If you wish to participate in makeing all the historycal kings show on the map at the right time pls post here the king names for your favorite faction (also pls. mention their rule periods year > year).
Cheers,
Burebista
If you wish to participate in makeing all the historycal kings show on the map at the right time pls post here the king names for your favorite faction (also pls. mention their rule periods year > year).
Cheers,
Burebista
Kingdom of England
-Normans:
William I, the Conqueror 1066–1087
William II, Rufus 1087–1100
Henry I, Beauclerc 1100–1135
Stephen 1135–1141, 1141–1154
-Plantagenets:
a)Angevins:
Henry II, FitzEmpress 1154–1189
Richard I, the Lionheart 1189–1199
John Lackland 1199–1216
Prince Louis of France 1216-1217 (After the First Barons' War)
Henry III 1217–1272
Edward I, Longshanks 1272–1307
Edward II 1307–1327 (deposed, murdered 1327)
Edward III 1327–1377
Richard II 1377–1399 (deposed, murdered 1400)
b)Lancastrians:
Henry IV 1399–1413
Henry V 1413–1422
Henry VI 1422–1461, 1470–1471
c)Yorkists:
Edward IV 1461–1470, 1471–1483
Richard III 1483–1485
Last edited by Roman al Moldovei; December 19, 2006 at 01:58 AM.
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
Kingdom of France
-Capetian Dynasty (987 to 1328)
Henry I 1031-1060
Philip I 1060-1108
Louis VI 1108-1137
Louis VII 1137-1180
Philip II Augustus 1180-1223
Louis VIII 1223-1226
Louis IX (Saint Louis) 1226-1270
Philip III 1270-1285
Philip IV "The Fair" 1285-1314
Louis X 1314-1316
John I 1316
Philip V 1316-1322
Charles IV 1322-1328
-Capetian Dynasty, House of Valois (1328-1589)
Philip VI 1328-1350
John II 1350-1364
Charles V 1364-1380
Charles VI 1380-1422
Charles VII 1422-1461
Louis XI "The Prudent", "The Spider King" 1461-1483
Charles VIII 1483-1498
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
Kingdom of Scotland:
-House of Moray:
MacBeth (MacBeatha; Mac Bethad mac Findláich) (1040–1057)
Lulach (Lulach mac Gillai Comgain) (1057–1058)
-House of Dunkeld:
Malcolm III (Calum III; Máel Coluim mac Donnchada) (1058–1093)
Donald III (Domhnall III; Domnall mac Donnchada) (1093–1094)
Duncan II (Donnchadh II; Donnchad mac Maíl Choluim) (1094)
Donald III (Domhnall III; Domnall mac Donnchada) (1094–1097)
Edgar (Eagar/Eadgar; Etgair mac Maíl Choluim) (1097–1107)
Alexander I (Alasdair I; Alaxandair mac Maíl Choluim) (1107–1124)
Saint David I (Daibhidh I; Dabíd mac Maíl Choluim) (1124–1153)
Malcolm IV (Calum IV; Máel Coluim mac Enric) (1153–1165)
William I (Uilleam I; Uilliam mac Enric) (1165–1214)
Alexander II (Alasdair II) (1214–1249)
Alexander III (Alasdair III) (1249–1286)
-House of Balliol (Bailiol):
John (Iain) (1292–1296)
-House of Bruce (Bruis):
Robert I the Bruce (Raibeart I) (1306–1329)
David II (Daibidh II) (1329–1371)
-House of Stewart:
Robert II (Raibeart II) (1371–1390)
Robert III (Raibeart III) (1390–1406)
James I (Seumas I) (1406–1437)
James II (Seumas II) (1437–1460)
James III (Seumas III) (1460–1488)
James IV (Seumas IV) (1488–1513)
Last edited by Roman al Moldovei; December 19, 2006 at 02:10 AM.
