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  1. Alfonso, also called Anfuso or Anfusus ( c. 1120 – 10 October 1144), was the Prince of Capua from 1135 and Duke of Naples from 1139. He was an Italian-born Norman of the noble Hauteville family.

  2. Alfonso the Magnanimous (Alfons el Magnànim in Catalan) (1396 – 27 June 1458) was King of Aragon and King of Sicily (as Alfonso V) and the ruler of the Crown of Aragon from 1416 and King of Naples (as Alfonso I) from 1442 until his death.

  3. Alfonso, also called Anfuso or Anfusus (c. 1120 – 10 October 1144), was the Prince of Capua from 1135 and Duke of Naples from 1139. He was an Italian-born Norman of the noble Hauteville family. After 1130, when his father Roger became King of Sicily, he was the third in line to the throne; second in line after the death of an older brother in ...

  4. Alfonso led his forces into Italy, capturing the important towns of Capua and Gaeta, but was then defeated and taken prisoner. A persuasive speaker, he convinced his captors in Milan to release him, then gathered another fleet and returned to Naples. He besieged the city in 1441 and finally captured it the next year. The pope formally ...

  5. Alfonso of Capua (1121-10 October 1144) was Prince of Capua from 1135 to 1144 (succeeding Robert II and preceding William I) and Duke of Naples from 1139 to 1144 (succeeding Sergius VII and preceding William I).

  6. Alfonso Kardinal Capecelatro di Castelpagano CO (* 5. Februar 1824 in Marseille, Frankreich; † 14. November 1912 in Capua, Italien) war Erzbischof von Capua und Bibliothekar der Vatikanischen Apostolischen Bibliothek .

  7. With his small band of courtiers in attendance, Alfonso awaited impatiently the arrival of Pedro’s galleys and the nine ships chartered in Genoa to transport his newly recruited army to Naples.