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Count Of Syracuse
Count of Syracuse may refer to: * Jordan of Hauteville (1060–1092), count of Syracuse (1091–1092); reconquest from Arab holding in 1091 * Tancred, Count of Syracuse (12th century; ) * Simon, Count of Syracuse (12th century; ) * Alamanno da Costa (died 1229), count of Syracuse (1190s–stripped 1208) * Prince Leopold, Count of Syracuse (life 1813–1860), count of Syracuse (1816–1860) See also * Tyrant of Syracuse * Duke of Syracuse * List of mayors of Syracuse, Sicily * Syracuse (other) {{SIA ...
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Jordan Of Hauteville
Jordan of Hauteville (–1092) was the eldest son and bastard of Roger I of Sicily. A fighter, he took part, from an early age, in the conquests of his father in Sicily. Jordan is named as son of Count Roger's first marriage in ''Europäische Stammtafeln'' but, according to Geoffrey Malaterra, his mother was a concubine of Roger I. Her origin is unknown. In 1077, at the siege of Trapani, one of two Saracen strongholds remaining in the west of the island, Jordan led a sortie which successfully surprised the guards of the garrison's grazing animals. Its food supply now cut off, the city soon surrendered. He was present at the siege of Taormina in 1079 and, in 1081, with Robert of Sourdeval (or Sourval) and Elias Cartomensis (a Saracen turncoat), he retook the city of Catania from the last emir of Syracuse, Italy, Syracuse, Benavert, Ibn Abbad, in another surprise attack. The next year, while his father was away helping Robert Guiscard, his brother the Duke of Apulia, Jordan was left ...
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Tancred, Count Of Syracuse
Tancred (fl. 1104) was the Count of Syracuse and a member of the Hauteville family. He was appointed by his relative Roger I of Sicily to govern one of the first and only feudal counties created in Sicily after the Norman conquest. His predecessor was Roger's son, Jordan Jordan, officially the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, is a country in the Southern Levant region of West Asia. Jordan is bordered by Syria to the north, Iraq to the east, Saudi Arabia to the south, and Israel and the occupied Palestinian ter .... His descendant, Simon, still ruled Syracuse in the middle of the twelfth century. References * Abulafia, David (1977). ''The Two Italies: Economic Relations between the Norman Kingdom of Sicily and the Northern Communes''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN, 0-521-21211-1. Italo-Normans Norman warriors 12th-century counts in Europe Counts of Syracuse ...
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Simon, Count Of Syracuse
Simon (fl. 1162) was the Norman Count of Syracuse and a member of the Hauteville family. He may be an illegitimate son of Roger II of Sicily, but more likely a son of Henry, Count of Paterno, the brother-in-law of Roger I. He was probably a descendant of his predecessor Tancred. In 1162, when Frederick Barbarossa was seeking allies for a planned invasion of the Kingdom of Sicily, he made a treaty with the Republic of Genoa, offering them the entire Ligurian coast and the lands of Simon in Sicily. These lands included the cities of Syracuse and Noto and 250 knight's fees (''caballariae'') in the fertile plain around Noto, the ''Val di Noto''. When the Emperor Henry VI Henry VI (German: ''Heinrich VI.''; November 1165 – 28 September 1197), a member of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was King of Germany (King of the Romans) from 1169 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1191 until his death. From 1194 he was also King of Sic ... reissued his father's charter to Genoa on 30 May 1191, he retain ...
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Alamanno Da Costa
Alamanno da Costa (active 1193–1224, died before 1229) was a Genoese admiral. He became the count of Syracuse in the Kingdom of Sicily, and led naval expeditions throughout the eastern Mediterranean. He was an important figure in Genoa's longstanding conflict with Pisa and in the origin of its conflict with Venice. The historian Ernst Kantorowicz called him a "famous prince of pirates". Early free-lance career Alamanno came from Genoa's mercantile class, and the earliest record of him dates from 1193, when he joined an ''accomende'', a commercial partnership, directed towards Sicily. In 1204, Alamanno and his son Benvenuto, on their own initiative, set out aboard the ''Carroccia'' in search of the Pisan corsair ''Leopardo''. The ''Carroccia'' and ''Leopardo'' were both classed as ''navi''—broad-beamed, lateen-rigged ships. The former had on board 500 armed men, and the latter probably half as many. The inventory taken after Alamanno successfully captured the ''Leopardo'' and int ...