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
Kingdom of Portugal
Counts:
Nuno (II) 1050-1071
-House of Burgundy:
Henrique 1093-1112
Teresa or Tareja Regent of the County (Queen of Portugal) 1112-1126
Afonso Henriques 1126-1129
Princes:
Afonso Henriques 1129-1139
Kings:
Afonso I Henriques 1139-1185 The Conqueror (o Conquistador), The Founder (o Fundador), The Great (o Grande)
Sancho I 1185-1211 The Populator (o Povoador)
Afonso II 1211-1223 the Fat (o Gordo)
Sancho II 1223-1247 The Pious (o Capelo), The Piteous (o Piedoso)
Afonso III 1247-1279 The Bolognian (o Bolonhês)
Denis 1279-1325 The Farmer (o Lavrador), The Poet-King (o Rei-Poeta), The Troubadour-King (o Rei-Trovador)
Afonso IV 1325-1357 The Brave (o Bravo)
Peter I 1357-1367 The Just (o Justiceiro), The Cruel (o Cruel), The Vengeful (o Vingativo), The Until-the-End-of-the-World-In-Love (o Até-ao-Fim-do-Mundo-Apaixonado)
Ferdinand I 1367-1383 The Handsome (o Formoso), The Beautiful (o Belo), The Fickle (o Inconstante), The Reckless (o Inconsciente)
-House of Aviz, or Joannine Dynasty:
John I 1385-1433 The One of Good Memory (o de Boa Memória), The Good (o Bom), The Great (o Grande)
Edward 1433-1438 The Eloquent (o Eloquente), The Philosopher-King (o Rei-Filósofo)
Afonso V 1438-1481 The African (o Africano)
John II 1481-1495 The Perfect Prince (o Príncipe Perfeito), The Tyrant (o Tirano)
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
Milan
Mayors of Milan:
Pagano I della Torre 1197–1241
Pagano II della Torre 1247–1257
Manfredi Lancia 1253–1256
Martino della Torre 1257–1259
Oberto Pelavicino 1259–1264
Filippo della Torre 1263–1265
Napoleone della Torre 1265–1277
Oddone Visconti, Archbishop of Milan 1277–1294
Matteo I Visconti 1294–1302
Guido della Torre 1302–1311
Matteo I Visconti 1311–1322
Galeazzo I Visconti 1322–1327
Azzone Visconti 1329–1339
Luchino Visconti 1339–1349
Barnabò Visconti 1349–1385
Galeazzo II Visconti 1349–1378
Matteo II Visconti 1349–1355
Gian Galeazzo Visconti 1378–1395
Dukes of Milan:
Gian Galeazzo Visconti 1395–1402
Gian Maria Visconti 1402–1412
Filippo Maria Visconti 1412–1447
Francesco I Sforza 1450–1466
Galeazzo Maria Sforza 1466–1476
Gian Galeazzo Sforza 1476–1494
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
This one is really difficult...
Spanish Kingdoms
Kings of Aragon and Navarre:
1035–1063 Ramiro I of Aragon
1063–1094 Sancho I Ramirez (V of Navarre)
1094–1101 Peter I of Aragon, conquered Huesca
1104–1134 Alfonso I the Battler, conquered Zaragoza
Kings of Aragon:
1134–1137 Ramiro II of Aragon the Monk
1137–1162 Petronila of Aragon → married Count Ramon Berenguer IV The Saint of Barcelona
1162–1196 Alfonso II (I of Barcelona) the Chaste or the Troubadour, conquered Teruel
1196–1213 Peter II (I of Barcelona) the Catholic, died at the Battle of Muret
Kings of Aragon and Valencia, Counts of Barcelona, of the House of Barcelona:
1213–1276 James I the Conqueror, conquered Valencia, Majorca and Ibiza
1276–1285 Peter III (I of Valencia, II of Barcelona) the Great, conquered Sicily
1285–1291 Alfonso III (I of Valencia, II of Barcelona) the Generous or the Liberal, conquered Minorca
1291–1327 James II the Just
1327–1336 Alfonso IV (II of Valencia, III of Barcelona) the Good
1336–1387 Peter IV (II of Valencia, III of Barcelona) the Ceremonious
1387–1396 John I the Hunter
1396–1410 Martin I, the Humanist
interregnum 1410–1412
Kings of Aragon and Valencia, Counts of Barcelona, of the Trastámara dynasty:
1412–1416 Ferdinand I of Aragon, of Antequera
1416–1458 Alfonso V (Afonso III of Valencia, IV of Barcelona), conquered Naples
1458–1479 John II → title disputed much of that time in the War Against John II (1462–1472)
1479–1516 Ferdinand II of Aragon and Sicily (III of Naples, V of Spain) the Catholic, married Isabella I of Castile, invaded Navarre
Kings of Aragon and Counts of Barcelona during the War Against John II (none of these reigned in Valencia, which remained under the control of John II):
1462–1463 Henry IV of Castile
1463–1466 Peter V of Aragon (IV of Barcelona)
1466–1472 Rene I the Good of Anjou, king of Naples
Kings of Castile:
Jiménez Dynasty
Ferdinand I the Great (1035-1065)
Sancho II the Strong (1065-1072), also king of León (1072)
Alfonso VI the Brave (1072-1109), also king of León (1072-1109)
Urraca (1109-1126), also queen of León (1109-1126)
House of Burgundy:
Alfonso VII the Emperor (1126-1157), also king of Galicia (1111-1157) and king of León (1126-1157)
Sancho III the Desired (1157-1158)
Alfonso VIII the Noble (1158-1214)
Henry I (1214-1217)
Berenguela the Great (1217)
Ferdinand III the Saint (1217-1252), also king of León from 1230, canonised in 1671
All kings hereafter were also kings of León.
