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Alfonso II

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Alfonso II (1448–1495)

King of Naples 1494–95. He was the son of Ferrante I and Isabella of Naples. Widely regarded as cowardly and cruel, he was highly unpopular. He was involved in various Italian conflicts, defeating Florence at Poggio in 1479 and the Turks at Otranto in 1481. When Charles VIII of France was advancing on Naples in early 1495 Alfonso abdicated in favour of his son, Ferdinand II (1467–96).

Long before succeeding his father, Alfonso was associated with his father's misrule, for it was during his father's reign that Alfonso pursued his military exploits, as Duke of Calabria, fighting not only Florence and the Turks, but also Venice in 1484 and the Neopolital barons in 1486, suppressing them with characteristic cruelty. These engagements in Italian political struggles came about largely through his marriage to Ipolita, the sister of Lodovico Sforza of Milan, and also through his sister's marriage to Ercole d'Este of Ferrara.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
However, the author does not seem to know that it was also owned by King Alfonso II of Naples (1385-1458), a newly discovered fact that places Alfonso in the succession of Renaissance collectors and connoisseurs who took great pride in owning one of the most coveted of ancient glyptic art objects.
These water amusements varied from the heavy-handed fifteenth-century japes of the Neapolitan Duke Alfonso II, in whose courtyard at Poggioreale diners could suddenly find themselves two or three feet deep in water, to the sudden delicate jets and sprays which unexpectedly cooled visitors to gardens designed 100 years later.
Papalas, "The Trattato del Giuoco della palla di Messer Antonio Scaino da Salo and Ferrarese Cultural Ideology in the Time of Alfonso II (1559-97).
 
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