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Louis the Child (1337-16 October 1355) was king of Sicily, then called Trinacria, from 1342 to 1355. March 16 - Edward, the Black Prince is created Duke of Cornwall, becoming the first English Duke Beginning of the Hundred Years War (c. ...
October 16 is the 289th day of the year (290th in leap years). ...
Events January 7 - Portuguese king Afonso IV sends three men to kill Ines de Castro, beloved of his son prince Pedro - Pedro revolts and incites a civil war. ...
The following is a list of monarchs of the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily: // Hauteville Counts of Sicily, 1071â1130 Roger I 1071â1101 Simon 1101â1105 Roger II 1105â1130 Hauteville Kings of Sicily, 1130â1198 Roger II 1130â1154 William I 1154â1166 William II 1166â1189 Tancred...
The armoured triskelion on the flag of the Isle of Man Triskelion (or triskele, from Greek τρισκελης three-legged) is a symbol consisting of three bent human legs, or, more generally, three interlocked spirals, or any similar symbol with three protrusions exhibiting...
Events May - Pope Clement VI elected John III Comnenus becomes emperor of Trebizond Louis becomes king of Sicily and duke of Athens Constantine IV becomes king of Armenia Patriarch of Antioch transferred to Damascus under Ignatius II Kitzbühel becomes part of Tyrol Louis I becomes king of Hungary Births...
His father was Peter II, whom he succeeded at the age of five, and his mother was Elisabeth of Carinthia. His reign began under the joint regency of his uncle Giovanni, the duke of Randazzo, and his mother. Peter II (July 1305-15 August 1342, Calascibetta) was crowned king of Sicily (then called Trinacria) in 1321 and gained full sovereignty when his father died in 1337. ...
Elisabeth or Elizabeth (1298 â after 1347) was the daughter of Otto III of Carinthia and Tyrol (also numbered as Otto II) by his wife Euphemia of Silesia-Liegnitz. ...
This article does not cite its references or sources. ...
RANDAZZO, a town of Sicily, in the province of Catania, at the Northern foot of Mount Etna, 43 m. ...
He lived at Randazzo until 1347. In that year, the plague called the Black Death arrived. In 1348, the duke named Blasco II de Alagona, a Catalan, regent. Rivalry—before then mitigated by the duke—between the Italian noblesse (the families of Chiaramonte, Palizzi, and Scaloro degli Uberti; called the filoangioini) and the Catalan noblesse (the families of Peralta, Alagona, and Ventimiglia; called the filoaragonesi) degenerated into civil war. Louis, a Catalan by descent, sent the royal army after the Chiaramonte unto Milazzo. Only in 1350 did peace arrive. Illustration of the Black Death from the Toggenburg Bible (1411). ...
Bubonic plague is the best-known variant of the deadly infectious disease plague, which is caused by the enterobacteria Yersinia pestis. ...
Illustration of the Black Death from the Toggenburg Bible (1411) The Dead Man, or Black Plague, was one of the most devastating pandemics in human history. ...
April 7 - Charles University is founded in Prague. ...
Blasco II de Alagona (died 23 October 1355), called the Young, was a very influential nobleman in fourteenth century Sicily. ...
The Catalans are an ethnic group or nation whose homeland is Catalonia, or the Principality of Catalonia (Catalan: Catalunya, or Principat de Catalunya), which is a historical region in southern Europe, embracing a territory situated in the north-east of Spain and an adjoining portion of southern France. ...
A civil war is a war in which parties within the same culture, society or nationality fight against each other for the control of political power. ...
Milazzo is a town of 50. ...
Events 29 August - An English fleet personally commanded by King Edward III defeats a Spanish fleet in the battle of Les Espagnols sur Mer. ...
In 1355, the king's cousin Frederick, lord of Aci and son of the duke of Randazzo, died. In an attempt to avoid the plague, Louis left the fortress Agira for the castle of Aci. He died in the Acese fortress on 16 October in that year, of the plague, and only seventeen years of age. He was buried in the cathedral of Catania next to Frederick II (III) and Giovanni, the old regent. ACI may be an acronym or initialism for any of: American Concrete Institute Association of Construction Inspectors Automobile Club dItalia This page concerning a three-letter acronym or abbreviation is a disambiguation page â a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Country Italy Region Sicily Province Enna (EN) Mayor Rosario Sanfilippo (since May 25, 2003) Elevation 650 m Area 163. ...
A cathedral is a religious building for worship, specifically of a denomination with an episcopal hierarchy, such as the Roman Catholic, Anglican and some Lutheran churches, which serves as a bishops seat, and thus as the central church of a diocese. ...
Catania is the second-largest city of Sicily, southern Italy, and is the capital of the province which bears its name. ...
Frederick III (or II) (1272 â 1337), King of Sicily, was the third son of King Peter III of Aragon and Sicily, and of Constance, daughter of Manfred. ...
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