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  1. Roger III (1118 – 2 or 12 May 1148) was the eldest son of King Roger II of Sicily and Elvira of Castile. He was the Duke of Apulia from 1134 until his death. [1]

  2. Brief Life History of Roger III. When Roger III d'Apulie Duc d'Apulie was born in 1118, in Italy, his father, Ruggero di Sicilia Re di Sicilia, was 23 and his mother, Reyna de Sicilia Elvira Alfónsez de León y Castilla, was 16. He married Emma di Lecce in 1134, in Lecce, Puglia, Italy. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 1 daughter.

    • Male
    • Emma of Lecce, Emma Of Lecce
  3. Robert Guiscard. by Taelor Myrie. In 1046, Robert Guiscard departed France, beginning his journey to Southern Italy. The son of Tancred of Hauteville embarked on a journey to Italy to seek what his father was unable to give to him: land, glory, and riches.

  4. Roger III (1118 – 2 or 12 May 1148) was the eldest son of King Roger II of Sicily and Elvira of Castile. He was the Duke of Apulia from 1134 until his death. Roger's first public act took place at Melfi in 1129, where, though still a child, he accepted the fealty of some rebellious barons along with his father and his younger brother Tancred.

  5. Roger III (Italian: Ruggero III, Sicilian: Ruggeru III; 1175 – 24 December 1193), of the House of Hauteville, was the eldest son and heir of King Tancred of Sicily and Queen Sibylla. He was made Duke of Apulia (as Roger V), probably in 1189, shortly after his father's accession.

  6. Roger III of Apulia (1118-12 May 1148) was Duke of Apulia from 1135 to 1148, succeeding Roger II and preceding William I. Roger de Hauteville was born in Apulia, Italy in 1118, a son of Roger II of Sicily and Elvira of Castile.

  7. The Norman rulers of Sicily and southern Italy are famed for their strategic uses of cultural elements borrowed from their Greek Christian and Arabic Muslim populations, as well as those consciously imported from North African societies in both Ifrīqiya and Fatimid Egypt.