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  1. Gisulfo II (también transcrito Gisulph, latín Gisulphus o Gisulfus, y el italiano Gisulfo o Gisolfo) fue el último príncipe Lombardo de Salerno (1052-1077). Gisulf era el primogénito y sucesor de Guaimario IV y Gemma, la hija del conde Capuano Laidulfo y es descrito como un villano y un pirata en la crónica de Amatus de Montecassino ...

  2. Gisulf II (also spelled Gisulph, Latin Gisulphus or Gisulfus, and Italian Gisulfo or Gisolfo) was the last Lombard prince of Salerno (1052–1077). Life. Gisulf was the eldest son and successor of Guaimar IV and Gemma, daughter of the Capuan count Laidulf.

  3. Gisulph II (born c. 1040—died after 1089) was the prince of Salerno, the last important Lombard ruler to oppose the Norman conquest of southern Italy; his defeat marked the end of effective resistance to the Normans. In 1052 Gisulph’s father, Gaimar V, was assassinated in a revolt.

  4. Salerno was besieged by the Normans of Robert Guiscard and Prince Richard I of Capua until it fell on 13 December 1076. Prince Gisulf II surrendered the next year and the principality, the final Lombard state in Italy, fell. Salerno became the capital of Guiscard's duchy of Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily.

  5. Gisulfo II di Salerno ( Salerno, 1030 circa – Sarno, 1090 o 1091) è stato un principe longobardo, ultimo principe di Salerno, dal 1052 al 1078, e duca di Amalfi, dal 1088 e il 1089 . Indice. 1 Biografia. 1.1 Nomina a co-reggente. 1.2 Assassinio del padre e successione. 1.3 Principe di Salerno. 1.4 Ultimi anni del Principato Longobardo. 2 Note.

  6. Gisulf I (also Gisulph, Gisolf, Gisulfo, Gisolfo, Gisulphus, or Gisulfus) (May 930 – November or December 977) was the eldest son of Guaimar II, Lombard Prince of Salerno, and his second wife Gaitelgrima. He was associated with his father as ruler in 943 and succeeded him on his death in 952.

  7. THE SALERNITAN COINAGE OF GISULF II (1052-77) AND ROBERT GUISCARD (1077-85) I The coinage of Salerno and the neighbouring petty states of Campania in the tenth and eleventh centuries is one of the most curious and interesting of medieval Italy. These states - Benevento, Gaeta, Capua, Naples, Amalfi and Salerno -