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  1. Gennaro of Naples and Sicily (Gennaro Carlo Francesco; 12 April 1780 – 1 January 1789) was a Prince of Naples and Sicily. He died of Smallpox aged 8. He and his mother are the central figures of a portrait by Angelica Kauffman in 1783.

  2. Roman Catholic. Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies was the first King of the united Kingdom of the Two Siclies. [1] The Kingdom was created on 12 December 1816 having united the separate crown of Naples and Sicily. He was a member of the House of Bourbon. Before that he had been, since 1759, Ferdinando IV of the Kingdom of Naples and Ferdinando ...

  3. Itialian nobility. Born at the Royal Palace in the Kingdom of Naples, Prince Gennaro Carlo Francesco was a member of the Capetian dynasty of the House of Bourbon and a Prince of Naples and Sicily by birth. He died at the age of eight of smallpox at Caserta Palace.

  4. Gennaro of Naples and Sicily (Gennaro Carlo Francesco; 12 April 1780 – 1 January 1789) was a Prince of Naples and Sicily. He died of Smallpox aged 8. He and his mother are the central figures of a portrait by Angelica Kauffman in 1783. Biography. Born at the Royal Palace of Naples in

  5. House. Bourbons of Naples. Father. Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies. Mother. Maria Carolina of Austria. Princess Maria Isabella of Naples and Sicily (2 December 1793 – 23 April 1801) was a member of the House of Bourbon. She was the youngest child and daughter of Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies and his wife, Maria Carolina of Austria .

  6. His youngest sister, Princess Maria Antonia of Naples and Sicily also married Maria Isabella's elder brother, the future Ferdinand VII of Spain, then Prince of Asturias. After the Bourbon family fled from Naples to Sicily in 1806, Lord William Bentinck , the British resident, had drafted a new constitution along British and French lines.

  7. 25 de abr. de 2024 · Princess Maria Amalia Teresa of Naples and Sicily was the wife of Louis Philippe I, King of the French. She was born on April 26, 1782, at the Caserta Palace in Caserta, Kingdom of Naples, now in Italy, to King Ferdinand IV of Naples (also King Ferdinand III of Sicily) and Maria Carolina of Austria. At the time, Naples and Sicily were two ...