Sie ist verheiratet mit Alfonso II of NAPLES.
Sie haben geheiratet am 10. Oktober 1465 in Milan, Lombardia, Italy, sie war 19 Jahre alt.
Kind(er):
Ippolita Maria Sforza (18 April 1445 - 20 August 1484) was a member of the powerful Italian condottieri Sforza family which ruled the Duchy of Milan from 1450 until 1535. She was the first wife of Alfonso, Duke of Calabria, who later reigned as King Alfonso II of Naples.
Ippolita was born in Cremona on 18 April 1445, the eldest daughter of Francesco I Sforza, Duke of Milan (23 July 1401 - 6 March 1466) and Bianca Maria Visconti (31 March 1425 - 28 October 1468). She had six brothers and one younger sister.
Her paternal grandparents were Muzio Sforza, a renowned condottiero, and Lucia di Torsano, and her maternal grandparents were Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan and Agnese del Maino, daughter of Ambrogio del Maino, a Milanese nobleman and ducal questore.
Ippolita was a very intelligent and cultured young woman. She was tutored by the Greek scholar and grammarian Constantine Lascaris, who taught her philosophy and Greek. With his brothers and brothers she was taught in a palace school. When she was 14 years old she made a Latin address to pope Pius II at the diet of Mantua, which became well known after it was circulated in manuscript.
On 10 October 1465, in Milan, Ippolita, aged nineteen, married Alfonso, Duke of Calabria (4 November 1448 - 18 December 1495), the eldest son of King Ferdinand I of Naples and Isabella of Clermont, Duchess of Calabria. He would later reign briefly as King Alfonso II of Naples. Ippolita was never crowned Queen consort as her death occurred ten years before Alfonso attained the Neapolitan throne. The marriage of Alfonso and Ippolita was politically advantageous as it created a powerful alliance between the Kingdom of Naples and the Duchy of Milan, which was one of the most important of the 15th-century Italian city-states. Ippolita was Alfonso's first wife. Her initially harmonious marriage descended into rivalry and contempt; her husband Alfonso, perhaps threatened by her high level of education or disdainful of her pedigree, treated her with a lack of respect throughout the marriage.
Together, Alfonso and Ippolita had three children:
King Ferdinand II of Naples (26 August 1469 - October 1496), married Joanna of Naples (15 April 1479 - 27 August 1518)
Isabella of Aragon, Duchess of Bari and Princess of Bari (2 October 1470 - 11 February 1524), married her first cousin Gian Galeazzo Sforza, Duke of Milan, by whom she had issue, including Bona Sforza (13 February 1495 - 7 November 1558) Queen consort of King Sigismund I of Poland, who in her turn had six children.
Piero of Rossano, Prince of Rossano (31 March 1472 - 17 February 1491), Lieutenant General of Apulia, died of an infection following leg surgery.
Ippolita Maria Sforza died at Naples on 20 August 1484 at the age of thirty-eight. Her husband subsequently married his mistress of long standing, Truzia Gazzela, by whom he already had two illegitimate children, born during his marriage to Ippolita.
SOURCE: Wikipedia
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