Two Sicilies

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il Regno delle Due Sicilie
The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies


1816 – 1861
Flag Coat of arms
Flag (1860) Coat of arms
Location of Two Sicilies
Map of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Capital Naples
Language(s) Sicilian, Neapolitan
Government Monarchy
King
 - 1816-1825 Ferdinand I
 - 1859-1861 Francis II
History
 - Established 12 December1816
 - Italian Unification 12 February1861
Area
 - 1860 111,900 km2
43,205 sq mi
Population
 - 1860 est. 8,703,000 
     Density 77.8 /km² 
201.4 /sq mi

The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (Italian: il Regno delle Due Sicilie) was the new name that the Bourbon King Ferdinand IV of Naples bestowed upon his domain (including Southern Italy and the island of Sicily) after the end of the Napoleonic Era and the full restoration of his power in 1816. The capital city of the kingdom was Naples.

Contents

[edit] Origin of the Two Sicilies

Before the French invasions of the Napoleonic Era, the Bourbon dynasty ruled over the same lands, but they were formally divided into the "Kingdom of Naples" and the "Kingdom of Sicily". After the change in the name of the kingdom, Ferdinand became known as King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies.

[edit] History of the name

The name Two Sicilies derived from the splitting of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1282. Though ruled as a unit for a century and a half, the island and mainland parted ways when the Sicilian Vespers rose up and threw off Neapolitan rule, accepting in its stead Aragon. The Angevin Kings of Naples retained the mainland and continued the name Kingdom of Sicily in order to assert their claim; for some time the southern peninsula was known as the Kingdom of Sicily this side of Cape Faro, for the lighthouse on the mainland side of the Strait of Messina, although the Kingdom of Sicily per se did not use the name. The two kingdoms were not under the same ruler until 1735 under Charles (to become later Charles III of Spain), and were not legally reunited until after the 1815 Congress of Vienna. Between 1816 and 1848 the island of Sicily experienced no less than three popular revolts against Bourbon rule, including the revolution of independence of 1848, when the island was fully independent of Bourbon control for 16 months. Apart from having occurred at an interesting point in European history (see Revolutions of 1848), there is a clear link between this revolution and the more well known historical event that was to occur 11 years hence (the Risorgimento).

[edit] Kings of the Two Sicilies, 1816-1861

In 1860-1861 the kingdom was conquered by the Kingdom of Sardinia, and the title dropped.

Other people of the House of Two Sicilies include:

[edit] Grand Master of Constantinian Order of St George

An important prerogative of the Head of this house is that of Grand Master of the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George, and it has survived the 1861 loss of kingdom. This dignity is an ecclesiastical office, "crusader" one, Roman Catholic, invested in the House of Farnese and its heirs by the Papal Brief Sincerae Fidei of 1699, the Imperial Bull Agnoscimus et notum facimus of the same year and the Papal Bull Militantis Ecclesiae of 1718. The succession of the Infante D. Carlos de Borbón y Farnese (afterwards known as Charles I, Duke of Parma, then Charles VII, King of Sicily and Naples, and ultimately as king Charles III of Spain) to this benefice of the Farnese, as the eldest son and heir of Elisabeth Farnese, was approved by Papal Bull of 1739, and that of his third son Ferdinand IV and III of Naples and Sicily in 1763. This dignity, whose descent by male primogeniture is governed by Canon law (Catholic Church), became in practice a part of Two Sicilies monarchy.

It was neither mentioned in nor could it have been affected by the 1900 Act of Cannes, since it was not only a separate and autonomous dignity governed by its own laws, but it is contrary to canon law to undertake to make an anticipatory renunciation of an ecclesiastical office.

