During the spring of 976, Abu'l-Qasim launched a raiding expedition on
Byzantine Italy. His first target was the city of
Messina, which he found deserted upon arrival. He soon moved on to
Apulia, taking tribute from
Cosenza before sending his brother to raid the surrounding countryside. He soon crossed the straits back to Sicily. During the summer of the same year, Abu'l-Qasim crossed back to mainland Italy, where he quickly forced tribute out of St. Agatha and took and razed
Taranto. He then sent one army to
Otranto while he besieged
Gravina, before retiring to Muslim lands for the year, bringing home hundreds of captives as slaves. In May 982, Abu'l-Qasim returned to Italy hoping to confront the advancing German emperor
Otto II. Around
Rossano Calabro, Abu'l-Qasim spotted the German army and realized that he had hugely underestimated its size. He attempted to retreat back to Sicily, but Otto caught up with him around
Capo Colonna. In the
Battle of Stilo, the outnumbered Kalbid force was able to surround and defeat the German forces with an unexpectedly strong cavalry charge; Otto himself only escaped by swimming to a Greek merchant ship, but Abu'l-Qasim was killed in the melee. == References ==