Alamanno took the pompous and probably self-appointed title "
by the grace of God, the king and the commune of Genoa, Count of Syracuse [
comes Siracuse] and
familiaris of the lord king". As historian
David Abulafia asserts, "it [is] hard to understand what say the Genoese had in the appointment of the counts of a foreign kingdom", yet during the minority of the Sicilian king
Frederick I they seem to have had a say. During his tenure, Sicily fell under Genoese hegemony, acting as a trading post, waystation and granary for the republic. It also became a centre of piracy. Alamanno's claim on Syracuse was not recognised by King Frederick I, who was also the Emperor Frederick II. He was thus excluded from the treaty between Genoa and
Marseille in 1208, which excluded all "corsairs who reside in or work out of Sicily" (
cursales qui in Siciliam morantur vel consuetudinem). Alamanno was in a close alliance with Enrico Pescatore, to whom he lent the use of the
Leopardo. They raided the eastern Mediterranean as far as the
County of Tripoli; and both hosted the
trobador Peire Vidal, who repaid them with lavish praise. In 1205, off the coast of
Provence, three Pisan
navi captured a Genoese
nave, the
Viola, on its way to
al-Bijāya. The captured ship was taken to
Cagliari and thence to
Messina. There it joined a combined Pisan force of
navi and twelve
galleys and landed a party to attack a Genoese force in the area. The sources are unclear if there were four
navi or ten. Two of the galleys were dispatched to
Palermo, where they were intercepted and captured by a force of galleys under Alamanno, one of whose ships was commanded by his son. Shortly after, a Pisan fleet of ten
navi and twelve galleys (with "many other vessels") and an army under Count Ranieri di Manenta besieged Syracuse for three-and-a-half months. In December 1205, a combined force under Alamanno—who had been leading the defence of the city—and Enrico lifted the siege. Enrico had been at Messina gathering a relief force. Originally it comprised four galleys, some
taride (horse transports) and two Genoese
navi that were returning from
Outremer. The Genoese convinced him to augment this force with more galleys and smaller vessels, as well as sixteen more
navi, apparently the most powerful ship class, before attacking the Pisan fleet at Syracuse. The latter contained some nine
navi, twelve galleys and fourteen other ships the chronicler refers to merely as
buciisque et barchis (
bucios and
barche). ==Activities in the East==