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Pages in category "Italian noble families" The following 171 pages are in this category, out of 171 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. House of Accolti;
Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Italy (House of Savoy). The Italian nobility (Italian: Nobiltà italiana) comprised individuals and their families of the Italian Peninsula, and the islands linked with it, recognized by the sovereigns of the Italian city-states since the Middle Ages, and by the kings of Italy after the unification of the region into a single state, the Kingdom of Italy.
Italian noble families (150 C, 171 P) Italian nobles by title (16 C) ... Pages in category "Italian nobility" The following 116 pages are in this category, out of 116 ...
Pages in category "Lists of Italian nobility" The following 49 pages are in this category, out of 49 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
In 1921, the Elenco Ufficiale delle Famiglie nobili e titolate del Regno d'Italia (Official List of the Noble and Titled Families of the Kingdom of Italy) [17] was approved: the list included all the families already entered in the regional registers, but an asterisk marked those that had been entered in the Golden Book of the Italian Nobility ...
The Kingdom of Italy was dissolved in 1946 and the use of titles of nobility is not currently recognized or regulated by the Italian state. [1] This list includes dukedoms in Italy which were created by sovereign rulers other than the King of Italy, such as the Holy Roman Emperor and the Holy See, as well as titles that originally belonged to ...
The Kingdom of Naples – united, after the Napoleonic age, to the Kingdom of Sicily thus forming an accentrate Kingdom of the Two Sicilies – was the largest and most demographically and culturally developed of the Italian states. Nobles were many, powerful and with many titles: it was one of the few states that used the title of Prince ...
The Libro d'Oro (The Golden Book), originally published between 1315 and 1797, is the formal directory of nobles in the Republic of Venice (including the Ionian Islands).It has been resurrected as the Libro d'Oro della Nobiltà Italiana (The Golden Book of Italian Nobility), a privately published directory of the nobility of Italy.