Carl I Neapolis Cyning
Carl I Cyning (21 Hrēþmōnaþ 1227 to 7 Æfter Gēole 1285), se hātte ēac Carl of Angeowe, wæs Sicilie Cyning be gehiersumunge of 1266,[1] oððæt ðe he fōn þon riht on þære īege of þæm Pāpan in bēc in 1262. he wæs ahwearfen of þæm īeglande æfter þāra the Sicilisc Uespers of 1282. Þæreft bannede he his crafing þæs īeglandes and his titul þærto ac his rīce wæs restricted to the peninsular possessions of þæs rīces, mid his cynestōle in Neapolis (and for þis þing nemneþ man hine Neapolis Cyning æfter 1282, and swa swa his æftergengan).
Carl I | |
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Cynedom | 6 Æfter Gēole 1266 – 7 Æfter Gēole 1285 |
Foregenga | Manfrið |
Æftergenga | Petrus I(on Sicilie þære īege) Carl II(on oðrum landum) |
Bryd | Beatrice of Profentse Margaret Burgenda Hlāfdige |
Bearn | Hlōðwig Sicilie Æþeling Blanche Sicilie Hlāfdige Beatrice Constantinoplis Cāserin Carl II Neapolis Cyning Philippus Sicilie Æþeling Hroðbeorht Sicilie Æþeling Elisabeþ Ungara Cwēn Margaret Sicilie Hlāfdige |
Hus | Angeow-Sicilia |
Fæder | Hlōðwig VIII Francena Cyning |
Modor | Blanche of Castile |
Geboren | 21 Hreðmonað 1226, 1226 Francland |
Deaþ | 7 Æfter Gēole 1285 |
Carl wæs se giengsta sunu of Hlōðwig VIII Francena Cyning and Blanche of Castile, and þȳ wæs he Hlōðwig IX Cyninges giengra brōðor and ēac brōðor of Alfonso II of Toulouse. He ahiersumode Sicilia þæt Cynerīce fram þæm Hohenstaufen Hūs and he begeat land ymbe Wendelsǣs ēasternum landum. Se Gewinn þāra Sicilianiscan Uespers forced him to abandon his plans to þe he gesomne þæt Læden Rīce.
He ǣwnode Beatrice of Profentse, sēo wæs ierfe of Raymond Berengar IV of Proventse and þærbe wæs he Eorl of Profentse and Forcalquier fram 1246. In 1247 dubbode Hlōðwig IX Cyning his brōðor hine þe Carl biþ Eorl of Angeowe and Eorl of Mans, under þæm Frencisan cynedōme. Be fyrdþræce and gebanne weard he Albanie Cyning in 1272 and be bycgan Ierusalem Cyning in 1277. Be Willelmes II of Villehardouin iefegewrite iefde Carl Cyning Achaea swa bregorīce in 1278.
Frūman
adihtan- ↑ Vieusseux, André,Italy and the Italians in the nineteenth century, (Pall-Mall East., 1824), 56