King of Italy: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Ruler who ruled part or all of the Apennine Peninsula after the fall of the Western Roman Empire}} |
{{Short description|Ruler who ruled part or all of the Apennine Peninsula after the fall of the Western Roman Empire}} |
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{{More citations needed|date=March 2010}} |
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{{Infobox monarchy |
{{Infobox monarchy |
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| royal_title = King |
| royal_title = King |
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| first_monarch = [[Odoacer]] |
| first_monarch = [[Odoacer]] |
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| last_monarch = [[Umberto II of Italy]] |
| last_monarch = [[Umberto II of Italy|Umberto II]] |
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| formation = 4 September 476 |
| formation = 4 September 476 |
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| abolition = 12 June 1946 |
| abolition = 12 June 1946 |
Revision as of 07:00, 4 April 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2010) |
King of Italy | |
---|---|
Re d'Italia | |
Details | |
Style | His Majesty |
First monarch | Odoacer |
Last monarch | Umberto II |
Formation | 4 September 476 |
Abolition | 12 June 1946 |
Residence | Quirinal Palace |
Pretender(s) | Disputed: |
King of Italy (Template:Lang-it; Template:Lang-la) was the title given to the ruler of the Kingdom of Italy after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. The first to take the title was Odoacer, a barbarian warlord, in the late 5th century, followed by the Ostrogothic kings up to the mid-6th century. With the Frankish conquest of Italy in the 8th century, the Carolingians assumed the title, which was maintained by subsequent Holy Roman Emperors throughout the Middle Ages. The last Emperor to claim the title was Charles V in the 16th century. During this period, the holders of the title were crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy.
A Kingdom of Italy was restored from 1805 to 1814 with Napoleon as its only king, centred in Northern Italy. It was not until the Italian unification in the 1860s that an independent Kingdom of Italy covering the entire Italian Peninsula was restored. From 1861 the House of Savoy held the title of King of Italy until the last king, Umberto II, was exiled in 1946 when Italy became a republic.
History
After the deposition of the last Western Emperor in 476, Heruli leader Odoacer was appointed Dux Italiae (Duke of Italy) by the reigning Byzantine Emperor Zeno. Later, the Germanic foederati, the Scirians and the Heruli, as well as a large segment of the Italic Roman army, proclaimed Odoacer Rex Italiae ('King of Italy).[1] In 493, the Ostrogothic king Theoderic the Great killed Odoacer, and set up a new dynasty of kings of Italy. Ostrogothic rule ended when Italy was reconquered by the Byzantine Empire in 552.
In 568, the Lombards entered the peninsula and ventured to recreate a barbarian kingdom in opposition to the Empire, establishing their authority over much of Italy, except the Exarchate of Ravenna and the duchies of Rome, Venetia, Naples and the southernmost portions. In the 8th century, estrangement between the Italians and the Byzantines allowed the Lombards to capture the remaining Roman enclaves in northern Italy. However, in 774, they were defeated by the Franks under Charlemagne, who deposed their king and took up the title "king of the Lombards". After the death of Charles the Fat in 887, Italy fell into instability and a number of kings attempted to establish themselves as independent Italian monarchs. During this period, known as the Feudal Anarchy (888–962), the title Rex Italicorum ("King of the Italians" or "King of the Italics") was introduced. After the breakup of the Frankish empire, Otto I added Italy to the Holy Roman Empire and continued the use of the title Rex Italicorum. The last to use this title was Henry II (1004–1024). Subsequent emperors used the title "King of Italy" until Charles V. They were crowned in Pavia, Milan and Bologna.
In 1805, Napoleon I was crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy at the Milan Cathedral. The next year, Holy Roman Emperor Francis II abdicated his imperial title. From the deposition of Napoleon I (1814) until the Italian Unification (1861), there was no Italian monarch claiming the overarching title. The Risorgimento successfully established the House of Savoy dynasty over the whole peninsula and, uniting the kingdoms of Sardinia and the Two Sicilies, it formed the modern Kingdom of Italy. The monarchy was superseded by the Italian Republic, after a constitutional referendum was held on 2 June 1946, after World War II.[2] The Italian monarchy formally ended on 12 June of that year and Umberto II left the country.
As "Kingdom of Odoacer"
Initially named Dux Italiae (Duke of Italy) by Zeno, the Roman Emperor in Constantinople, he later was recognized as King of Italy by the foederati in control of the Italian peninsula. He was deposed by the Ostrogoths, who established their own kingdom.
