Again by royal will, Macalda was given in marriage to Alaimo da Lentini, who at the time was quite influential in Angevin circles. His first marriage had been with another woman also named Macalda. When Alaimo's splendors at the Angevin court were about to decline, it was thanks to the maneuvers of his intriguing wife that he managed to rebuild his reputation, at first with the Sicilians, becoming one of the principal instigators of the Sicilian Vespers (a revolt that his consort also adhered to), and then at the Aragonese court. Once the revolt had broken out, in the situation that saw Alaimo leave to defend Messina from the siege, Macalda became the governor of
Catania, acting in lieu of her husband. On that occasion, Macalda made herself the leading figure in Catania by an unscrupulous betrayal of the French who had rebelled against her in the clamor of the Vespers: after having feigned a gracious welcome, she stripped them of their property instead, and then left them to the mercy of the enraged people. 1282–85,
King of Aragon 1276–85 The ambitious Macalda seemed to be aiming much higher to realize her designs for power. The Sicilians had besought
Constance of Hohenstaufen, daughter of King
Manfred, to accept the crown of Sicily, as the last of the
Hohenstaufens. The queen's consort,
Peter III of Aragon, supported the initiative and prepared to land on the island. (recognizable by his crown) with his wife Constance, the heir to the throne of Manfred of Sicily, commands the landing at
Trapani of the Aragonese fleet on August 30, 1282. Miniature from the
Nuova Cronica by
Giovanni Villani (from a manuscript at the
Biblioteca Vaticana)
Taking aim at Peter of Aragon Still during the period of the Vespers, but following the arrival of Peter of Aragon in Sicily, rises an intrigue sketched out by her with the purpose of getting herself the role of the king's "favorite," an episode that casts further light on her unscrupulous
arrivisme. Indeed, at that time, once she learned of the Aragonese arriving in
Randazzo, Macalda presented herself to them in great pomp, adorned with superb military attire, holding a silver mace in her hand, animated by intentions of sexual lust that were soon made explicit. Brought in front of the king, she addressed these words to him: Bartholomaeus,
Historia Sicula The king was avoiding amorous adventures at the time; he feigned that he did not understand her intentions and, honoring her and treating her with courtesy, personally conducted her to the inn with an escort of knights. Peter's behavior did not make Macalda give up: by pretending not to understand, she began to follow the Aragonese in his itinerary across the island. When the king reached
Furnari, near
Milazzo, it was nighttime. An old man, in a state of indigence and looking miserable, covered with rags of leather, accosted him and was granted an audience. It was the Messinese Vitale del Giudice (Vitalis de Judice), formerly a friend and crony of Manfred, then reduced to a state of begging because of the consistent fealty he had cultivated for the Swabian dynasty. The old man warned the king of the volatility of political alliances in Sicily and, in particular, of the inconstancy of Alaimo, who had already betrayed Manfred and Charles of Anjou, but made even worse by conditioning and intrigues that, according to the white-haired beggar, he was subjected to by Macalda and by her wicked father, Giacomo Scaletta. The king did not seem to give much weight to this and gently dismissed him, saying that his desire in that land was to make friends and not to cultivate or foment suspicions over past events. The next day, however, remembering the warnings of that vindictive old man, he decided to detoxify the atmosphere, proclaiming amnesty for anyone who was tarnished by political offenses. At
Santa Lucia del Mela, Macalda asked for hospitality from the king, who was quartered in the local castle, giving as a reason the lack of inns in that small village, since she had been the last to get there. The king then allowed her two rooms but, not wanting to be tricked, moved to an inn, where he was again seen arriving by the insistent Macalda. Once again the king declined the advances of the woman: he called his majordomo and tried to take his leave for the night. But in front of the insolence of Macalda, who remained glued to her chair, he decided to get free of the embarrassment by calling the proprietors and their family members into the room and entertaining himself with that audience in various conversations and digressions, among which he made a show of his proven marital fidelity. The meeting went on until dawn, until the king had to go out in arms and took leave of all his visitors, frustrating the opportunity pursued by the woman.
