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13th-century Italian people

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Maria of Montferrat
Queen of Jerusalem (1192-1212) (r.1205-1212)
Mary of Hungary
Queen of Naples (1257-1323)
Constance of Aragon
Queen Consort of Hungary and Holy Roman Empress Consort
Isabella of England
Holy Roman Empress
Angela of Foligno
Italian saint
St. Zita
Zita (27 April 1278), also known as Sitha or Citha, is an Italian saint, the patroness saint of maids and domestic servants. She is often appealed to in order to help find lost keys.
Fra Dolcino
Italian preacher (1250-1307)
Rose of Viterbo
saint of third order of Francis (Franciscan tertiary)
Isabella of Villehardouin
Greek noble (1263-1312)
Beatrice of Sicily, Latin Empress
Empress of Latin Constantinople
Licario
Licario, called Ikarios () by the Greek chroniclers, was a Byzantine admiral of Italian origin in the 13th century. At odds with the Latin barons (the "triarchs") of his native Euboea, he entered the service of the Byzantine emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos (r. 1259–1282), and reconquered many of the Aegean islands for him in the 1270s. For his exploits, he was rewarded with Euboea as a fief and rose to the rank of megas konostaulos and megas doux, the first foreigner to do so.
Saint Fina
Italian christian
Mastino I della Scala
Italian Condottiero
Agnes of Montferrat
Empress consort
Cunizza da Romano
Italian noble
Viridiana
Veridiana (Virginia Margaret del Mazziere) (1182 – 1 February 1242) is an Italian saint. Having made pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela and Rome, she then became an anchoress.
Gemma Donati
wife of Dante Alighieri
Gianni Schicchi de' Cavalcanti
Florentine knight
Franca Visalta
Italian saint
Vataça Lascaris
Italian princess
Maifreda da Pirovano
Italian heretic
Aldobrandesca
Aldobrandesca (also known as Alda) (, Siena, Italy – ) was an Italian saint and mystic. A short description of her life was published in 1584, which was later translated into Latin and published in the Acta Sanctorum.
Blanche of Anjou
(1250-1269)
Vanni Fucci
Character in Dante's Inferno