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When Joachim Murat was the king of Naples (1808–1815), the corners of the flag had 2 red and 2 black triangles, and the coat of arms was inside a rhombus in the center. In 1811 Murat changed the flag to blue with a rectangle in the center whose border was checkered white and red. The coat of arms was on the left side of the rectangle (the ...
English: Flag of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Naples, from 1811 to 1815. Italiano: Bandiera del Regno di Napoli napoleonico tra il 1811 e il 1815, contenente anche il nuovo stemma delle Due Sicilie, con l'aquila e il fascio francesi, il triscele siciliano e il cavallo di Napoli.
The first document, the Regia carmina, is from the 14th century, it is a panegyric in honor of King Robert of Anjou, probably the work of Convenevole da Prato, composed between 1328 and 1336; in this illuminated manuscript there is a miniature in which a standard bearer bears two insignia, the main and largest is the flag of the Royal House of ...
The Kingdom of Naples (Latin: Regnum Neapolitanum; Italian: Regno di Napoli; Neapolitan: Regno 'e Napule) was a state that ruled the part of the Italian Peninsula south of the Papal States between 1282 and 1816.
15 July 1811 May 1815 Converted from the old Guard Voltigeurs in 1811. [3] Regiment of Vélité-Hunters Reggimento Veliti Cacciatori: 22 September 1808 15 July 1811 Originally formed as the Company of Chosen Civic Hunters in 1806, and expanded to a regiment in 1808 after their conversion. Became the 1st Regiment of Velites of Foot on 15 July 1811.
Flag Date Use Description 1979–present: Flag of the Autonomous Region of the Azores.: This flag is similar to the flag of Portugal used between 1830 and 1910, except that the Portuguese coat of arms has been replaced by nine five-sided stars in a semi-circular arch over a stylized golden goshawk (in Portuguese: Açor), the symbol of the Azores, positioned over the border of the two bands.
In 1811, the 1st and 2nd Neapolitan Line Infantry Regiments and the 1st Light Infantry were in Compère’s division of Suchet’s army in Valencia alongside the 2nd Neapolitan Cacciatori a Cavallo. On 15 December 1811 the Neapolitan infantry regiments in Spain were so reduced in strength that they had to be combined into the "new" Neapolitan ...
The flag itself was blue, with a black swastika replacing the eagle. The wreath was gold instead of black, as were the diagonal lines. In the corners were gold anchors (top left, bottom right) and Iron Crosses (top right, bottom left). On the other side was an Iron Cross in the centre, with gold eagles replacing the two Iron Crosses in the corners.