- Odoacer (476–493)
Ostrogothic Kingdom (493–553)
Theodoric the Great was invited by the emperor Zeno to take Italy from Odoacer and rule it in Zeno's name. He defeated Odoacer in 493, establishing a new kingdom in place of Odoacer's. Officially, the Ostrogothic kings ruled the Roman citizens in Italy as a viceroy of the Roman emperors, and their own Gothic people as their king, though functionally they ran their kingdom entirely independently from the Roman authority in Constantinople. Their greatest extent was during Theodoric's reign; as Roman Emperors from the east began to exert more power and retake control of Roman territory, the last Ostrogothic king fell to the Emperor Justinian in 553.
- Theodoric the Great (493–526)
- Athalaric (526–534)
- Queen Amalasuintha (534–535)
- Theodahad (534–536)
- Witiges (536–540)
- Ildibad (540–541)
- Eraric (541)
- Totila (541–552)
- Teia (552–553)
Interregnum (553–568)
Roman authority in Italy was briefly re-established under Justinian, though his gains were lost under his successor Justin II, after a new Germanic tribe, the Lombards, invaded from the north and established their kingdom in 568.
- Justinian I (553–565) (as Roman Emperor)
- Justin II (565–568) (as Roman Emperor)
Kingdom of the Lombards (568–814)
The Lombards under Alboin established their kingdom in the extreme north of Italy in 568, gradually pushing the Byzantine Romans back from the peninsula until only the Exarchate of Ravenna remained under Roman control. This finally fell in the 750s, with the Lombards gaining control of most of the peninsula. The last Lombard King of Italy, Desiderius, was deposed by his son-in-law Charlemagne, who folded it into the larger Carolingian Empire, which evolved over time into the Holy Roman Empire.
- Alboin (568–572)
- Cleph (572–574)
- Rule of the dukes (ten-year interregnum)
- Authari (584–590)
- Agilulf (591 – c. 616)
- Adaloald (c. 616 – c. 626)
- Arioald (c. 626 – 636)
- Rothari (636–652)
- Rodoald (652–653)
- Aripert I (653–661)
- Perctarit and Godepert (661–662)
- Grimoald (662–671)
- Garibald (671)
- Perctarit (671–688), restored from exile
- Alahis (688–689), rebel
- Cunincpert (688–700)
- Liutpert (700–701)
- Raginpert (701)
- Aripert II (701–712)
- Ansprand (712)
- Liutprand (712–744)
- Hildeprand (744)
- Ratchis (744–749)
- Aistulf (749–756)
- Desiderius (756–774)
Kingdom of Italy (781–962)
Carolingian Dynasty (774–887)
Charlemagne ruled over northern Italy as King of the Lombards. In 781, he named his son Pepin as King of Italy, though he still maintained suzerainty over the land. Charlemagne was crowned Roman Emperor in 800, while the Kingdom of Italy became one of the constituent kingdoms of the Empire. Beginning with Louis the Pious in 818, the Kingdom was ruled directly by the Carolingian Emperor himself.
- Charlemagne as King of the Lombards (774–814) and Roman Emperor (800–814)
- Pepin (781–810)
- Bernard (810–818)
- Louis I (818–822)
- Lothair I (822–855)
- Louis II (844–875)
- Charles II the Bald (875–877)
- Carloman (877–879)
- Charles III the Fat (879–887)
Instability (888–962)
After 887, Italy fell into instability, with many rulers claiming the kingship simultaneously:
- Berengar I (887–896), vassal of the German King Arnulf of Carinthia, reduced to Friuli (889–894), deposed by Arnulf in 896.
- Guy of Spoleto (889–894), opponent of Berengar, ruled most of Italy but was deposed by Arnulf.
- Lambert of Spoleto (891–896), subking of his father Guy before 894, reduced to Spoleto (894–895).
- Arnulf of Carinthia (894–899)[3]
- Ratold, sub-king (896)
In 896, Arnulf and Ratold lost control of Italy, which was divided between Berengar and Lambert:
- Berengar I (896–924), seized Lambert's portion upon the latter's death in 898.
- Lambert of Spoleto (896–898)
- Louis III of Provence (900–905), opposed Berengar in 900–902 and 905.
- Rudolph II of Burgundy (922–933), defeated Berengar but fled Italy in 926.
- Hugh of Arles (926–947), elected by Berengar's partisans in 925, resigned to Provence after 945.
- Lothair II of Arles (945–950)
- Berengar II of Ivrea, jointly with his son Adalbert of Ivrea (950–961)
In 951 Otto I invaded Italy and was crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy. In 952, Berengar and Adalbert became his vassals but remained kings until being deposed by Otto.
