Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Filipe I de Tarento, ( Nápoles, 10 de novembro de 1278 - Nápoles, 26 de dezembro de 1331) nascido Filipe de Courtenay, foi um rei da Albânia da Casa de Anjou. [ 1][ 2] Reinou entre 1301 e 1331. Foi antecedido no trono por Carlos II de Nápoles [ 3] e foi sucedido no trono Roberto de Tarento .

  2. Felipe de Anjou (en italiano: Filippo d’Angiò; 1276-24 o 26 de diciembre de 1331) fue príncipe de Tarento, señor del Reino de Albania, déspota de Romania desde 1294, príncipe de Acaya desde 1307 y emperador titular de Constantinopla desde 1313, así como fundador de la Casa de Anjou-Tarento.

    • First Marriage
    • War of The Vespers
    • Balkan Adventure
    • Second Marriage
    • Guelph-Ghibelline War
    • Frankish Greece
    • Family
    • Sources

    On 4 February 1294, his father named him Prince of Taranto at Aix-en-Provence, and on 12 July 1294, Vicar-General of the Kingdom of Sicily. These dignities were a prelude to Charles' plan to bestow upon Philip an empire east of the Adriatic. The day he was invested as Vicar-General, he married by proxy Thamar Angelina Komnene, daughter of Nikephoro...

    As Vicar-General of Sicily, he was part of the invasion of that island during the latter stage of the War of the Sicilian Vespers. His army was defeated in 1299 at the Battle of Falconara by Frederick III of Sicily, and he was held prisoner until the signing of the Treaty of Caltabellottain 1302.

    In 1306, Philip of Savoy and Isabella of Villehardouin, the Prince and Princess of Achaea, visited Charles' court in Naples. Philip of Savoy was accused of disloyalty and failure to support Charles in a campaign against Epirus. As Isabelle had not sought her suzerain's consent before marrying him, Charles deprived the two of Achaea and bestowed it ...

    In 1309, Philip accused Thamar of adultery, probably on a falsified charge. This freed him to take part in a complex marital pact. Catherine of Valois, the titular Latin Empress, had been betrothed to Hugh V, Duke of Burgundy, titular King of Thessalonica. This engagement was broken, and she married Philip on 29 July 1313, at Fontainebleau. In exch...

    In 1315, Philip was sent by his brother Robert of Naples to lead an army relieving the Florentines, who were threatened by the Pisans under Uguccione della Faggiuola. The Florentine-Neapolitan army was badly beaten at the Battle of Montecatini on 29 August 1315; Philip's younger brother Peter, Count of Gravinaand his son Charles of Taranto were bot...

    The death of Louis of Burgundy without heirs in 1316 upset the Angevin plans for Achaea. Matilda was invited to marry John of Gravina, Philip's younger brother, by their elder brother, Robert of Naples. When she declined, she was kidnapped and brought to Naples. By long persuasion and threats, she was compelled in 1318 to consent to the marriage, w...

    Children of his first marriage (1294), with Thamar Angelina Komnene, which ended with a divorce (1309): 1. Charles (1296–1315), Vicar of Romania, killed at the Battle of Montecatini 2. Jeanne (1297–1323), married to Oshin of Armenia and then Oshin of Korikos. 3. Philip (1300–1330), Despot of Romania. 4. Maria (1302/04–1368), Abbess of Conversano. 5...

    Armstrong, Edward (1932). "Italy in the Time of Dante". In Gwatkin, Henry Melvill; Whitney, James Pounder; Tanner, Joseph Robson; Previté-Orton, Charles William; Brooke, Zachary Nugent (eds.). The...
    Geanakoplos, Deno (1975). "Byzantium and the Crusades, 1354–1453". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Hazard, Harry W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries. Mad...
    Nicol, Donald M. (1984). The Despotate of Epiros 1267-1479: A Contribution to the History of Greece in the Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521261906.
    Nicol, Donald M. (1994). The Byzantine Lady: Ten Portraits, 1250–1500. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45531-6.
  3. Filipe I de Tarento, nascido Filipe de Courtenay, foi um rei da Albânia da Casa de Anjou. Reinou entre 1301 e 1331. Foi antecedido no trono por Carlos II de Nápoles e foi sucedido no trono Roberto de Tarento.

  4. Filipe I de Tarento (en italiano: Filippo I di Taranto, francés: Philippe Iº de Tarente, grego: Φίλιππος Α' του Τάραντα), nado en Nápoles o 10 de novembro de 1278 e finado o 26 de decembro de 1332, foi príncipe de Tarento, déspota de Epiro, rei de Albania, príncipe de Acaia e emperador titular latino de Constantinopla.

  5. O Tratado de Orvieto foi um acordo feito em 1281 entre Carlos I da Sicília, João Dandolo, doge de Veneza e Felipe I de Tarento, titular do Império Latino, com a benção do Papado.

  6. Felipe de Anjou ( en italiano: Filippo d’Angiò; 1276-24 o 26 de diciembre de 1331) fue príncipe de Tarento, señor del Reino de Albania, déspota de Romania desde 1294, príncipe de Acaya desde 1307 y emperador titular de Constantinopla desde 1313, así como fundador de la Casa de Anjou-Tarento.