Charles I Of Sicily

Charles I (March 1227 - January 7, 1285) was the posthumous son of King Louis VIII of France, created Count of Anjou by his elder brother King Louis IX in 1246, thus founding the second Angevin dynasty. In 1266 Charles was invested by Pope Clement IV with the kingship of Naples and Sicily, in return for expelling Manfred, son of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II. In 1261, Sicily alone had been entrusted to his rule. Manfred's defeat and death in the Battle of Benevento on February 26, 1266 were followed by the defeat and execution of his nephew Conradin, ending the Hohenstaufen rule in Sicily. But in 1282, Sicilian Vespers rose against French officialdom and taxes intended to finance Charles's struggle to restore the Latin Empire at Constantinople. The island was taken by King Peter III of Aragn, who became also Peter I of Sicily, but Charles remained in possession of mainland Naples until his death, acquiring in addition the now empty title of King of Jerusalem in 1277. Charles's dynasty went on to rule Hungary and Poland for a time in the following century, but lost Naples in 1442. The main line in Anjou ended in 1481. In the Divine Comedy Dante sees Charles "singing in concert" with Peter III outside the gate of Purgatory.
width="30%" align="center" | Preceded by:
Manfred
width="40%" align="center" | King of Sicily width="30%" align="center" | Succeeded by:
Peter I
width="30%" align="center" | width="40%" align="center" | King of Naples width="30%" align="center" rowspan="3" | Charles II
width="30%" align="center" | William II width="40%" align="center" | Prince of Achaea
width="30%" align="center" | width="40%" align="center" | Count of Anjou
Charles I of Sicily Charles I of Sicily

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
jacques chirac
history of sweden
history of the european union
erich honecker
400
6000
cape cod canal
colin renfrew, baron renfrew of kaimsthorn
optical rotation
denial of service attack
simplex
hypersphere
orbital revolution
rotation
3 sphere
usagi tsukino
spin (physics)
cricket
nature versus nurture
cricket (insect)
dubh of scotland
william rowan hamilton
sigismund ii of poland
princeton plasma physics laboratory
net profit
battering ram
correlation implies causation (logical fallacy)
jan bos
dixieland
gerard van velde
academy of motion picture arts and sciences
margaret of scotland
gondwana
roman villa
outboard motor
roman invasion of britain
chevrolet
polynesia
biosalinity
entrepreneur
business plan
horoscope
scholasticism
domain name