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Arms of Constance II of Sicily. Constance II of Sicily ( c. 1249 –. () 9 April 1302) was queen consort of Aragon as the wife of Peter III of Aragon and a pretender to the Kingdom of Sicily from 1268 to 1285. [3] She was the only daughter of Manfred of Sicily and his first wife, Beatrice of Savoy. [4]
- Constance of Aragon, Queen of Sicily
Martin (King of Sicily; Count of Luna; Lord of Segorbe) v....
- Constance of Aragon
Constance of Aragon (1179 – 23 June 1222) was an Aragonese...
- Constance of Aragon, Queen of Sicily
Jun 25, 2022 · Constantia or Constance (1249 - 9 April 1302) was the Queen consort of Peter III of Aragon. She was the only daughter of Manfred of Sicily and his first wife Beatrice of Savoy. Her paternal grandparents were Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor and his mistress Bianca Lancia.
- Catania, Sicilia
- 1249
- "Costanza di Svevia", "Custanza"
- Catania, Sicilia, Italy
May 31, 2023 · Queen of Sicily. Constance was still young and had an opportunity to remarry. In 1208, Peter once again negotiated with the Pope and had Constance betrothed to Frederick, the young King of Sicily. Constance was about fifteen years older than Frederick. In June 1209, Constance left Aragon with her brother, Alfonso and five hundred Aragonese knights.
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Constance of Aragon ( Catalan: Constança d'Aragó; 1343 – 2/18 July 1363), was the first Queen consort of Frederick III the Simple. She was an infanta of Aragon, the eldest child of Peter IV of Aragon and his first wife Maria of Navarre. Her father unsuccessfully proposed her as heir to the throne in early 1347, in the absence of a male heir.
Flourished around the 1240s; married Manfred, king of Naples and Sicily (r. 1258–1266, illegitimate son of Frederick II, Holy Roman emperor); children: Constance of Sicily (d. 1302). In many historical accounts of the late Medieval period, Constance, queen of Aragon (located in the western Mediterranean, and including Sicily and Sardinia), is ...