Angevin Dynasty
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Assorted References
- branch of Capetian dynasty
- In Capetian dynasty
…controversial succession; the first Capetian house of Anjou, with kings and queens of Naples (1266–1435) and kings of Hungary (1310–82); the house of Évreux, with three kings of Navarre (1328–1425); the second Capetian house of Anjou, with five counts of Provence (1382–1481); and other lesser branches.
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- In Capetian dynasty
history of
Italy
- In Italy: The end of Hohenstaufen rule
…ruled in the centre; the Angevins were in control in Sicily and Naples; and the whole was held together by the strong personality and ambitious dreams of Charles of Anjou (Charles II). As matters turned out, many of his dreams differed but slightly from those of the Hohenstaufens. Moreover, despite…
Read More - In Italy: The southern kingdoms and the Papal States
…between two branches of the Angevin family (those of Durazzo versus those of Provence) that claimed recognition as heirs of the queen. The eventual victor, King Ladislas (1386–1414), benefiting from the turbulence provoked by the Great Schism (see below), was able to boast of considerable military success in central Italy…
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- Naples
- In Naples: Naples from the Angevins to the Risorgimento
In 1266 establishment of the Angevin dynasty in Naples renewed the city’s importance—formidably proclaimed by erection of the Castel Nuovo and the Sant’Elmo fortress. The Angevin kings and their Aragonese successors attracted to Naples great figures of Italian thought and literature and the northern architects and artists whose genius survives…
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- In Naples: Naples from the Angevins to the Risorgimento
- Sicilian Vespers
- In Sicilian Vespers
against Charles I, Angevin king of Naples and Sicily; it precipitated a French-Aragonese struggle for possession of that kingdom. Its name derives from a riot that took place in a church outside Palermo at the hour of vespers on Easter Monday, March 30, 1282. Peter III of Aragon,…
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- In Sicilian Vespers
- Two Sicilies
- In Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
…divided in 1282 between the Angevin (French) dynasty on the mainland and the Aragonese (Spanish) dynasty on the island, both of which claimed the title of king of Sicily. In 1443 Alfonso V of Aragon, on reuniting the two portions, took the title of rex Utriusque Siciliae (king of the…
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- In Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
- Anjou
- In Anjou: First dynasty of counts
Under one of the sons of Robert the Strong, Anjou was entrusted to a certain Ingelger, who became the founder of the first Angevin dynasty. Ingelger’s son Fulk I the Red rid the country of the Normans and enlarged his domains by…
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- In Anjou: First dynasty of counts
- Hungary
- In Hungary: The Angevin kings
Both Angevin kings (dynastic name derived from Anjou) owed much to the wealth they derived from the gold mines of Transylvania and northern Hungary, some 35 to 40 percent of which went to the king, enabling him to maintain a splendid court. Spared for two generations…
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- In Hungary: The Angevin kings
- Provence
- In Provence
…when Provence passed to the Angevin ruler Charles of Anjou, brother of King Louis IX. The province was at first subordinated to the Italian interests of these Angevin counts of Provence, who were also kings of Naples, but their reign witnessed the development of many of the region’s characteristic political…
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- In Provence