- Source: List of Neapolitan royal consorts
This is a list of consorts of Naples. Many kings of Naples had more than one wife; they may have divorced their wife or she might have died.
Early Byzantine Duchesses of Naples
See Also: Dukes of Naples
Drosu, wife of Sergius I
Theodora, Roman senatrix, daughter of Giovanni and his wife Theodora, daughter of Theophylacto I of Tusculum & his wife Theodora; wife of John III
Limpiasa of Capua, daughter of Richard I of Capua and Fredesenda of Hauteville, married Sergius VI in April 1078 also held title of Protosebastē
Eva (or Anna) of Gaeta, daughter of Geoffrey Ridell, Duke of Gaeta, wife of John VI, also held title of Protosebastē
Royal consort of Naples
= Capetian House of Anjou, 1266–1382
== House of Anjou-Durazzo, 1382–1435
=The rule of the House of Durazzo was contested by the Dukes of Anjou of the House of Valois, who led several military expeditions into the kingdom. In the end Queen Joanna II, being heirless, recognized Duke Louis III in 1426 as Duke of Calabria and heir. Louis predeceased her, but his brother René inherited his claim. Joanna recognised René as her heir before her death.
= House of Valois-Anjou, 1382–1426 and 1435–1442
=Louis I, Duke of Anjou, was the adopted heir of Joanna I. He succeeded her, de jure, on her death in 1382. His descendants fought the House of Durazzo, mostly in vain, but not without any successes, for the throne until an agreement was reached between Louis III and Joanna II whereby she recognised him and his house as her heirs. René, Louis's brother, succeeded Joanna in 1435.
René had a contestant in King Alfonso V of Aragon who had been previously considered as a successor by Joanna II but had been later discarded in favour of René's brother. Alfonso conquered the kingdom manu militari and René was forced to flee. 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.
= House of Trastámara, 1442–1501
=The French conquered the kingdom in 1501 and King Frederick was taken as a prisoner to France, where he died.
= House of Valois-Orléans, 1501–1504
=The kingdom was conquered by the Spanish in 1504, after the Battle of the Garigliano
= House of Trastamara, 1504–1516
== House of Habsburg, 1516–1700
== House of Bourbon, 1700–1713
=The Spanish lost the kingdom to the Austrians during the War of the Spanish Succession.
= House of Habsburg, 1714–1734
=The kingdom was conquered by a Spanish army in 1734, during the War of the Polish Succession. Together with Sicily Naples was recognized independent under a cadet branch of the Spanish Bourbons by the Treaty of Vienna in 1738.
= House of Bourbon, 1735–1806
== House of Bonaparte and House of Murat, 1806–1815
== House of Bourbon, 1815–1816
=none
In 1816 King Ferdinand IV merged the two Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily into the new Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and took the new title of Ferdinand I, King of the Two Sicilies.
See also
List of monarchs of Naples
Duchess of Calabria
List of royal consorts of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
List of Sicilian consorts
List of Italian consorts
List of Sardinian consorts
List of Aragonese consorts
Royal Consorts of Spain
List of French consorts
List of Angevin consorts
List of Lotharingian consorts
Notes
Sources
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of Neapolitan royal consorts
- List of Neapolitan monarchs
- List of queens of Jerusalem
- List of queens consort of the Two Sicilies
- List of Tuscan consorts
- Duchess of Calabria
- List of Albanian monarchs
- House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies
- Otto, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen
- Joanna of Naples (1478–1518)