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    • Twice Queen of Hungary and of Bohemia

      • Beatrice of Naples (16 November 1457 – 23 September 1508), also known as Beatrice of Aragon (Hungarian: Aragóniai Beatrix; Italian: Beatrice d'Aragona), was twice Queen of Hungary and of Bohemia by marriage to Matthias Corvinus and Vladislaus II. She was the daughter of Ferdinand I of Naples and Isabella of Clermont.
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  2. Beatrice of Naples (16 November 1457 – 23 September 1508), also known as Beatrice of Aragon (Hungarian: Aragóniai Beatrix; Italian: Beatrice d'Aragona), was twice Queen of Hungary and of Bohemia by marriage to Matthias Corvinus and Vladislaus II.

  3. Beatrice of Naples (1457–1508) Queen of Hungary. Born in 1457; died on September 23, 1508, in Ischia; daughter of Isabel de Clermont (d. 1465) and Ferdinand also known as Ferrante I (1423–1494), king of Naples (r. 1458–1494); married Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary (r. 1458–1490), in 1476; married Vladislas also known as Ladislas II ...

  4. Beatrice of Provence (c. 1229 – 23 September 1267), was the ruling Countess of Provence and Forcalquier from 1245 until her death, as well as Countess of Anjou and Maine, Queen of Sicily and Naples by marriage to Charles I of Naples.

  5. He was beheaded in the public marketplace. This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica. Kingdom of Naples, state covering the southern portion of the Italian Peninsula from the Middle Ages to 1860. It was often united politically with Sicily.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Benedetto Croce. The rise of fascism in Italy, compounded by the Great Depression of the 1930s, darkened the interval between the wars—from which, at Naples, the philosopher Benedetto Croce and other enlightened figures stand forth in defense of humanity and reason.

  7. Jean-Paul Sartre. The representative of French existentialism visits Naples in 1936 for the first time. In a letter to his disciple and lover, Olga Kosakiewicz, describes the journey as an experience of “sensory dissipation”.

  8. Apr 9, 2018 · The first King of Naples was Charles I of Anjou, the youngest son of Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile. Charles was married twice, first to Beatrice of Provence, who was thus the first Queen consort of Naples. After her death in 1267, Charles remarried to Margaret of Burgundy.

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