[edit] Heads of the Royal House of the Two Sicilies, 1861-present

  • 1861-1894: Francis II
  • 1894-1931: Prince Alfonso, Count of Caserta
  • 1931-1960: Prince Ferdinand, Duke of Noto, later, Duke of Calabria
  • 1960-present: Disputed Claim: currently between Prince Ferdinand, Duke of Castro and Infante Carlos, Duke of Calabria

Upon Ferdinando Pio's death in 1960, there was a dispute about who inherited the headship of the house. Ferdinando's next brother Carlo had, in anticipation of his marriage to the eldest sister and heiress presumptive of King Alfonso XIII of Spain, signed the so-called Act of Cannes on 14 December 1900:

...Here present is His Royal Highness Prince Don Carlo our dearest loved Son and he has declared that he shall be entering into marriage with Her Royal Highness the Infanta Doña Maria Mercedes, Princess of the Asturias, and assuming by that marriage the nationality and quality of Spanish Prince, intends to renounce, and by this present act solemnly renounces for Himself and for his Heirs and Successors to any right and rights to the eventual succession to the Crown of the Two Sicilies and to all the Properties of the Royal House found in Italy and elsewhere and this according to our laws, constitutions and customs of the Family and in execution of the Pragmatic Decree of King Charles III, Our August ancestor, of the 6th October 1759, to whose prescriptions he declares freely and explicitly to subscribe to and obey.[1]

The laws of the deposed Sicilian dynasty and Spain's Pragmatic Decree, however, required a renunciation only in very limited circumstances: the actual union of the Crown of the Two Sicilies in the person of the King of Spain or his heir apparent, which had not happened in 1900 nor did it occur subsequently. Furthermore, this act was signed subsequent to the agreement by marriage contract between the Count of Caserta (the father of prince Carlo, then head of the Royal House in exile), and the Queen Regent of Spain, which specifically excluded the need for a dynastic renunciation to the non-existent throne. Prince Carlo was created an Infante of Spain, a title held by several other princes of the Two Sicilies in the past, but with his wife's death and the birth of a Prince of Asturias (and three other sons) to the King and Queen of Spain, the possibility of him becoming king consort and his son becoming both King of Spain and pretender to the Two Sicilies, receded. All the descendants of King Francis I of the Two Sicilies by his wife, Infanta Isabel, already enjoyed a right to the Spanish throne by virtue of the royal constitutions of 1837, 1845 and 1876.

[edit] Calabria line

Prince Carlo's son, Infante Don Alfonso, became the senior male of the house on the death of his uncle, Ferdinando Pio, Duke of Calabria, in 1960 and was proclaimed Head of the Royal House of the Two Sicilies, with the recognition of the Heads of the royal houses of Spain, Parma and Portugal, and the senior line (Bourbon) pretender to the throne of France. Prince Carlo and his descendants continued to be included as Princes of the Two Sicilies in the Almanach de Gotha from 1901-1944, and in the Libro d'Oro of the Italian Nobility from the first edition in 1907 until 1964, at which time the editor came out in support of the cadet line claimant. Infante Don Alfonso took the title of Duke of Calabria, considering that the title of Duke of Castro (a Farnese inheritance) had been lost with the sale of the last portions of the duchy to the Italian government in 1941 (a sale from which Prince Carlo received his portion of the proceeds, along with his brothers and sisters, although if the alleged renunciation of 1900 had been valid he would not have been entitled to do so). Prince Carlo married as his second wife, in 1907, Princess Louise of Orléans, and by her had a son (Carlos, killed in the Spanish Civil War) and three daughters (of whom Princess Maria Mercedes married Juan, Count of Barcelona and was the mother of King Juan Carlos I of Spain, and Princess Esperanza married Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza). The descent in the senior line is as follows:

The latter's immediate heir is Pedro, Duke of Noto, married to D. Sofia de Landaluce y Melgarejo (a descendant through her mother of the Dukes of San Fernando de Quiroga).

According to the Roman Catholic canon law, they succeeded as Grand Masters of the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George.

Most of the rest of the Bourbon-Two Sicilies family rejected Alfonso's claims, however, and recognized Ranieri, the next surviving brother of Ferdinando Pio, as head of the house. Ranieri took the style of "Duke of Castro" as his title of pretence. The representatives of the junior branch are as follows:

  • 1960-1966: Prince Ranieri, Duke of Castro (Died 1973), married to Countess Carolina Zamoyska (whose mother was a Bourbon-Sicily princess).
  • 1966-present: Prince Ferdinand Maria, Duke of Castro, who has one son and two daughters, including Princess Beatrice, the former wife of Prince Charles Napoléon.

