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Topic: Ferdinand I of Naples



  
 Ferdinand II, king of Aragon. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
or Ferdinand the Catholic, 1452–1516, king of Aragón (1479–1516), king of Castile and León (as Ferdinand V, 1474–1504), king of Sicily (1468–1516), and king of Naples (1504–16).
For the rest of his life Ferdinand continued his regency over Castile, first in the name of Joanna, who became insane, and then for his grandson, later Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. When Ferdinand died, he left his grandson a united Spain, as well as Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, and an overseas empire.
Many of Ferdinand’s policies had long-lasting effects, especially the expulsion of the Jews and the Muslims, many of whom settled in N Africa, the search for American gold, and the conversion of large agricultural areas into grazing lands for the benefit of the wool industry.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/fe/Ferdi2Ara.html   (574 words)

  
 Around Naples Encyclopedia 22
A common thread in the expulsion of the Jesuits in Spain and then Naples is that Charles III of Bourbon was the King of Spain when the Jesuits were forced to leave that nation, and his son, Ferdinand IV was the king of Naples when the same thing happened there.
The Jesuits didn't return to the Kingdom of Naples until 1827—well after the initial wave of anti-Jesuit feeling and well after the ultimate anti-cleric, Napoleon (acting through his puppet-king, Murat), had caused all monastic orders in Naples to be abolished.
I have read any number of times that the "Jesuits were expelled from Naples in 1773" and have even referred to that episode in some of the items I write.
http://nile.ed.umuc.edu/~jmatthew/naples/blog22.htm   (14696 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Ferdinand II (of Naples)
Ferdinand II (of Naples) (1469-96), king of Naples (1495-96).
Search for books about your topic, "Ferdinand II (of Naples)"
Son of Ferdinand II, king of the Two Sicilies, and grandson of Francis I, he was the...
http://encarta.msn.com/Ferdinand_II_(of_Naples).html   (194 words)

  
 Naples - Local business directory. Naples .
Ferdinand II of Naples Ferdinand II (1469-1496), king of Naples, was the grandson of Ferdinand I, and son of Alphonso II.
Ferdinand I of Naples Ferdinand I (1423 - 1494), also called Don Ferrante, was the King of Naples and the natural son of Alfonso V of Aragon and I of Sicily and Naples.
Joan I of Naples Queen Joan I, born in 1327 as the Countess of Provence, ruled Naples and Jerusalem from 1343 to 1381.
http://www.localbizus.com/florida/naples/naples-florida.html   (676 words)

  
 Ferdinand IV, King of Naples by MENGS, Anton Raphael
Ferdinand I (1751-1825) king of the Two Sicilies (1816-25) who earlier (1759-1806), as Ferdinand IV of Naples, led his kingdom in its fight against the French Revolution and its liberal ideas.
The Republic was overthrown in June 1799, and Ferdinand returned to Naples, where he put to death the Republic's supporters, violating the terms of their surrender.
She brought about the downfall of the former regent Bernardo Tanucci and engaged Naples in the Austro-English coalition against the French Revolution in 1793.
http://www.kfki.hu/~arthp/html/m/mengs/ferdinan.html   (423 words)

  
 Ferdinand - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ferdinand II of Naples - 1469-1496; became king 1495.
Ferdinand III of Naples - see Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Franz Ferdinand, archduke of Austria, assassinated in Sarajevo 1914.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand   (369 words)

  
 ART / 4 / 2DAY
The Republic was overthrown in June 1799, and Ferdinand returned to Naples, where he put to death the Republic's supporters, violating the terms of their surrender.
Ferdinand I (1751-1825) king of the Two Sicilies (1816-1825) who earlier (1759-1806), as Ferdinand IV of Naples, led his kingdom in its fight against the French Revolution and its liberal ideas.
She brought about the downfall of the former regent Bernardo Tanucci and engaged Naples in the Austro-English coalition against the French Revolution in 1793.
http://www.safran-arts.com/42day/art/art4mar/art0322.html   (5513 words)

  
 Ferdinand II of Naples: Information From Answers.com
Ferdinand II of Naples is mentioned in the following topics:
He was the grandson of Ferdinand I, and son of Alphonso II and heir of the Brienne claim to kingdom of Jerusalem.
He had married his half-aunt Giovanna of Naples in 1496, shortly before his death (she was the daughter of his grandfather Ferdinand and his second wife, Joanna of Aragon; Giovanna, born in 1478, a late child of a second marriage, was actually younger than Ferdinand).
http://www.answers.com/topic/ferdinand-ii-of-naples   (372 words)

