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Signature. Alfonso the Magnanimous ( Alfons el Magnànim in Catalan) [a] (1396 – 27 June 1458) was King of Aragon and King of Sicily (as Alfonso V) and the ruler of the Crown of Aragon [b] from 1416 and King of Naples (as Alfonso I) from 1442 until his death. He was involved with struggles to the throne of the Kingdom of Naples with Louis III ...
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Alfonso II (1–25 March 1157 – 25 April 1196), called the...
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Felicie de Roucy. Alfonso I ( c. 1073/1074 [a] – 7 September...
- Alfonso II of Aragon
Alfonso V de Aragón ( Medina del Campo, 1396- Nápoles, 27 de junio de 1458), llamado también el Sabio o el Magnánimo, 2 entre 1416 y 1458 fue rey de Aragón, de Valencia, de Mallorca, de Sicilia, de Cerdeña y conde de Barcelona; y entre 1442 y 1458 rey de Nápoles . Era el hijo primogénito del regente de Castilla Fernando de Antequera y ...
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Alfonso V, bronze medal by Pisanello, 1448–49; in the Bargello, Florence. Alfonso V, known as Alfonso the Magnanimous, (born 1396—died June 27, 1458, Naples), King of Aragon (1416–58) and of Naples (as Alfonso I, 1442–58). He followed a policy of Mediterranean expansion, pacifying Sardinia and Sicily and attacking Corsica (1420).
Alfonso V of Aragon (the Magnanimous) (1396 – 1458) King of Aragon and Naples, and an important Renaissance patron of the arts and scholarship, Alfonso was the son of Ferdinand I of Aragon and the adopted son of Joanna II of Naples, who made him the hereditary king of her realm. This queen, who had no direct heir, allied with Alfonso against ...
Alfonso V. Alfonso V ( the Magnanimous) (1394–1458) King of Aragón and Sicily (1416–58) and of Naples (1443–58). During his reign the Catalan-Aragónese empire reached its greatest extent. In 1442 Alfonso captured Naples. In 1443 he transferred his court to Naples, which developed into a centre of Renaissance culture.