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      • The Kingdom of Sicily existed in the south of modern Italy from 1130 to 1861. It included the actual island of Sicily, and also, at different times, southern Italy with Naples and, until 1530, Malta. After 1302, it was sometimes called the Kingdom of Trinacria.
      about-history.com › history-of-the-kingdom-of-sicily-1130-1861
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  2. The Kingdom was founded in 1130 by Roger II, belonging to the Siculo-Norman family of Hauteville. During this period, Sicily was prosperous and politically powerful, becoming one of the wealthiest states in all of Europe. [1] . As a result of the dynastic succession, the Kingdom passed into the hands of the Hohenstaufen.

  3. Dec 6, 2023 · In Southern Italy and Sicily, the Normans unified the entire region as the Kingdom of Norman Sicilywhich endured from 1130 to 1194—with the city of Palermo as its capital. Map of Palermo by Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg with detail of the Palazzo Normanni (royal palace), 1588 ( David Rumsey Historical Map Collection )

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  4. Sicily was indeed the center for the formation of a Norman kingdom and a multicultural heartland during the late 1000s into the 1100s. This kingdom would have a major role to play in the Crusades and the many battles that took place within that time period.

  5. The kingdom of Sicily under the Hohenstaufen and Angevins; By David Abulafia; David Abulafia, University of Cambridge; Book: The New Cambridge Medieval History; Online publication: 28 March 2008; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521362894.024

    • David Abulafia
    • 1999
  6. The Battle of Gagliano was a military engagement between the forces of the Kingdom of Sicily and the Angevin Kingdom of Naples. Fought in early 1300 during the War of the Sicilian Vespers, the battle involved the entrapment and routing of a Angevin heavy cavalry detachment by a Sicilian force near the fortified town of Gagliano Castelferrato in ...

    • February 1300
    • Sicilian victory
    • Gagliano Castelferrato, Kingdom of Sicily
  7. The Kingdom of Sicily ( Latin: Regnum Siciliae; Italian: Regno di Sicilia; Sicilian: Regnu di Sicilia) was a state that existed in Sicily and the south of the Italian Peninsula plus, for a time, in Northern Africa from its founding by Roger II of Sicily in 1130 until 1816.

  8. This book is an introductory account of the kingdom of Sicily established in 1130 by Roger II, a 'Norman' king, and ruled by Roger, his own son and grandsons until 1194 when the kingdom was conquered by his son-in-law, Henry VI of Hohenstaufen.

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