Holy Roman Empire (962–1556)
Otto is considered to be the founding emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, and the Kingdom of Italy was considered one of the constituent realms of the Empire. Beginning in the 12th century, states such as the Republic of Venice and the Papal States captured more and more territory from the Kingdom of Italy, and the Empire's territory on the Peninsula shrunk over time. After Charles V, the emperors stopped being crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy and the Italian title fell into disuse. Imperial control in Italy receded to Trent and South Tyrol until the dissolution of the Empire in 1806. Southern Italy had never been part of the Holy Roman Empire; it remained initially under the control of various Byzantine fiefs until the Norman Kingdom of Sicily (later the Kingdom of Naples) took control of the area in the 13th century. Central Italy, along the Rome-Ravenna axis, was part of the Papal States, under the direct personal rule of the pope. The Duke of Savoy was de jure a vassal of the Holy Roman Emperor being Prince and Perpetual Vicar of the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty (962–1024)
Image | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|
Otto I | 23 November 912 – 7 May 973 | 962[4] | 7 May 973 | |
Otto II | 955 – 7 December 983 | c. October 980[5] | 7 December 983 | |
Otto III | 980 – 23 January 1002 | c. February 996[6] | 23 January 1002 | |
Arduin | 955–1015 | 1002[4] | 1014 | |
Henry II [7] |
6 May 973 – 13 July 1024 | 1004[4] | 13 July 1024 |
Salian dynasty (1027–1125)
Image | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|
Conrad I [8] |
990 – 4 June 1039 | 1026[4] | 4 June 1039 | |
Henry III | 29 October 1017 – 5 October 1056 | 1039[4] | 5 October 1056 | |
Henry IV | 11 November 1050 – 7 August 1106 | 1056[4] | December 1105 | |
Conrad II of Italy | 1074–1101 | 1093[4] | 1101 | |
Henry V [9] |
8 November 1086 – 23 May 1125 | 1106[4] | 23 May 1125 |
Süpplingenburg dynasty (1125–1137)
Image | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lothair III | 9 June 1075 – 4 December 1137 | 1125[4] | 4 December 1137 |
House of Hohenstaufen (1128–1197)
Image | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|
Conrad III | 1093 – 15 February 1152 | 1138[4] (also crowned in 1128 in opposition to Lothair[10]) |
1152 | |
Frederick I | 1122 – 10 June 1190 | 1154 | 1186 | |
Henry VI | November 1165 – 28 September 1197 | 1186[4] | 28 September 1197 |
House of Welf (1208–1212)
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Otto IV | 1175 or 1176 – 19 May 1218 | 1209[4] | 1212 |
House of Hohenstaufen (1212–1254)
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frederick II (Friedrich II) |
26 December 1194 – 13 December 1250 | 5 December 1212 | 13 December 1250 | ||
Henry (Heinrich (VII)) |
1211 – 12 February 1242 | 23 April 1220 | 12 February 1242 | ||
Conrad IV (Konrad IV) |
25 April 1228 – 21 May 1254 | May 1237 | 21 May 1254 |
House of Luxembourg (1311–1313)
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Henry VII | 1275[11] – 24 August 1313 | 6 January 1311[12] | 24 August 1313 |
House of Wittelsbach (1327–1347)
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Louis IV | 1 April 1282 – 11 October 1347 | 1327 | 11 October 1347 |
House of Luxembourg (1355–1437)
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Charles IV | 14 May 1316 – 29 November 1378 | 1355[4] | 29 November 1378 | ||
Sigismund | 14 February 1368 – 9 December 1437 | 1431[4] | 9 December 1437 |
House of Habsburg (1437–1556)
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frederick III | 21 September 1415 – 19 August 1493 | 16 March 1452 | 19 August 1493 | ||
Charles V | 24 February 1500 – 21 September 1558 | 24 February 1530[13] | 16 January 1556 |
Charles V was the last emperor to be crowned king of Italy or to officially use the title.[4] The Habsburg emperors claimed the Italian crown until 1801. The empire continued to include Italian territories until its dissolution in 1806.
In 1805, Napoleon established a client state in northern Italy, named the Kingdom of Italy. He established himself as King of Italy, in personal union with his role as Emperor of the French. This client state did not survive the end of the Napoleonic era; in its place, the Congress of Vienna established a number of independent duchies and kingdoms in the region.
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Coronation | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Napoleon I | 15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821 | 17 March 1805 | 11 April 1814 |
Full title
This title is present in Italian laws proclaimed by Napoleon I:
[Name], by the Grace of God and the Constitutions, Emperor of the French and King of Italy.
Kingdom of Italy, House of Savoy (1861–1946)
During and after the Revolutions of 1848, sentiment on the peninsula grew for the establishment of a unified Italian kingdom. Southern Italy had not been united with Northern Italy since the early medieval period, being mostly under the rule of the Kingdom of Naples and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. Northern Italy, in the early 19th century, came under the domination of the Kingdom of Sardinia, which besides its namesake island, also ruled the expansive Piedmont and Savoy regions along the French-Italian borderlands. The formerly Republican leader in southern Italy, Giuseppe Garibaldi, made common cause with the House of Savoy to overthrow the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, and the people voted in a plebiscite to join Sardinia to form the Kingdom of Italy in 1861; the Papal States and the city of Rome were annexed to the Kingdom in 1870, completing the Unification of Italy. This kingdom lasted until the aftermath of World War II, when the 1946 Italian institutional referendum ended the monarchy.
