less confusing.
Norman princes of Capua
These princes were of the Drengot line and served as a counterpoise to the House of Hauteville until it had finally lost all power. The chronology here, too, can be very confusing due to the rivalry between the Robert II and Roger II of Sicily and his sons.
To the Kingdom of Sicily, where it became an appanage for second sons: