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词条 List of monarchs of Sicily
释义

  1. Emirs of Sicily

  2. Counts of Sicily

     House of Hauteville, 1071-1130 

  3. Kings of Sicily

     House of Hauteville, 1130–1198  House of Hohenstaufen, 1194–1266  Plantagenet Dynasty  Capetian House of Anjou, 1266–1282  House of Barcelona, 1282–1410  House of Trastámara, 1412–1516  House of Habsburg, 1516-1700  House of Bourbon, 1700-1713, during War of the Spanish Succession  House of Savoy, 1713–1720  House of Habsburg, 1720–1735  House of Bourbon 1735–1816 

  4. Family tree

  5. See also

The monarchs of Sicily ruled from the establishment of the County of Sicily in 1071 until the "perfect fusion" in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in 1816.

The origin of the Sicilian monarchy are in the Norman conquest of southern Italy occurred between the 11th and 12th century. Sicily, which was ruled as an Islamic emirate for at least two centuries, was invaded in 1071 by Norman House of Hauteville, who conquered Palermo and established a feudal county. The House of Hauteville completed their conquest of Sicily in 1091.

In 1130, the County of Sicily and the County of Apulia, both led by two distinct branches of the House of Hauteville, merged in the Kingdom of Sicily, and Count Roger II was crowned king by Antipope Anacletus II.

Over the centuries, Sicily passed in the hands of several foreign authorities: from 1194 to 1254 was part of the Holy Roman Empire; from 1282 to 1714 became a personal union of the Crown of Aragon; from 1713 to 1720 was a personal union of the Duchy of Savoy and finally, from 1720 to 1735, was one of the crown of the Habsburg Monarchy.

In 1282, after the Sicilian Vespers, the kingdom split in two separated states: the properly named Ultra Sicily (Siciliae ultra Pharum, what means "Sicily over the Strait") and the Hither Sicily (Siciliae citra) or commonly named Kingdom of Naples. The two states stylized themselves always as "Kingdom of Sicily", until the partial unification 1516 when Charles II of Spain inherited both lands as "King of Naples and Sicily". The definitive unification there was in 1816, when Ferdinand IV and III unified the two entities in a single state, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.

Emirs of Sicily

See Emirate of Sicily

Counts of Sicily

Sicily was granted, pending its Christian reconquest, to Robert Guiscard as "duke" in 1059 by Pope Nicholas II. The Guiscard granted it as a county to his brother Roger.

House of Hauteville, 1071-1130

{{Monarchs - table header}}
|-
| Roger I
1071–1101 || ||1031
son of Tancred of Hauteville and Fredisenda|| Judith of Évreux
1061
4 children

Eremburga of Mortain
1077
8 children

Adelaide del Vasto
1087
4 children|| 1101
Mileto
aged 70
|-
| Simon
1101–1105 || ||1093
son of Roger I of Sicily and Adelaide del Vasto || never married || 1105
Mileto
aged 12
|-
| Roger II
1105–1130 || || 22 December 1095
Mileto
son of Roger I of Sicily and Adelaide del Vasto || Elvira of Castile
1117
6 children

Sibyl of Burgundy
1149
2 children

Beatrix of Rethel
1151
1 child || 26 February 1154
Palermo
aged 58
|}

Kings of Sicily

Roger II received royal investiture from Antipope Anacletus II in 1130 and recognition from Pope Innocent II in 1139. The Kingdom of Sicily, which by then comprised not only the island, but also the southern third of the Italian peninsula, rapidly expanded itself to include Malta and the Mahdia, the latter if only briefly.

House of Hauteville, 1130–1198

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Roger II
1130–1154 || || 22 December 1095
Mileto
son of Roger I of Sicily and Adelaide del Vasto || Elvira of Castile
1117
6 children

Sibyl of Burgundy
1149
2 children

Beatrix of Rethel
1151
1 child || 26 February 1154
Palermo
aged 58
|-
| William I the Bad
1154–1166 || || 1131
son of Roger II and Elvira of Castile|| Margaret of Navarre
4 children|| 7 May 1166
Palermo
aged 35
|-
| William II the Good
1166–1189 || || 1155
son of William I and Margaret of Navarre|| Joan of England
February 1177
1 child|| 11 November 1189
Palermo
aged 34
|-
| Tancred I
1189–1194
(joint rule)|| || 1138
illegitimate son of Roger III, Duke of Apulia|| Sibylla of Acerra
6 children|| 20 February 1194
Palermo
aged 56
|-
| Roger III
1193
(joint rule)|| ||1175
son of Tancred of Sicily and Sibylla of Acerra || Irene Angelina
no children || 24 December 1193
aged 18
|-
| William III
1194 || || 1190
son of Tancred and Sibylla of Acerra|| never married||1198
aged 8
|-
| Constance I
1194–1198|| || 2 November 1154
daughter of Roger II and Beatrix of Rethel|| Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor
1184
1 child|| 27 November 1198
Palermo
aged 44
|-
|}

Constance was married to the Emperor Henry VI and he pressed his claim to the kingdom from William II's death, but only succeeded in displacing his wife's family in 1194.

There is evidence that, during the baronial revolt of 1197, there was an attempt to make Count Jordan Lupin of Bovino king in opposition to Henry VI. He may even have been crowned and seems to have had the support of Constance, who had turned against her husband. In the end he was captured and executed. He is accepted as a pretender to the throne by modern historians Evelyn Jamison and Thomas Curtis Van Cleve.

House of Hohenstaufen, 1194–1266

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Henry I
1194–1197 || || November 1165
Nijmegen
son of Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor and Beatrix of Burgundy ||Constance of Sicily
1184
1 child|| 28 September 1197
Messina
aged 32
|-
| Frederick I
1198–1250
(joint rule)|| ||26 December 1194
Jesi
son of Henry I and Constance I||Constance of Aragon
15 August 1209
1 child

Yolande of Jerusalem
9 November 1225
2 children

Isabella of England
15 July 1235
4 children|| 13 December 1250
Torremaggiore
aged 55
|-
| Henry II
1212–1217
(joint rule)|| || 1211
Sicily
son of Frederick II and Constance of Aragon ||Margaret of Austria
29 November 1225
2 children|| 12 February 1242
Martirano
aged 30
|-
| Conrad I
1250–1254 || ||25 April 1228
Andria
son of Frederick II and Yolande of Jerusalem ||Elisabeth of Bavaria
1 September 1246
1 child|| 21 May 1254
Lavello
aged 26
|-
| Conrad II the Younger
1254–1268|| ||25 March 1252
Wolfstein
son of Conrad I and Elisabeth of Bavaria ||never married||29 October 1268
Naples
aged 16
(executed)
|-
| Manfred
1258–1266|| ||1232
Illegitimate son of Frederick I ||Beatrice of Savoy
21 April 1247
1 child

Helena Angelina Doukaina
9 November 1255
5 children||26 February 1266
Battle of Benevento
aged 34
(killed in action)
|-
|}

Manfred was regent of Sicily for his nephew, the child Conrad II ("Conradin"), but took the crown in 1258, and continued to fight to keep the kingdom under the Hohenstaufen. In 1254 the pope, having declared the kingdom a papal possession, offered the crown to the King of England's son, Edmund Crouchback, but the English never succeeded in taking the kingdom. In 1262 the pope reversed his previous decision and granted the kingdom to the King of France's brother, Charles of Anjou, who succeeded in dispossessing Manfred in 1266. Conradin continued his claim to the throne until his death by decapitation perpetrated by Charles of Anjou in 1268.

Plantagenet Dynasty

Edmund Crouchback, son of King Henry III of England, claimed the Crown of Sicily between 1254 and 1263; the claim was taken very seriously by both him and his father, but was completely ineffectual.

Capetian House of Anjou, 1266–1282

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Charles I
1266–1282 || || 21 March 1226
son of Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile || Beatrice of Provence
31 January 1246
7 children

Margaret of Burgundy
18 November 1268
1 child || 7 January 1285
Foggia
aged 58
|-
|}

Peter III of Aragon, Manfred's son in law, of the House of Barcelona, conquered the island of Sicily from Charles I in 1282 and had himself crowned King of Sicily. Thereafter the old Kingdom of Sicily was centred on the mainland, with capital at Naples, and although informally called Kingdom of Naples it was still known formally as "Kingdom of Sicily". Thus, there were two "Sicilies" — the island kingdom, however, was often called "Sicily beyond the Lighthouse" or "Trinacria", by terms of a treaty between the two states.

House of Barcelona, 1282–1410

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Peter I the Great (joint rule)
1282–1285 || || 1240
Valencia
son of James I of Aragon and Yolanda of Hungary || Constance of Sicily
13 June 1262
6 children || 2 November 1285
Vilafranca del Penedès
aged 45
|-
| Constance II (joint rule)
1276–1285 || || 1249
Sicily
daughter of Manfred of Sicily and Beatrice of Savoy || Peter I the Great
13 June 1262
6 children || 9 April 1302
Barcelona , Spain
aged 52 or 53
|-
| James the Just
1285–1296|| ||10 August 1267
Valencia
son of Peter I and Constance of Sicily|| Isabella of Castile
1 December 1291
No children

Blanche of Anjou
29 October 1295
10 children

Marie de Lusignan
15 June 1315
No children

Elisenda de Montcada
25 December 1322
No children || 5 November 1327
Barcelona
aged 60
|-
| Frederick II
1296–1337 || || 13 December 1272
Barcelona
son of Peter I and Constance of Sicily|| Eleanor of Anjou
17 May 1302
9 children || 25 June 1337
Palermo
aged 65
|-
| Peter II
1337–1342 || ||July 1305
son of Frederick II and Eleanor of Anjou|| Elisabeth of Carinthia
23 April 1322
9 children ||15 August 1342
Calascibetta
aged 37
|-
| Louis
1342–1355 || ||1337
Catania
son of Peter II and Elisabeth of Carinthia|| Never married||16 October 1355
Aci Castello
aged 18
|-
| Frederick III the Simple
1355–1377 || ||1 September 1341
Catania
son of Peter II and Elisabeth of Carinthia|| Constance of Aragon
11 April 1361
1 child

Antonia of Balzo
17 January 1372
No children || 27 January 1377
Messina
aged 36
|-
| Maria
1377–1401
(joint rule)|| ||1363
Catania
daughter of Frederick III and Constance of Aragon|| Martin I of Sicily
1390
1 child || 25 May 1401
Lentini
aged 38
|-
| Martin I the Younger
1390–1409
(joint rule)|| ||1374
son of Martin I of Aragon and Maria of Luna|| Maria of Sicily
1390
1 child || 25 July 1409
Cagliari
aged 35
|-
| Martin II the Elder
1409–1410 || || 1356
Girona
son of Peter IV of Aragon and Eleanor of Sicily||Maria de Luna
13 June 1372
4 children

Margarita of Aragon-Prades
1409
No children||31 May 1410
Barcelona
aged 54
|-
|}

Martin I died heirless in 1409 and the kingdom was inherited by his father who united it to the Crown of Aragon.

House of Trastámara, 1412–1516

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Ferdinand I the Honest
1412–1416 || || 27 November 1380
Medina del Campo
son of John I of Castile and Eleanor of Aragon||Eleanor of Alburquerque
1394
8 children|| 2 April 1416
Igualada
aged 36
|-
| Alfonso the Magnanimous
1416–1458 || || 1396
Medina del Campo
son of Ferdinand I and Eleanor of Alburquerque||Maria of Castile
1415
No children|| 27 June 1458
Naples
aged 52
|-
| John the Great
1458–1479|| || 29 June 1397
Medina del Campo
son of Ferdinand I and Eleanor of Alburquerque|| Blanche I of Navarre
6 November 1419
4 children

Juana Enríquez
2 children ||20 January 1479
Barcelona
aged 81
|-
| Ferdinand II the Catholic
1479–1516|| || 10 March 1452
son of John II of Aragon and Juana Enriquez|| Isabella I of Castile
19 October 1469
5 children

Germaine of Foix
1505
No children ||23 January 1516
Madrigalejo
aged 63
|-
| Joanna the Mad
1516–1555|| || 6 November 1479
daughter of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile|| Philip IV of Burgundy
1496
6 children|| 12 April 1555
Madrigalejo
aged 75
|-
|}

House of Habsburg, 1516-1700

{{Monarchs - table header}}
|-
| Charles II
1516–1554 || || 24 February 1500
Ghent
son of Philip I of Castile and Joanna of Castile||Isabella of Portugal
10 March 1526
3 children ||21 September 1558
Yuste
aged 58
|-
| Philip II of Spain
1554–1598 || || 21 May 1527
Valladolid
son of Charles II and Isabella of Portugal||Maria of Portugal
1543
1 child

Mary I of England
1554
No children

Elisabeth of Valois
1559
2 children

Anna of Austria
4 May 1570
5 children||13 September 1598
Madrid
aged 71
|-
| Philip II
1598–1621|| || 14 April 1578
Madrid
son of Philip I and Anna of Austria||Margaret of Austria
18 April 1599
5 children||31 March 1621
Madrid
aged 42
|-
| Philip III
1621–1665|| || 8 April 1605
Valladolid
son of Philip II and Margaret of Austria||Elisabeth of Bourbon
1615
7 children

Mariana of Austria
1649
5 children

||17 September 1665
Madrid
aged 60
|-
| Charles III
1665–1700|| || 6 November 1661
Madrid
son of Philip III and Mariana of Austria||Maria Luisa of Orléans
19 November 1679
No children

Maria Anna of Neuburg
14 May 1690
No children

||1 November 1700
Madrid
aged 38
|-
|}

House of Bourbon, 1700-1713, during War of the Spanish Succession

{{Monarchs - table header}}
|-
| Philip IV
1700–1713|| || 19 December 1683
Versailles
son of Louis, Dauphin of France and Maria Anna of Bavaria||Maria Luisa of Savoy
2 November 1701
4 children

Elisabeth of Parma
24 December 1714
7 children

||9 July 1746
Madrid
aged 62
|-
|}

At the end of the War of the Spanish Succession, by the Treaty of Utrecht, Sicily was ceded to the Duke of Savoy.

House of Savoy, 1713–1720

{{Main|Kingdom of Sicily under Savoy}}{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Victor Amadeus
1713–1720 || || 14 May 1666
Turin
son of Charles Emmanuel II, Duke of Savoy and Marie Jeanne Baptiste de Savoie-Nemours||Anne Marie of Orléans
10 April 1684
6 children||31 October 1732
Moncalieri
aged 66
|-
|}

The Spanish invaded the kingdom in 1718 during the War of the Quadruple Alliance. The Duke of Savoy ceded it to Austria in 1720 by the Treaty of The Hague.

House of Habsburg, 1720–1735

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Charles IV
1720–1735 || || 1 October 1685
Vienna
son of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor and Eleonore-Magdalena of Pfalz-Neuburg||Elisabeth Christine
1 August 1708
4 children|| 20 October 1740
Vienna
aged 55
|-
|}

Charles I, Duke of Parma conquered the kingdom during the War of the Polish Succession. At the end of the war Sicily was ceded to the new Charles V of Sicily.

House of Bourbon 1735–1816

{{Monarchs - table header}}
| Charles V
1735–1759 || || 20 January 1716
Madrid
son of Philip IV and Elizabeth of Parma||Maria Amalia of Saxony
1738
13 children||14 December 1788
Madrid
aged 72
|-
| Ferdinand III
1759–1816|| || 12 January 1751
Naples
son of Charles V and Maria Amalia of Saxony||Marie Caroline of Austria
12 May 1768
17 children

Lucia Migliaccio of Floridia
27 November 1814
No children||4 January 1825
Naples
aged 73
|-
|}

In 1816 the Kingdom of Naples and the Kingdom of Sicily were merged as the new Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.

Family tree

{{Main|Kings of Sicily family tree}}

See also

  • List of Sicilian consorts
  • List of viceroys of Sicily
  • List of Counts of Apulia and Calabria
  • List of monarchs of Naples
  • List of monarchs of the Two Sicilies
{{Sicily}}{{Former monarchies Italian peninsula}}{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}}{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Monarchs Of Sicily}}

5 : Lists of monarchs|History of Sicily|Kings of Sicily|History of Naples|Monarchs of Naples

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