Challenge of Barletta

The Challenge of Barletta (Italian: Disfida di Barletta) was a tournament fought in the country of Trani near Barletta, southern Italy, on 13 February 1503, on the plains between Corato and Andria.

The tournament was provoked by a French knight Charles de la Motte who, after drinking too much of the local wine, made disparaging remarks about the Italians. It consisted in a mounted tourney between 13 Italians (the most famous being Ettore Fieramosca), based in Barletta, and 13 French knights who were based in Canosa di Puglia. The Italian knights won the battle, and the French had to pay ransom. Barletta has since acquired the moniker Città della Disfida (City of the Challenge) as a result.

The event inspired a historical novel by the Italian writer Massimo D'Azeglio, Ettore Fieramosca, or  La disfida di Barletta, written in 1833.