Consolidation: The Last Counts of Savoy (1323-1415)
 

Amadeus the Great was succeeded by two of his sons.ššThe first, Count Edward the Extravagant (1284-1329), wreaked havoc on the state's finances due to his spending but generally continued faithful to his late father's policies.ššThe Fifteenth Count of Savoy and his wife, Bianca of France, had one child, a daughter, but she was excluded from the succession due to the Salic Law.ššHis reign lasted but six years and, in 1329, he was succeeded by his younger brother, Aimone, as Sixteenth Count of Savoy (1291-1242).šš

As extravagant as his brother had been, Aimone was also cautious and sensible, and earned the appellation of "the Peaceful".ššBy sheer strength of character and leadership, and without force of arms, Aimone was able to pacify a rebellious Geneva and steer his country clear of the ravages of the Hundred Years War plaguing France.ššNeutrality in the Anglo-French wars and peace with the Empire brought prosperity to the Savoy state and replenished its coffers depleted by Count Edward. The rule of law was codified and a Chancellery created to administer justice in the Count's name.šš He lavished attention on the Abbey of Hautecombe and built the ornate Chapel of the Princes as the final resting place for members of the House of Savoy.ššIt was here that he was interred next to his ancestors.

Amadeus VI (1334-1383), the "Green Count", succeeded his father as Seventeenth Count of Savoy at the tender age of nine.ššHis cousin, Count Louis II of Vaud acted as Regent until his majority.ššThe young count's preference for green livery at tournaments accounts for his sobriquet.ššA bold knight and soldier, he loved adventure and tournaments as much for his prowess as for the excitement.ššThe talents and passions of the young man were not confined to the tournament grounds or the battlefields.ššHe showed a genuine concern for the less fortunate of Savoy and, by decree, instituted a system of legal assistance to the poor.šš

Among his lasting accomplishments was the establishment, in 1362, of the Order of the Collar, which eventually became known as The Order of the Most Holy Annunciation (Santissima Annunziata), one of Europe's oldest and most prestigious knightly orders still in existence.ššIt became the highest chivalric order in Savoy.ššThose upon whom the accolade is conferred receive a gold collar with a suspended medallion emblem of the Holy Annunciation.ššThe insignia is never suspended from a ribbon.ššThose who receive the decoration are automatically styled "cousins" of the sovereign.ššAmadeus VI and his successors became Grand Masters in perpetuity of this Dynastic Order.šš

The Green Count played a pivotal role in the life and destiny of the Byzantine Empire.ššBy the 13th century the Eastern Empire was in steep decline.ššWracked by internal conflicts, ill-defined lines of legitimate succession and palace coups, it could barely defend itself against the continuing attacks of the advancing Muslims that threatened Constantinople, the storied capital built by Constantine the Great on the shores of the Bosporus.ššWith Pope Clement VII, Amadeus prepared and led a successful crusade that, in 1367, broke a siege of Constantinople and restored the Emperor in Byzantium.ššBut Amadeus and Clement VII demanded a high price for their help: the reconciliation of the Eastern and Roman churches.ššThe Pope and Emperor agreed.ššBut like so many détentes, the agreement was soon forgotten as the Muslim threat abated.ššThe Eastern Church revoked the compact of unity and Byzantium's increasing isolation from the West continued inexorably to its destruction in 1453.

Nevertheless, throughout his reign Amadeus played his diplomatic and military cards very well.ššHis architectural imprint can be seen today on the southern shores of Lake Geneva at the Castle of Ripaille, which he built as a residence. It was the first Savoy dwelling place without fortifications, evidencing the progress made by the dynasty and the peace that had generally prevailed in the county. Amadeus succumbed to the plague while campaigning in Campobasso, in the Molise, assisting Duke Louis of Anjou in his attempt to recover the crown of Naples.ššHe died on March 1, 1383 and was interred at his family's beloved Abbey of Hautecombe.šš

Amadeus VII (1360-1391) was the Eighteenth Count of Savoy.ššHe had to distinguish himself from his successful father and was known as the "Red Count".ššContinuing his father's interest in diplomacy and expansion of Savoy influence, he quickly married Emperor Charles V's niece and secured the Emperor's consent to the expansion of Savoy into Nice in 1388.ššHe died young after a fatal fall from his horse while hunting at the Castle of Ripaille in 1391.šš