Alfonso X the Learned (1252-1284)
Sancho IV the Brave (1284-1295)
Ferdinand IV the Summoned (1295-1312)
Alfonso XI the Just (1312-1350)
Pedro of Castile (1350-1369)
House of Trastámara
Henry II the Bastard (1369-1379)
John I (1379-1390)
Henry III the Infirm (1390-1406)
John II (1406-1454)
Henry IV the Impotent (1454-1474)
Isabella I (1474-1504), married Ferdinand II of Aragon (Ferdinand V of Castile)
Kings of Leon:
Jiménez Dynasty
Ferdinand I the Great (1037-1065)
Alfonso VI the Brave (1065-1072), also king of Castile (1072-1109)
Sancho II the Strong (1072), also king of Castile (1065-1072)
Alfonso VI the Brave (1072-1109), again
Urraca (1109-1126), also queen of Castile (1109-1126)
House of Burgundy:
Alfonso VII the Emperor (1126-1157), also king of Galicia (1111-1157) and king of Castile (1126-1157)
Ferdinand II (1157-1188)
Alfonso IX (1188-1230)
Ferdinand III the Saint (1230-1252), also king of Castile from 1217
All kings hereafter were also kings of Castile.
Alfonso X the Learned (1252-1284)
Sancho IV the Brave (1284-1295)
Ferdinand IV the Summoned (1295-1312)
Alfonso XI the Just (1312-1350)
Pedro of Castile (1350-1369)
House of Trastámara
Henry II was the illegitimate son of Alfonso XI. He was made duke of Trastámara.
Henry II the Bastard (1369-1379)
John I (1379-1390)
Henry III the Infirm (1390-1406)
John II (1406-1454)
Henry IV the Impotent (1454-1474)
Isabella I (1474-1504), married Ferdinand II of Aragon (Ferdinand V of Castile)
Kingom of Navarre:
House of Jiménez (905-1234):
1054-1076 Sancho IV of Peñalén
1076-1094 Sancho V Ramírez, Also king of Aragón from 1063.
1094-1104 Peter
1104-1134 Alfonso the Battler
1134-1150 García VI Ramírez the Restorer
1150-1194 Sancho VI the Wise
1194-1234 Sancho VII the Strong
House of Champagne (1234-1284)
1234-1253 Theobald I the Troubadour, the Posthumous
1253-1270 Theobald II
1270-1274 Henry I the Fat
1274-1305 Joan I, married to Philip IV of France
House of Capet (1284-1349)
1284-1305 Philip I the Fair, also king of France.
1305-1316 Louis I the Headstrong
1316 John I
1316-1322 Philip II the Tall
1322-1328 Charles I the Fair
1328-1349 Joan II, married to Philip of Évreux
House of Évreux (1328-1441)
1328-1343 Philip III of Evreux, also count of Évreux.
1349-1387 Charles II the Bad
1387-1425 Charles III the Noble
1425-1441 Blanche
House of Trastámara (1425-1479)
1425-1479 John II the Great, also king of Aragón, husband of Blanche
1441-1446 Charles IV de Viana, Prince of Viana.
1479 Eleanor
House of Foix (1479-1516):
1479-1483 Francis Phoebus, also count of Foix
1483-1516 Catherine
House of Albret (1483-1572):
John III d'Albret, husband of Catherine.
In 1512, he was defeated by Ferdinand II of Aragon who then conquered southern Navarre for Aragon and was crowned king. The following monarchs only reigned over Lower Navarre, the part of Navarre north of the Pyrenees.