Image | Coat of Arms | Name | Life | Became King | Ceased to be King |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Victor Emmanuel II | 14 March 1820 – 9 January 1878 | 17 March 1861 | 9 January 1878 | ||
Umberto I | 14 March 1844 – 29 July 1900 | 9 January 1878 | 29 July 1900 | ||
Victor Emmanuel III | 11 November 1869 – 28 December 1947 | 29 July 1900 | 9 May 1946 | ||
Umberto II | 15 September 1904 – 18 March 1983 | 9 May 1946 | 12 June 1946 |
Full title
Up until the dissolution of the monarchy in 1946, the full titles of the Kings of the Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946) were:
[Name], by the Grace of God and the will of the Nation, King of Italy, King of Sardinia, Cyprus, Jerusalem, Armenia, Duke of Savoy, count of Maurienne, Marquis (of the Holy Roman Empire) in Italy; Prince of Piedmont, Carignano, Oneglia, Poirino, Trino; Prince and Perpetual Vicar of the Holy Roman Empire; Prince of Carmagnola, Montmélian with Arbin and Francin, Prince bailiff of the Duchy of Aosta, Prince of Chieri, Dronero, Crescentino, Riva di Chieri and Banna, Busca, Bene, Bra, Duke of Genoa, Monferrat, Aosta, Duke of Chablais, Genevois, Duke of Piacenza, Marquis of Saluzzo (Saluces), Ivrea, Susa, of Maro, Oristano, Cesana, Savona, Tarantasia, Borgomanero and Cureggio, Caselle, Rivoli, Pianezza, Govone, Salussola, Racconigi over Tegerone, Migliabruna and Motturone, Cavallermaggiore, Marene, Modane and Lanslebourg, Livorno Ferraris, Santhià, Agliè, Centallo and Demonte, Desana, Ghemme, Vigone, Count of Barge, Villafranca, Ginevra, Nizza, Tenda, Romont, Asti, Alessandria, of Goceano, Novara, Tortona, Bobbio, Soissons, Sant'Antioco, Pollenzo, Roccabruna, Tricerro, Bairo, Ozegna, delle Apertole, Baron of Vaud and of Faucigni, Lord of Vercelli, Pinerolo, of Lomellina, of Valle Sesia, of the Marquisate of Ceva, Overlord of Monaco, Roccabruna and eleven-twelfths of Menton, Noble Patrician of Venice, Patrician of Ferrara.[citation needed]
See also
- King of Jerusalem
- List of kings of the Lombards
- List of monarchs of Naples
- List of monarchs of Sardinia
- List of Sicilian monarchs
- List of monarchs of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia
- List of monarchs of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
- List of rulers of Tuscany
- List of popes
- List of viceroys of Naples
- List of viceroys of Sicily
- List of Italian queens
Notes
- ^ Bury, History, vol. 1 p. 406
- ^ Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1047 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
- ^ Bryce, James The Holy Roman Empire (1913), pg. xxxv
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Lodovico Antonio Muratori, Giuseppe Oggeri Vincenti, Annali d'Italia, 1788, pp. 78–81.
- ^ According to Sismondi, History of the Italian Republics in the Middle Ages (pg. 29), although Otto II was crowned King of the Romans in 961 and Holy Roman Emperor in 967, he only obtained the Iron Crown at Pavia in late 980, during his descent into Italy, and prior to his celebrating Christmas at Ravenna.
- ^ Although Otto III was crowned Holy Roman Emperor at Rome on 21 May 996, he was crowned King of Italy at Milan prior to the death of Pope John XV in early March 996 – see Comyn, History of the Western Empire, Vol. 1, pg. 123
- ^ enumerated as successor of Henry I who was German King 919–936 but not Emperor.
- ^ enumerated as successor of Conrad I who was German King 911–918 but not Emperor
- ^ Barraclough, Geoffrey (1984). The Origins of Modern Germany. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-30153-2.
- ^ Comyn, Robert. History of the Western Empire, from its Restoration by Charlemagne to the Accession of Charles V, Vol. I. 1851, p. 191.
- ^ Kleinhenz, Christopher, Medieval Italy: an encyclopedia, Volume 1, Routledge, 2004, pg. 494
- ^ Jones, Michael, The New Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. VI: c. 1300-c. 1415, Cambridge University Press, 2000, pg. 533
- ^ Philip Pandely Argenti, Chius Vincta, 1941, p. xvii.