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  1. Anne of Savoy, Princess of Squillace, Altamura, and Taranto (1 June 1455 – February 1480) was the first wife of King Frederick IV. She died 16 years before he succeeded to the Neapolitan throne, so she was never queen consort.

  2. Anna of Savoy. Not to be confused with Anne of Savoy. Anna of Savoy, born Giovanna (1306–1365), was a Byzantine Empress consort, as the second spouse of Andronikos III Palaiologos. She served as regent, with the titles augusta and autokratorissa, [1] during the minority of her son John V Palaiologos from 1341 until 1347. [2] .

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ann_SavoyAnn Savoy - Wikipedia

    Biography. Savoy was born in St. Louis, Missouri and raised in Richmond, Virginia. [2] . She resides with her husband Marc Savoy and family in Eunice, Southern Louisiana. [3] As a musician, she performs with her husband accordionist Marc Savoy and fiddler Michael Doucet in the Savoy Doucet Cajun Band.

  4. Born around 1320 in Savoy, Italy (modern-day southeastern France); died in 1353 in Byzantium; daughter of Count Amadeus V of Savoy; became second wife of Andronikos also spelled Andronicus III Paleologus (d. 1341), emperor of Byzantium (r. 1328–1341), in 1326; children: John V Paleologus (b. 1331), Byzantine or Nicaean emperor (r. 1341–1347

  5. Noblewoman of Savoy. Born in 1455; died in 1480; daughter of Yolande of France (1434–1478) and Amedée also known as Amadeus IX, duke of Savoy (r. 1465–1472); married Frederick IV (1452–1504), king of Naples (r. 1496–1501, deposed), on September 11, 1478.

  6. To say that Ann Savoy is excited about her new Smithsonian Folkways album Another Heart is an understatement as sweeping as the prairies of Southwestern Louisiana, where she has lived most of her life. “It’s blowing my mind to smithereens!” she says, speaking from her home in rural Eunice, a center of the vibrant Cajun and Creole cultures.

  7. Anna of Savoy, born Giovanna (1306–1365), was a Byzantine Empress consort, as the second spouse of Andronikos III Palaiologos. She served as regent, with the titles augusta and autokratorissa, during the minority of her son John V Palaiologos from 1341 until 1347.