Dukedom of Amalfi
The Duke of Amalfi is a Spanish ducal title first created in 1639 by King Philip IV for Prince Ottavio Piccolomini, a Holy Roman Imperial Army Field Marshal.
Of noble Tuscan descent, two Popes were scions of the Piccolomini family, and the 1st duke's younger brother Dom. Ascanio served as Archbishop of Siena.from 1628 until 1671.
King Alfonso XIII revived the dukedom in 1902.[1]
List of title holders
Title | Period | |
---|---|---|
Created by Philip IV | ||
I | Ottavio Piccolomini | 1639-1656 |
Revived by Alfonso XIII | ||
II | Enrique Fulgencio Fuster y López | 1902-1912 |
III | Antonio de Zayas-Fernández de Córdoba y Beaumont | 1912-1945 |
IV | Luis Moreno y de Zayas | 1945-1959 |
V | María del Carmen Cotoner y Cotoner | 1959-1996 |
VI | Íñigo Seoane y Cotoner | 1996-2004 |
VII | Íñigo Seoane-García y Ramírez | 2004–present |
Succession
As with other Spanish noble titles, the dukedom of Amalfi descended according to cognatic primogeniture, meaning that females could inherit the title if they had no brothers (or if their brothers had no issue). That changed in 2006, since when the eldest child (regardless of gender) can automatically succeed to noble family titles.
See also
Referencias
External links
- Elenco de Grandezas y Títulos Nobiliarios Españoles. Instituto "Salazar y Castro", C.S.I.C.
- Enrique Fulgencio Fuster, Conde de Roche: Aristocracia y Cultura
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.