Ferdinand I (born 1423, Valencia, Spain—died Jan. 25, 1494) was the king of Naples from 1458.
He was the illegitimate son of Alfonso V of Aragon, who, after establishing himself as king of Naples in 1442, had Ferdinand legitimized and recognized as his heir. Succeeding Alfonso in 1458, Ferdinand was soon faced with a baronial revolt in favour of René of Anjou, the pretender to the throne. He overcame the rebellion in 1464, but his rule was threatened by Ottoman expansionism, by the territorial ambitions of other Italian states, and by the rebelliousness of his own barons. Ferdinand, therefore, pursued an opportunist policy. In August 1480 the Turks seized the south Italian port of Otranto; Ferdinand, with the financial assistance of Florence, expelled them in 1481. Later he allied with Florence, and the two powers fought Venice in the War of Ferrara (1482–84).
Ferdinand’s attempts to break the barons’ power resulted in another baronial revolt (1485–87), in which the barons attempted to replace the king with either René II of Lorraine or with Frederick of Aragon, Ferdinand’s second son. Pope Innocent VIII also declared war on Ferdinand but agreed to a separate peace in 1486. Ferdinand finally suppressed the barons by a series of arrests, trials, confiscations, and executions.