Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. The Kingdom of Naples (Latin: Regnum Neapolitanum; Italian: Regno di Napoli; Neapolitan: Regno 'e Napule) was a state that ruled the part of the Italian Peninsula south of the Papal States between 1282 and 1816.

  3. In 661 Naples, with the permission of the emperor Constans II, was ruled by a local duke, Basilius, whose allegiance to the emperor soon became merely nominal. In 763 the duke Stephen II switched his allegiance from Constantinople to the Pope .

  4. Aug 8, 2024 · Naples was seized by the French, and Ferdinand fled to Sicily. On January 24, 1799, the Parthenopean Republic was proclaimed but was left unprotected. The city of Naples, abandoned by the French, fell to Ferdinand’s forces on June 13, 1799, after desperate resistance by the patriots.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The following is a list of rulers of the Kingdom of Naples, from its first separation from the Kingdom of Sicily to its merger with the same into the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. Kingdom of Naples (1282–1501) House of Anjou.

  6. 4 days ago · Pedro de Toledo (viceroy 1532–53) reorganized the Kingdom of Naples and placed it firmly within the Spanish monarchical orbit dominated by Castile. Within the kingdom, he oversaw the eradication of the pro-French barons and attempted to install centralized, absolutist policies.

  7. 6 days ago · Although maintaining his court at Palermo, the Holy Roman emperor Frederick II fortified Naples, founded the university there in 1224, and nurtured, in a rebellious ambience, the city’s intellectual life. Naples - Ancient City, Mediterranean Port, Vesuvius: Naples was founded about 600 bce as Neapolis (“New City”), close to the more ...

  8. May 17, 2018 · The early modern kingdom of Naples [2], whose twelve provinces compromised the southern third of the Italian peninsula, was the military and fiscal cornerstone of Spain [3]'s Mediterranean empire from its conquest in December 1503.