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
Here is a testing script for France:
Once I am sure that I have all the variables covered I will start implementing it. Also I will try to simplify the procedure and when implemented it will be only for the AI. Roman al Moldovei can you add all the names you mentioned? (in their respective txt files). To double check your self - add one and name a named_character in descr_start.txt if the you start the campaign and it has your new name it is ok you are implementing corectly - if he exists but with no name - something is wrung.monitor_conditions I_SettlementExists Rome
and I_TurnNumber > 1
and Philip IsFactionLeader
spawn_army
faction france
character Adam, named character, age 18, x 114, y 132, family
traits Factionheir 1 , GoodCommander 4 , GoodAttacker 4 , NaturalMilitarySkill 4 , PoliticsSkill 4 , Loyal 4, ContentGeneral 3
unit NE Bodyguard exp 6 armour 0 weapon_lvl 0
end
terminate_monitor
end_monitor
monitor_conditions I_TurnNumber = 4
and not I_CharacterExists Adam
and I_NumberOfHeirs france < 1 ;not tested
spawn_army
faction france
character Adam, named character, age 18, x 114, y 132, family
traits Factionheir 1 , GoodCommander 4 , GoodAttacker 4 , NaturalMilitarySkill 4 , PoliticsSkill 4 , Loyal 4, ContentGeneral 3
unit NE Bodyguard exp 6 armour 0 weapon_lvl 0
end
terminate_monitor
end_monitor
monitor_conditions I_TurnNumber = 5
and Philip IsFactionLeader
console_command kill_character "Philip"
console_command kill_character "Louis"
terminate_monitor
end_monitor
Kingdom of Sicily
Counts:
Sicily was granted to Robert Guiscard as "duke" in 1059 by Pope Nicholas II. The Guiscard granted it as a county to his brother Roger.
Hauteville Dynasty (1071–1130):
1071–1101 Roger I Bosso
1101–1105 Simon
1105–1130 Roger II
Kings:
Roger II received royal investiture from Antipope Anacletus II in 1130 and recognition from Pope Innocent II in 1139.
Hauteville Dynasty (1130–1198):
1130–1154 Roger II
1154–1166 William I the Bad
1166–1189 William II the Good
1189–1194 Tancred
1193–1194 Roger III, co-king
1194 William III
1194–1198 Constance
Constance was married to the Emperor Henry VI and he pressed his claim to the kingdom from William II's death, but only succeeded in displacing his wife's family in 1194.
Hohenstaufen Dynasty (1194–1266):
1194–1197 Henry I
1198–1250 Frederick I
1212–1217 Henry II, co-king
1250–1254 Conrad
1254–1258 Conradin (continued his claim until his death in 1268, but his guardian Manfred seized power in 1258.)
1258–1266 Manfred
Kings of the Two Sicilies:
After 1282, Sicily was divided into Sicily proper (often called Trinacria diplomatically) and the mainland realm centred on Naples. These two kingdoms were reunited only much later.
Angevin Kings of Naples (1266–1442):
Charles of Anjou conquered Sicily in 1266, but lost the island itself in 1282. Thereafter, his kingdom, with its capital at Naples, is informally called the Kingdom of Naples.
House of Capet-Anjou (1246 creation):
1266–1285 Charles I (actual king of Sicily until 1282)
1285–1309 Charles II the Lame
1309–1343 Robert the Wise
1343–1382 Joan I (died without a direct heir and the throne was disputed)
House of Durazzo: House of Valois-Anjou (1360 creation):
1382–1386 Charles III the Short 1382–1384 Louis I
1386–1414 Ladislaus the Magnanimous 1384–1417 Louis II
1414–1435 Joan II 1417–1426 Louis III (died 1434)
Louis III took the title Duke of Calabria in 1426 and Joan II recognised him as her heir, he predeceased her, but René inherited his claim. Joan then recognised René as her heir and thus united the two claims.
1435–1442 René the Good (died 1480).
René's claim was inherited by either his nephew (Charles IV of Anjou, who died in 1481, leaving his claims to French king Louis XI) or his grandson (René II of Lorraine). The latter's descendants continued to claim the throne of Naples, as did the French kings, down to 1529, and intermittently until 1559. René was deposed by Alfonso V of Aragon, who thus reunited the thrones of Naples and Sicily.
Aragonese Kings of Sicily (1282–1409):
Peter III of Aragon, of the House of Barcelona, conquered Sicily in 1282 and had himself crowned king in opposition to Charles I. The coexistence of the two kingdoms was eventually confirmed by treaty. To distinguish this kingdom from the Kingdom of Sicily on the mainland, it was often referred to as "Sicily beyond the Lighthouse" or Trinacria.
