The following is a list of rulers of Sardinia.
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None of the following ruled over all of Sardinia.
Sardinia was divided from the 11th century in four autonomous principalities, called giudicati.
Some of these rulers occasionally took the style of king (rex):
Some ruled with the title King of Sardinia (rex Sardiniae) by grant of the Holy Roman Emperor:
None of these rulers had effective authority over the whole isle.
James II of Aragon received royal investiture from Pope Boniface VIII in 1297 as Rex Sardiniae et Corsicae. The Aragonese did not take actual possession of the isle until 1323, after a victorious military campaign against the Pisans. However, Sardinian royal title never had a specific line of succession, and all kings used their own primary numeral title.
Name | Portrait | Birth | Marriages | Death |
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James II of Aragon 1323–1327 |
10 August 1267 Valencia son of Peter I and Constance of Sicily |
Isabella of Castile 1 December 1291 No children Blanche of Anjou 29 October 1295 10 children Marie de Lusignan 15 June 1315 No children Elisenda de Montcada 25 December 1322 No children |
5 November 1327 Barcelona aged 60 |
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Alfonso IV of Aragon 1327–1336 |
1299 Naples son of James II of Aragon and Blanche of Anjou |
Teresa d'Entença 1314 7 children Eleanor of Castile 2 children |
27 January 1336 Barcelona aged 37 |
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Peter IV of Aragon 1336–1387 |
5 October 1319 Balaguer son of Alfonso IV and Teresa d'Entença |
Maria of Navarre 1338 2 children Leonor of Portugal 1347 No children Eleanor of Sicily 4 children |
5 January 1387 Barcelona aged 68 |
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John I of Aragon 1387–1396 |
27 December 1350 Perpignan son of Peter IV of Aragon and Eleanor of Sicily |
Martha of Armagnac 1 child Yolande of Bar 3 children |
19 May 1396 Foixà aged 46 |
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Martin I of Aragon 1396–1410 |
1356 Girona son of Peter IV of Aragon and Eleanor of Sicily |
Maria de Luna 13 June 1372 4 children Margarita of Aragon-Prades 1409 No children |
31 May 1410 Barcelona aged 54 |
Name | Portrait | Birth | Marriages | Death |
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Ferdinand I of Aragon 1412–1416 |
27 November 1380 Medina del Campo son of John I of Castile and Eleanor of Aragon |
Eleanor of Alburquerque 1394 8 children |
2 April 1416 Igualada aged 36 |
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Alfonso V of Aragon 1416–1458 |
1396 Medina del Campo son of Ferdinand I and Eleanor of Alburquerque |
Maria of Castile 1415 No children |
27 June 1458 Naples aged 52 |
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John II of Aragon 1458–1479 |
29 June 1397 Medina del Campo son of Ferdinand I and Eleanor of Alburquerque |
Blanche I of Navarre 6 November 1419 4 children Juana Enríquez 2 children |
20 January 1479 Barcelona aged 81 |
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Ferdinand II of Aragon 1479–1516 |
10 March 1452 son of John II of Aragon and Juana Enriquez |
Isabella I of Castile 19 October 1469 5 children Germaine of Foix 1505 No children |
23 January 1516 Madrigalejo aged 54 |
At the end of the War of the Spanish Succession, by the Treaty of Utrecht, Sardinia was ceded to Austria
Name | Portrait | Birth | Marriages | Death |
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Emperor Charles VI 1713–1720 |
1 October 1685 Vienna son of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor and Eleonore-Magdalena of Pfalz-Neuburg |
Elisabeth Christine 1 August 1708 4 children |
20 October 1740 Vienna aged 55 |
Spanish forces invaded the kingdom in 1718 during the War of the Quadruple Alliance. Emperor Charles VI ceded it to the Duke of Savoy by the Treaty of The Hague.
The monarchs of the House of Savoy ruled from their mainland capital of Turin but styled themselves primarily with the royal title of Sardinia as superior to the original lesser title of Duke of Savoy. However, their numeral order continued the Savoyard list. In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II became king of Italy: however, the sovereigns continued to use all their former titles.
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