They also claim the office of the Grand Master of the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George.

[edit] Current lines of succession

Part of a series on:
Orders of Succession
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Brazil
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Ethiopia
France (Bonapartist)
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Hanover
Hesse
Iran
(Persia) Iraq
Italy
Montenegro
Portugal (Miguelist)
Portugal in 1910
Romania
Russia
Saxony
Serbia
Tuscany
Two Sicilies
Württemberg

see also:
Monarchies
Presidencies
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To Prince Ferdinand, Duke of Castro:

  1. Prince Carlo of Two Sicilies, Duke of Calabria (born 1963), married to Camilla Crociani
  2. Prince Antoine of the Two Sicilies (born 1929), married to Duchess Elizabeth of Wurttemberg
  3. Prince François of the Two Sicilies (born 1960), married to Countess Alexandra of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
  4. Prince Antoine of the Two Sicilies (born 2003)
  5. Prince Gennaro of the Two Sicilies (born 1966)
  6. Prince Casimir of the Two Sicilies (born 1938)
  7. Prince Louis of the Two Sicilies (born 1970) married to Christine Apovian
  8. Prince Alexander of the Two Sicilies (born 1974)

To Infante Carlos, Duke of Calabria

  1. Prince Pedro, Duke of Noto married to D. Sofia de Landaluce y Melgarejo
  2. Prince Ferdinando, Duke of Castro, married to Chantal de Chevron-Villette (died 2005)
  3. Prince Carlo of Two Sicilies, Duke of Calabria (born 1963), married to Camilla Crociani
  4. Prince Antoine of the Two Sicilies (born 1929), married to Duchess Elizabeth of Wurttemberg
  5. Prince François of the Two Sicilies (born 1960), married to Countess Alexandra of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
  6. Prince Antoine of the Two Sicilies (born 2003)
  7. Prince Gennaro of the Two Sicilies (born 1966)
  8. Prince Casimir of the Two Sicilies (born 1938)
  9. Prince Louis of the Two Sicilies (born 1970) married to Christine Apovian
  10. Prince Alexander of the Two Sicilies (born 1974)

[edit] Flags of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Some cultural websites about the history of Naples and Sicily:

  • Associazione culturale neoborbonica - Southern Italian "neo-Bourbonist" site, making a case for a positive view of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. Mostly in Italian, some pages in English. (Italian) / (English)
  • Brigantino - Il portale del Sud - A massive Italian-language site dedicated to History, Culture and Arts of southern Italy. (Italian)
  • Casa Editoriale Il Giglio - An Italian publisher that focuses its production upon history, culture and the arts in the Two Sicilies. (Italian)
  • Bookshop Neapolis - The website of a bookshop, located in the heart of the historical center of Naples, specialized in History and Culture of Naples and Southern Italy (mainly in Italian). (Italian) / (English)
  • Edoardo Spagnuolo website - A websites with many historical documents about the rebellions against invasion in 1860, with particular interest in the region of Irpinia. (Italian)
  • La Voce di Megaride - A website dedicated to Napoli and Southern Italy, by Marina Salvadore. (Italian)
  • Associazione culturale "Amici di Angelo Manna" - A website dedicated to the work of volcanic Angelo Manna, historian, poet, deputy. (Italian)
  • Fora! The e-journal of Nicola Zitara - Large amount of articles about Southern Italy's Culture and History by prof. Nicola Zitara. (Italian)
  • Regalis Italian dynastic history, with sections on the House of the Two Sicilies. (English)


The headship of the house is in dispute between two branches of the family::

[edit] Further reading

  • Sainty, Guy Stair, KStJT, The Orders of Chivalry and Merit of the Bourbon Two Sicilies Dynasty, Madrid, 1989,ISBN 84-599-2739-3

[edit] References

  1. ^ Sainty, Guy Stair. ChivalricOrders.org. The Two Sicilies Succession. Guy Stair Sainty. Retrieved on 2000-October-10.