[2] At the same time, a council decided to arm a fleet of eighteen galleys giving the command to Iacopo, during a battle of Modone and Corone.
[5] Several islands (including Santorini) had been reconquered from their Latin lords by the Byzantine Empire in the 1270s in the wake of Licario's campaigns, but the tide turned in the beginning of the 14th century.
This was when various Latin leaders took opportunity to establish new dominions in the islands, often resulting in subsequent conflicts with the Sanudo family of the Duchy of Naxos.
Its fate is unclear, but in a treaty concluded between Venice and the Byzantine emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos in 1302, Venetian possession of the island was recognized.
[2] In it, Iacopo was styled dominator insularum Sancte Erini et Thyrasie, but recognized only Venice, not the Duke of Naxos, as his feudal suzerain.