Aragonese–Genoese War

[1] Guillem de Cervelló and de Banyeres commanded an armada of 40 galleys and 30 woodwinds and as vice admirals Galceran Marquet and Bernat Sespujades who attacked Monaco and Menton in 1331, and besieged Savona and Genoa itself, then retreated to Sardinia[2] while Antonio Grimaldi armed a raid to attack the Aragonese fleet.

[4] In 1332 the admirals of the fleet were the Veguer of Barcelona Pere de Santcliment in spring, and Francesc de Finestres and Arnau Oliver in winter,[5] and Bernat Sespujades repulsed the attack of 13 Genoese galleys in Cagliari, even though he had very few cash at the time.

[6] Alfonso IV of Aragon ordered that the territories of Barcelona, Mallorca and Valencia arm sixty galleys, of which at least thirty had to be ready in April 1333, ten for each city,[7] and his admiral would be Galceran Marquet, who was re-elected in 1334.

[4] Peter IV of Aragon signed peace on September 19, 1336, after a truce had been established a few months earlier with the intervention of Pope Benedict XII.

[8] The war made it possible to win the rebel city of Sassari,[9] key for the northern domain of Sardinia and the maritime routes.