Macalda and Alaimo at the court of the King of Sicily Macalda and Alaimo took part in the new court, so intimate with the king as to be admitted to sit at his table. Alaimo, by intent of the king, had a top-level role: when Peter left the kingdom for France, having to face King Charles in the famous duel of Bordeaux that would never take place, the Aragonese king chose Alaimo, as chief justiciar, and Giovanni da Procida, as chancellor, to support the two regents, Queen Constance and James the
infante. Alaimo was thus the only Sicilian in a government where Constance had the delicate task of managing, mediating, and healing the political tensions and the pushes for autonomy going through the island, the same tensions and aspirations of which Alaimo, already Captain of Messina during the time of the Communitas Siciliae, was "the most influential exponent." Moreover, the king entrusted to the care of Alaimo the very delicate task of the custody of persons and protection of the physical well-being of his family members.
Rivalry with Constance of Hohenstaufen But the defeat inflicted on her by Peter of Aragon's ostentatious marital fidelity gravely wounded her feminine pride, inciting Macalda to vindictive behavior, with acts of jealousy and emulation toward the court and particularly toward Queen Constance. Macalda began to defy her openly, acting like a royal highness, and made a show of snubbing and degrading going so far as refusing to call her "queen," and limiting her, in her haughtiness, to the reductive title "mother of James." Thus Macalda inaugurated a season of mad and extravagant rivalries with the royal highnesses, which led her to refuse the queen's benevolence; she carefully avoided attending her, though not at the opportunities to vaunt a particular hairdo or to show off some special dress woven with imperial purple. The episodes of this rivalry led to great scandal in the surroundings, putting the queen's kindness and proverbial patience to a severe test.
Relations between Macalda and Queen Constance Some anecdotes about this one-sided rivalry have been handed down. Once when she fell ill, the debilitated Constance went to the
Cathedral of Monreale, entering Palermo on a litter instead of a horse as was her custom. Macalda did not miss the chance to emulate her: in perfect health and for no other reason, she paraded through the streets of Palermo on a luxurious litter festooned with scarlet cloth, held up on the unruly shoulders of some of her husband's soldiers and peasants from her country. On the way back to Catania she did the same while entering Nicosia, burdening the reluctant bearers as far as forcing them to stand still for a long time exposed to the weather. Having become pregnant, Macalda began to lament a presumed state of infirmity, thanks to which she demanded and got the power to live in the monastery of the
Friars Minor. According to her, this cohabitation was necessary to guarantee the tranquility she yearned for, far from the clamor of the people, but this forced proximity between the sacred and her controversial profane figure appeared scandalous to most. A little after giving birth, Macalda made herself the protagonist in a new affront to Queen Constance. Together with her sons James and Frederick, Constance was invited by Alaimo to
hold the newborn baby at baptism, two weeks from then. Macalda feigned hesitation, claiming the excuse that the baby's fragile constitution, according to her, was not able to bear the water of the
baptismal font. But three days later, without any other valid reason, she had him baptized publicly in person, held by the people, blatantly snubbing the royal offer. On another occasion, writes Bartholomaeus, the
infante James, under the regency of Constance, set out to review the districts of the island accompanied by thirty knights. Macalda, as was her custom, quickly stepped in to accompany him, but she wanted to do it with her usual arrogance, acting "as much a justiciar as her husband," escorted by a cortege comparable in splendor but immensely greater in numbers, and of a rather dubious appearance: the entourage she had with her numbered "three hundred sixty men at arms, of doubtful faith or suspicious, deliberately gleaned from various lands," a large company of brigands, a band of disorderly troops, more than a cortege of knights. These behaviors of hers were also to induce her fall from grace, and to favor and accelerate that of her husband Alaimo. == Alaimo's fall into disgrace and the arrest of Macalda ==