  
 Ferdinand
Ferdinand II of Naples - 1469-1496; became king 1495.
Ferdinand III of Naples - see Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies - 1810-1859; became king 1830.
http://www.fastload.org/fe/Ferdinand.html   (372 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Naples, kingdom of (Italian History) - Encyclopedia
His successor in Naples, Ferdinand I (Ferrante), suppressed (1485) a conspiracy of the powerful feudal lords.
In 1816 Ferdinand merged Sicily and Naples and styled himself Ferdinand I, king of the Two Sicilies.
Refusing to give up their claim to Sicily, Charles and his successors warred with the house of AragOn, which held the island, until in 1373 Queen Joanna I of Naples formally renounced her claim.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/N/Naples-k.html   (372 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: List of monarchs of Naples and Sicily
Ferdinand I (1423 - January 25, 1494), also called Don Ferrante, was the King of Naples from 1458 to 1494.
Ferdinand I (formerly Ferdinand IV of Naples and III of Sicily) 1815-1825
Alphonso II of Naples (November 4, 1448 - December 18, 1495) was King of Naples from January 25, 1494 to 1495.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/List-of-monarchs-of-Naples-and-Sicily   (4074 words)

  
 Ferdinand
Ferdinand II of Naples Ferdinand II (Ferdinand I, and son of Alphonso II.
Ferdinand of Austria Imperial Majesty Ferdinand I Karl Leopold Joseph Franz Marchlin Emperor of Austria King of Hungary...
Ferdinand, Indiana Ferdinand is a town located in 2000 census, the town had a total population of 2,277.
http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/ferdinand.html   (4074 words)

  
 Ferdinand - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ferdinand II of Naples - 1469 - 1496 ; became king 1495.
Ferdinand III of Naples - see Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Franz Ferdinand, archduke of Austria, assassinated in Sarajevo.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand   (4074 words)

  
 Ferdinand VII --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - Your gateway to all Britannica has to offer!
The Spanish populace rose against the French invaders in the name of Ferdinand, who became known as “the Desired.” In 1812 independent Spaniards adopted a liberal constitution, which Ferdinand overthrew on his return as king in 1813 to rule in an absolutist style.
Charles ruled Spain, Naples and Sicily, the duchy of Milan, and the Netherlands and was the imperial lord of Germany as well as of the New...
(March 29, 1830), decree of Ferdinand VII of Spain, which promulgated his predecessor Charles IV's unpublished decision of 1789 revoking the Salic law of succession, which had denied royal succession to females.
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9364334   (4074 words)

  
 Ferdinand I of Naples
Ferdinand I of Naples should not be confused with Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies, a latter king of Naples.
Alphonso II of Naples (November 4, 1448- December 18, 1495).
Giovanna of Naples (1478 - August 27, 1518).
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/F/Ferdinand-I-of-Naples.htm   (907 words)

  
 Index to royal Genealogical Data - ordered by forename - part 37
Ferdinand (Ferrante) I of Naples, King of Naples
Ferdinand (Ferrante) II of Naples, King of Naples, b.
Ferdinand IV of Naples, King of Naples and Sicily de Bourbon, b.
http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/genealogy/royal/gedFx37.html   (907 words)

  
 Karl V (1500-1558)
Holy Roman emperor (1519–56), king of Spain (as Charles I, 1516–56), and archduke of Austria (as Charles I, 1519–21), who inherited a Spanish and Habsburg empire extending across Europe from Spain and the Netherlands to Austria and the Kingdom of Naples and reaching overseas to Spanish America.
Charles was the son of Philip I the Handsome, king of Castile, and Joan the Mad, and the grandson of Emperor Maximilian I. and Mary of Burgundy, as well as of the “Catholic Kings” Isabella I the Catholic, of Castile, and Ferdinand II the Catholic, of Aragon.
From Africa, the Emperor sailed to Naples, entering Rome in 1536 to deliver his famous political address before Pope Paul III and the Sacred College of Cardinals, in which he challenged the King of France (who had meanwhile invaded Savoy and taken Turin) to personal combat.
http://www.hfac.uh.edu/gbrown/philosophers/leibniz/BritannicaPages/EmperorKarl-V/EmperorKarl-V.html   (2764 words)

  
 Around Naples Encyclopedia 23
You're at the elbow of the ambassador in Naples in 1816 as he gets instructions from President Madison on pressing Ferdinand IV for reparations from Naples for an episode in which Murat, ruling for the French in Naples a few years earlier, had confiscated American goods and ships in Naples*.
Clemency was not to be, and Ruffo was then genuinely outraged when his guarantee was violated by the King of Naples, Ferdinand (certainly at the behest of Queen Caroline), who had the refugees removed from ships in the harbor, returned to prison, and put on trial.
Bendetto Croce, who was anxious to have material from original sources researched and published, since many of the relevant documents that had resided in the archives in Naples had been destroyed by the Germans when they retreated from Naples in 1943.
http://faculty.ed.umuc.edu/~jmatthew/naples/blog23.htm   (2764 words)

