Kingdom of Naples
*Regno di Napoli*
* * * * * * * * * * * UNITS * * * * * * * * * * *
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Kingdom of Naples
*Regno di Napoli*
* * * * * * * * * * * UNITS * * * * * * * * * * *
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Last edited by Tzar; January 31, 2008 at 07:59 AM.
.....to be edited
Tsardoms : Naples Family Tree
kingdom of Naples
kingdom of Naples former state, occupying the Italian peninsula south of the former Papal States. It comprised roughly the present regions of Campania , Abruzzi , Molise , Basilicata , Apulia , and Calabria . Naples was the capital.
In the 11th and 12th cent. the Normans under Robert Guiscard and his successors seized S Italy from the Byzantines. The popes, however, claimed suzerainty over S Italy and were to play an important part in the history of Naples. In 1139 Roger II , Guiscard's nephew, was invested by Innocent II with the kingdom of Sicily , including the Norman lands in S Italy. The last Norman king designated Constance, wife of Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI, as his heir and the kingdom passed successively to Frederick II , Conrad IV , Manfred , and Conradin of Hohenstaufen. Under them S Italy flowered, but in 1266 Charles I (Charles of Anjou), founder of the Angevin dynasty, was invested with the crown by Pope Clement IV, who wished to drive the Hohenstaufen family from Italy. Charles lost Sicily in 1282 but retained his territories on the mainland, which came to be known as the kingdom of Naples. Refusing to give up their claim to Sicily, Charles and his successors warred with the house of Aragón, which held the island, until in 1373 Queen Joanna I of Naples formally renounced her claim.
During her reign began the struggle for succession between Charles of Durazzo (later Charles III of Naples) and Louis of Anjou ( Louis I of Naples). The struggle was continued by their heirs. Charles's descendants, Lancelot and Joanna II , successfully defended their thrones despite papal support of their French rivals, but Joanna successively adopted as her heir Alfonso V of Aragón and Louis III and René of Anjou, and the dynastic struggle was prolonged. Alfonso defeated René and in 1442 was invested with Naples by the pope. His successor in Naples, Ferdinand I (Ferrante), suppressed (1485) a conspiracy of the powerful feudal lords. Meanwhile the Angevin claim to Naples had passed to the French crown with the death (1486) of René's nephew, Charles of Maine. Charles VIII of France pressed the claim and in 1495 briefly seized Naples, thus starting the Italian Wars between France and Spain. Louis XII, Charles's successor, temporarily joined forces with Spain and dethroned Frederick (1501), the last Aragonese king of Naples, but fell out with his allies, who defeated him.
NAPLES FROM THE ANGEVINS TO THE HAPSBURGS
The Angevins
1266-1285
Charles I
1268
Battle of Tagliacozzo; defeat and execution of Conradin; Charles secures his control over the kingdom
1282
The Sicilian Vespers; Peter III of Aragon takes control of Sicily
1285-1309
Charles II, the Lame
1302
Peace of Caltabellotta; Aragonese control of Sicily is accepted
1309-1343
Robert, the Wise, hostage of Aragon ( married Jolanda of Aragon ), supports the Guelf faction against the Papacy ,patron of Literature and Art
1343-1382
Joanna I; she marries her cousin Andrew of Hungary (younger brother of Louis the Great of Hungary)
1345
Andrew of Hungary murdered with the connivance of Joanna I
1347-48
Invasion of Louis of Hungary; Joanna flees to Avignon; she obtains permission (1348) to marry Louis of Taranto (d.1362); Louis of Hungary meets resistance, withdraws
1350
Second invasion of Louis of Hungary fails(peace treaty, 1351)
1363
Joanna marries James of Majorca (d.1375)
1372
Peace with Frederick IV of Sicily; he is recognized as 'King of Trinacria' (terms accepted by Pope Gregory XI only after modification, 1374)
1376
Joanna marries Otto of Brunswick
1380
Joanna disinherits Charles of Durazzo, names Louis of Anjou as her heir
1382
Revolt by Charles of Durazzo; Joanna imprisoned and strangled
The Angevins of Durazzo
1382-1386
Charles III of Durazzo; he is opposed by Louis of Anjou (d.1384)
1385
Charles III returns to Hungary, where he is killed (1386)
1386-1414
Ladislas
1386-93
Regency of Queen Mother Marguerite; conflicts with Louis II of Anjou (1386-1400) who holds the city of Naples
1399
Ladislas successfully occupies the city of Naples
1407
Ladislas occupies Rome which Pope Gregory XII cannot hold
1411
Renewed conflict with Louis II of Anjou; Ladislas forced to withdraw from Rome but then reoccupies it
1414
Sudden death of Ladislas in Rome ends Neapolitan bid for hegemony in Italy
1414-1435
Joanna II
1414-15
In first months of Joanna's reign power is exercised by the Queen's favourite, Pandolfo Alopo, as chamberlain
1415
Joanna marries James de la Marche; he executes Alopo (1415) but soon rouses opposition from the Barons and is confined (1416); on his release he leaves the country (1419)
1417
Sergianni Caracciolo becomes the Queen's favourite; Pope Martin V is at first favourable
1419
Caracciolo alienates the condottiere Muzio Attendolo Sforza and Pope Martin V
1420
Joanna is attacked by Louis III of Anjou, Martin V, Sforza; defended by Caracciolo with the assistance of Alfonso of Aragon and the condottiere Braccio da Montone
1421
Joanna adopts Alfonso of Aragon as her heir
1423
Alfonso and Braccio quarrel with Caracciolo; Caracciolo has Joanna adopt Louis III of Anjou as her heir, make peace with Martin V
1431
Caracciolo, having made enemies among the nobility, is assassinated. Alfonso of Aragon gains influence
1433
Joanna again adopts Alfonso of Aragon as her heir
1433-34
Louis III campaigns to take over the kingdom, but dies (Nov. 1434)
1435
Joanna on her death (Feb.) bequeaths the kingdom to René of Anjou (brother of Louis III)
The Aragonese
1435-1458
Alfonso I of Aragon, the Magnanimous
1435-42
Conflict with the forces of René of Anjou
1442
Alfonso occupies the city of Naples; arranges for his illegitimate son Ferrante to succeed him there (while his brother John succeeds in Aragon and Sicily); Pope Eugenius IV comes to terms (1443)
1458-1494
Ferrante (Ferdinand I)
1458-64
Conflict with the forces of René, then John of Anjou
1480-81
Turkish occupation of Otranto
1485
The Great Barons Conspiracy (Francesco Coppola Count of Sarno,Antonello Sanseverino Prince of Salerno, Pietro Guevara Marchese del Vasto , Pirro del Balzo Prince of Altamura , in the Angevin interest, with support from the Pope; Ferrante (1486) makes terms with some of the barons, arrests and later executes the ringleaders , makes terms with the Pope
1494-1495
Alfonso II
1495
Confronted with French invasion, Alfonso abdicates, retires to Messina (Jan.), dies (Dec.)
