Ever since the Emperor
Michael VIII Palaiologos (r. 1259–1282) recovered
Constantinople from the
Latin Empire in 1261, the restored
Byzantine Empire faced the threat of a
Latin crusade to reclaim the city. The antagonistic
Despotate of Epirus and the
Latin states of southern Greece, fearful of the Byzantine resurgence, sought aid from the
Kingdom of Sicily, first under
Manfred of Sicily (r. 1258–1266), and after 1266 under the ambitious
Charles of Anjou (r. 1266–1285), who quickly established himself as Byzantium's chief antagonist. Countering the Angevin ruler's alliances and efforts to conquer Byzantium would occupy the remainder of Michael VIII's reign. In 1258, the Sicilians took possession of the island of
Corfu and the
Albanian coast, from
Dyrrhachium to
Valona and
Buthrotum and as far inland as
Berat. This gave Manfred a strategically vital beachhead in the Balkans, controlling the western terminus of the great
Via Egnatia, the main overland route to Constantinople. Already in the 11th and 12th centuries, the same area had been the target of the
Normans of southern Italy in their
attacks on the Empire. After overthrowing Manfred, in the
Treaty of Viterbo (1267) Charles secured his recognition as Manfred's heir. In 1272, the Latin notables who had held the fortresses of Valona,
Kanina, and Berat for Manfred surrendered them to Charles, and soon afterwards Charles's troops took Dyrrhachium too. Having secured the support of many Albanian chieftains, Charles proclaimed the establishment of the
Kingdom of Albania in the same year. Michael VIII countered the emerging threat by a diplomatic mission to the Papacy, which in the
Second Council of Lyon (1274) agreed to the union of the Orthodox and Catholic churches, estranged after the
Great Schism of 1054, and thereby placed Michael and his empire under papal protection. Taking advantage of Charles's entanglement in the conflict between
Guelphs and Ghibellines in Italy, in spring 1274 Michael launched an attack against Angevin holdings in Albania. Berat and Buthrotum were taken and Charles's troops were pushed back from the hinterland to the two ports of Valona and Dyrrhachium. Although these were assaulted several times in 1274–1275, they remained in Angevin hands. By 1279 however, Charles had established his control not only over the Latin states of Greece (after 1278 he was the
Prince of Achaea), but also received the submission and vassalage of
Nikephoros I, Despot of Epirus. In August 1279, in preparation for resuming his offensive against Michael along the Via Egnatia, Charles appointed as his vicar-general in Albania the Burgundian
Hugo de Sully. Over the next year, Sully received a steady flow of supplies, siege equipment and reinforcements. ==Siege==