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Prince Leopold, Count Of Syracuse
Prince Leopold of the Two Sicilies (22 May 1813, in Palermo – 4 December 1860, in Pisa) was a House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, prince of the Two Sicilies and was known as the Count of Syracuse. Life Leopold was the third son of Francis I of the Two Sicilies and his second wife, Maria Isabella of Spain. In 1816, at the creation of the kingdom of the Two Sicilies, when he was three years old, he was given the title of Syracuse, Sicily, Count of Syracuse. At his father's death in November 1830, Leopold's elder brother, Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies, named him Lieutenant general in Sicily.Acton, ''The Last Bourbons of Naples'', p. 48 As governor in Palermo, he introduced important reforms.Acton, ''The Last Bourbons of Naples'', p. 78 Fearing his popularity and the desire of Sicily for independence, he was recalled from his position in early 1835.Acton, ''The Last Bourbons of Naples'', p. 79 In April of the same year, he was sent to travel abroad. Ferdinand II considered a mar ...
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Tyrant Of Syracuse
Syracuse (; ) was an ancient Greek city-state, located on the east coast of Sicily, Magna Graecia. The city was founded by settlers from Corinth in 734 or 733 BC, and was conquered by the Romans in 212 BC, after which it became the seat of Roman rule in Sicily. Throughout much of its history as an independent city, it was governed by a succession of tyrants, with only short periods of democracy and oligarchy. While Pindar addressed the Deinomenids as kings (basileus) in his odes, it is not clear that this (or any other title) was officially used by any of the tyrants until Agathocles adopted the title in 304.''A Dictionary of the Ancient Greek World'' by David Sacks, Oswyn Murray, Margaret Bunson Page 10 Tyrants of Syracuse Deinomenids (485–465) * Gelon I (485 BC–478 BC) * Hiero I (478 BC–466 BC) * Thrasybulus (466 BC–465 BC) Thrasybulus was deposed in 465 and Syracuse had a republican government for the next sixty years. This period is usually known as the Second Democra ...
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Duke Of Syracuse
Duke of Syracuse ''()'' is a Spanish–Duosicilian royal title that was created in 1940 in the defunct Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, Peerage of the Two Sicilies by Infante Alfonso, Duke of Calabria, Infante Alfonso, heir to the throne of the Two Sicilies, for his newborn daughter Princess Inés, Duchess of Syracuse, Princess Inés. It makes reference to the city of Syracuse, Sicily, Syracuse in the former Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. Although the original denomination was Prince Leopold, Count of Syracuse, Count of Syracuse, it was elevated to a dukedom by the grantor. Dukes of Syracuse *1940–present Princess Inés, Duchess of Syracuse See also *Duke of Salerno (1937 creation) *List of dukes in the nobility of Italy *Count of Syracuse (12th century) *Tyrant of Syracuse (1st millennium BCE) References

Dukedoms of Italy, Syracuse {{Italy-hist-stub ...
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List Of Mayors Of Syracuse, Sicily
The mayor of Syracuse is an elected politician who, along with the Syracuse's city council, is accountable for the strategic government of Syracuse in Sicily, Italy. The current mayor is Francesco Italia who took office on 27 June 2018 and was re-elected on 12 June 2023. Overview According to the Italian Constitution, the mayor of Syracuse is member of the city council. The mayor is elected by the population of Syracuse, who also elects the members of the city council, controlling the mayor's policy guidelines and is able to enforce his resignation by a motion of no confidence. The mayor is entitled to appoint and release the members of his government. Since 1994 the mayor is elected directly by Syracuse's electorate: in all mayoral elections in Italy in cities with a population higher than 15,000 the voters express a direct choice for the mayor or an indirect choice voting for the party of the candidate's coalition. If no candidate receives at least 50% of votes, the top two ...
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