1495-1496
Ferrandino (Ferdinand II)
1495
Ferrandino retreats to Sicily before the French (Feb.)
1495
Charles VIII of France occupies Naples (Feb.-May)
1495
Ferrandino returns to the mainland (July) and regains control of the kingdom but dies (Oct. 1496)
1496-1501
Frederick of Altamura (uncle of Ferrandino)
1500
Secret Treaty of Granada between Ferdinand of Aragon and Louis XII of France for the conquest and partition of Naples (Nov.)
1501
Joint Franco-Spanish invasion; Frederick of Altamura is forced into exile (Aug.; he dies in France, 1504; but his son the Duke of Calabria takes up residence in Spain)
1501-1516
Ferdinand the Catholic, of Aragon
1503-04
Following disagreements between the French and Spanish conquerors of the kingdom, hostilities break out and the French are driven out (they abandon their claim by treaty, 1505)
1503-07
Gonsalvo da Cordova acts as the king's lieutenant in Naples{ Viceroy } (his most important successor under Ferdinand is Raymond of Cardona, 1509-22)
1516
On the death of Ferdinand, Naples, with Spain, is inherited by his grandson Charles of Hapsburg (Charles I of Spain, after 1519 Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire)
SICILY UNDER ANGEVIN AND ARAGONESE RULE
Angevin conquest, revolt, Aragonese intervention
1266-1282
Charles of Anjou becomes king as a result of his victories on the mainland; makes Naples his capital rather than Palermo
1282
The 'Sicilian Vespers', a popular uprising against the French in which many are massacred; Peter III of Aragon, inheritor of the Hohenstaufen claims in Sicily and South Italy as the husband of Manfred's daughter, lands on the island with an armed force
1282-1285
Peter III is crowned as Peter I of Sicily, refuses homage to the pope
1285-1295
James I (second son of Peter) becomes King of Sicily while his elder brother Alfonso III inherits the Crown of Aragon
1291
On the death of Alfonso III James I of Sicily becomes also James II of Aragon (to 1327); returning to Aragon, he places his younger brother Frederick in charge of Sicily
The Independent Monarchy
1296-1337
Frederick II (younger brother of James I), on James coming to terms with Pope Boniface VIII and abdicating the kingship of Sicily (1295), with the backing of the Sicilian Estates declares himself an independent king; he is excommunicated by the Pope and war against Naples follows
1302
Treaty of Caltabellotta, with Charles II of Naples; Frederick's position is reluctantly acknowledged, but the Angevins will continue to make attempts to dislodge the Aragonese from Sicily
1337-1342
Peter II
1342-1355
Louis, inheriting the throne at the age of four, is unable to establish a strong government and accepts a tributary relationship to the papacy. Baronial clans (especially the Chiaramonte and the Ventimiglia) quarrel for power
1355-1377
Frederick III, the Simple. Intermittent war against Naples continues
1372
Naples and the papacy come to terms with Frederick as a tributary King of 'Trinacria'
1377-1402
Mary of Aragon (daughter and heiress of Frederick III); government is effectively taken over by the heads of four baronial families who style themselves 'vicars'
1390
Mary is taken to Aragon and married to Martin 'the Younger' (grandson of John II of Aragon); they return with a military force (1392), defeat the opposing barons, and rule jointly until Mary's death (1402). Martin repudiates the treaty of 1372 and rules as King of Sicily
1402-1409
Martin I, the Younger (widower of Mary of Aragon) rules alone
1409-1410
Martin II, the Elder (Martin I of Aragon, father of Martin the Younger) inherits Sicily after his son's death
Union with Aragon
1410
On the death of Martin the Elder, Sicily though subject to disorder remains in union with Aragon, and is ruled by the kings of the House of Trastamara (1412-1516) and then by the Hapsburgs; mainland Naples is also in union with Aragon under Alfonso the Magnanimous (1435-1458)
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Last edited by Baron Vlad Felix; October 26, 2008 at 10:09 AM.
Lot of titles for ancillaries or for great officers and same for clerks; through the history of napolitan dynasty: BRANCACCIO DEL VESCOVO
http://www.genmarenostrum.com/pagine...IO-VESCOVO.htm
Like "Esattore della Gran Dogana di Napoli"
"Collector of the Great Customs of Naples"
or
Magister Hostiarius (Maggiordomo Maggiore della Real Casa)