1282–1285 Peter I the Great
1285–1295 James I the Just
1296–1336 Frederick II (III)
1337–1342 Peter II
1342–1355 Louis
1355–1377 Frederick III the Simple
1377–1401 Mary
1395–1409 Martin I the Younger
1409–1410 Martin II the Humane
to Aragon and Spain (1409–1713)
Aragonese Kings of Naples (1442–1500):
1442–1458 Alfonso I
1458–1494 Ferdinand I
1494–1495 Alfonso II
1495–1496 Ferdinand II
1496–1500 Frederick IV
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".
Kingdom of Sicily
Counts:
Sicily was granted to Robert Guiscard as "duke" in 1059 by Pope Nicholas II. The Guiscard granted it as a county to his brother Roger.
Hauteville Dynasty (1071–1130):
1071–1101 Roger I Bosso
1101–1105 Simon
1105–1130 Roger II
Kings:
Roger II received royal investiture from Antipope Anacletus II in 1130 and recognition from Pope Innocent II in 1139.
Hauteville Dynasty (1130–1198):
1130–1154 Roger II
1154–1166 William I the Bad
1166–1189 William II the Good
1189–1194 Tancred
1193–1194 Roger III, co-king
1194 William III
1194–1198 Constance
Constance was married to the Emperor Henry VI and he pressed his claim to the kingdom from William II's death, but only succeeded in displacing his wife's family in 1194.
Hohenstaufen Dynasty (1194–1266):
1194–1197 Henry I
1198–1250 Frederick I
1212–1217 Henry II, co-king
1250–1254 Conrad
1254–1258 Conradin (continued his claim until his death in 1268, but his guardian Manfred seized power in 1258.)
1258–1266 Manfred
Kings of the Two Sicilies:
After 1282, Sicily was divided into Sicily proper (often called Trinacria diplomatically) and the mainland realm centred on Naples. These two kingdoms were reunited only much later.
Angevin Kings of Naples (1266–1442):
Charles of Anjou conquered Sicily in 1266, but lost the island itself in 1282. Thereafter, his kingdom, with its capital at Naples, is informally called the Kingdom of Naples.
House of Capet-Anjou (1246 creation):
1266–1285 Charles I (actual king of Sicily until 1282)
1285–1309 Charles II the Lame
1309–1343 Robert the Wise
1343–1382 Joan I (died without a direct heir and the throne was disputed)
House of Durazzo: House of Valois-Anjou (1360 creation):
1382–1386 Charles III the Short 1382–1384 Louis I
1386–1414 Ladislaus the Magnanimous 1384–1417 Louis II
1414–1435 Joan II 1417–1426 Louis III (died 1434)
Louis III took the title Duke of Calabria in 1426 and Joan II recognised him as her heir, he predeceased her, but René inherited his claim. Joan then recognised René as her heir and thus united the two claims.
1435–1442 René the Good (died 1480).
René's claim was inherited by either his nephew (Charles IV of Anjou, who died in 1481, leaving his claims to French king Louis XI) or his grandson (René II of Lorraine). The latter's descendants continued to claim the throne of Naples, as did the French kings, down to 1529, and intermittently until 1559. René was deposed by Alfonso V of Aragon, who thus reunited the thrones of Naples and Sicily.
Aragonese Kings of Sicily (1282–1409):
Peter III of Aragon, of the House of Barcelona, conquered Sicily in 1282 and had himself crowned king in opposition to Charles I. The coexistence of the two kingdoms was eventually confirmed by treaty. To distinguish this kingdom from the Kingdom of Sicily on the mainland, it was often referred to as "Sicily beyond the Lighthouse" or Trinacria.
1282–1285 Peter I the Great
1285–1295 James I the Just
1296–1336 Frederick II (III)
1337–1342 Peter II
1342–1355 Louis
1355–1377 Frederick III the Simple
1377–1401 Mary
1395–1409 Martin I the Younger
1409–1410 Martin II the Humane
to Aragon and Spain (1409–1713)
Aragonese Kings of Naples (1442–1500):
1442–1458 Alfonso I
1458–1494 Ferdinand I
1494–1495 Alfonso II
1495–1496 Ferdinand II
1496–1500 Frederick IV
Roman I (1391-1394) "Marele şi singur stăpânitor, din mila lui Dumnezeu Domn, Roman Voievod stăpânind Ţara Moldovei de la munte, până la mare".