  
 Ferdinand II of Aragon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ferdinand II (Fernando de Aragón in Spanish and Ferran d'Aragó in Catalan), nicknamed the Catholic ( March 10, 1452 – June 23, 1516) was king of Aragon, Castile, Sicily, Naples, Valencia, Sardinia and Navarre and Count of Barcelona.
Although the French were victorious against Venice at the Battle of Agnadello, the League soon fell apart, as both the Pope and Ferdinand became suspicious of French intentions.
In 1508, war resumed in Italy, this time against Venice, which all the other powers on the peninsula, including Louis XII, Ferdinand, Maximilian, and Pope Julius II joined together against as the League of Cambrai.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_V_of_Spain   (2764 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Naples
Alfonso II, knowing the hatred in which he was held, abdicated in favour of his son Ferdinand II; vainly, however, for almost without striking a blow, Charles became master of the kingdom.
Louis III (of Anjou) declared war against her in 1420, on which account she adopted Alfonso V, son of Ferdinand of Aragon and Sicily; but as that prince wished the immediate possession of the kingdom, Joanna adopted Louis III, and after his death in 1434 his brother, René.
Naples then became the capital of the kingdom, to which, however, Peter III of Aragon laid claim on account of his marriage to a daughter of Manfred.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10683a.htm   (3450 words)

  
 boys clothing: European royalty -- Italian states Naples
Ferdinand II Francis II Francis II abdicated (1861) at which time the Kingdom of Naples became part of the Kingdom of Italy under King Victor Emanuel.
Charles IV Carlos de Borbon, brother of Ferdinand VI of Spain, conquered Naples and Sicily, and became Charles IV, King of the Two Sicilies.
Carlos de Borbon, brother of Ferdinand VI of Spain, conquered Naples and Sicily, and became Charles IV, King of the Two Sicilies.
http://histclo.hispeed.com/royal/ita/states/is-nap.htm   (459 words)

  
 Naples
Ferdinand's return was marked by mass executions of Neapolitans who had sided with the French.
Influenced by his wife and by Acton, Ferdinand allied Naples with the coalition opposing France in the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars.
Became king of the Two Sicilies as Ferdinand I (1816); his tyrannical and absolutist rule brought on revolution of 1820; forced to grant a constitution; with aid of Austria overthrew constitutional government (1821); thereafter an era of cruel vengeance and repression.
http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/naples.htm   (459 words)

  
 Kingdom of Naples - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles VIII expelled Alphonso II of Naples from Naples in 1495, but his cousin, Ferdinand II of Aragon had resumed control of the kingdom by 1504.
At his death in 1458, the kingdom was again separated and Naples was inherited by Ferdinand I of Naples, Alfons' illegitimate son.
Charles, however, maintained his possessions on the mainland, customarily known as the "Kingdom of Naples." Charles and his Angevin successors maintained a claim to Sicily, warring against the Aragonese until in 1373, Queen Joan I of Naples formally renounced the claim.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Naples   (429 words)

  
 Charles V
Charles was the son of Philip I, king of Castile, and Joanna the Mad; maternal grandson of Ferdinand V of Castile and Isabella I; paternal grandson of the Habsburg Holy Roman emperor Maximilian I; and great-grandson of Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy.
In 1556 Charles announced his intention to abdicate the imperial crown in favor of his brother, Ferdinand I, who officially became emperor in 1558.
In January 1526 he was forced to sign the Treaty of Madrid, relinquishing his claim to Italy and abandoning Burgundy.
http://www.angelfire.com/yt/elemmakil/charlesv.html   (999 words)

  
 Two Sicilies, kingdom of the on Encyclopedia.com
The reactionary regimes of his successors Francis I, Ferdinand II, and Francis II finally ended when Sicily and Naples fell to the forces of Garibaldi in 1860.
Ferdinand IV of Naples (Ferdinand III of Sicily) officially merged the two kingdoms in 1816 and called himself Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies.
The name Two Sicilies was used in the Middle Ages to mean the kingdoms of Sicily and of Naples (see Sicily and Naples, kingdom of).
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/t/twos1icil.asp   (999 words)

  
 Timeline 1476-1499
1490 Christopher Columbus was permitted to make his proposal to King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain.
King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella took the town of Grenada, the last Moslem kingdom in Spain.
The combined Catholic forces of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile drove out the last of the Berbers from Spain.
http://timelines.ws/1476_1499.HTML   (999 words)

  
 Spain
Ferdinand V, called The Catholic (1452-1516), king of Castile (1474-1504); as Ferdinand II he was also king of Sicily (1468-1516) and of Aragón (1479-1516); as Ferdinand III, king of Naples (1504-1516).
Ferdinand V (1452-1516) King-consort of Castile from 1474 (as Ferdinand II), King of Aragon from 1479, and Ferdinand III of Naples from 1504.
The liberal constitution of 1812, which the king had set aside, was restored, and Ferdinand was imprisoned.
http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/Spain.htm   (6847 words)

  
 Ferdinand - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ferdinand II of Naples - 1469-1496; became king 1495.
Ferdinand III of Naples - see Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Franz Ferdinand, archduke of Austria, assassinated in Sarajevo 1914.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand   (368 words)

  
 Ferdinand
Ferdinand II of Naples - 1469-1496; became king 1495.
Ferdinand III of Naples - see Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies - 1810-1859; became king 1830.
http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/f/fe/ferdinand.html   (368 words)

  
 Ferdinand Online Research :: Information about Ferdinand
Ferdinand II of Naples- 1469 - 1496 ; became king 1495.
Ferdinand III of Naples- see Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria, archduke of Austria, assassinated in Sarajevo 1914.
http://www.in-northcarolina.com/search/Ferdinand_Schrner.html   (397 words)

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