Category
page 1Counts of Provence
Louis XVIII of France
King of France and Navarre from 1815 to 1824 (1755-1824)
Charles I of Naples
King of Sicily (1226-1285)

Alfonso II of Aragon
Aragonese monarch (1157-1196)

Joanna I of Naples
Queen of Naples (1326-1382)
René of Anjou
king of Naples (1409-1480)

Charles II of Naples
king of Naples from 1284 to 1309

Robert, King of Naples
King of Naples (1276–1343)

Louis I
Duke of Anjou

Ramon Berenguer III
Count of Barcelona

Louis II of Naples
King of Naples

Boso of Provence
Frankish noble, King of lower Bourgundy

Louis III of Naples
titular king of Naples, count of Provence and duke of Anjou and Calabria,
René II of Lorraine
Duke of Lorraine (1451-1508)
Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence
Count of Provence
Alfonso II, Count of Provence
Count of Provence
Louis, Prince of Taranto
King of Naples
William I of Provence
Count of Provence
Douce I, Countess of Provence
Countess suo jure of Provence (1090-1129)
Ramon Berenguer III, Count of Provence
Aragonese infante
Berenguer Ramon, Count of Provence
French noble
Charles IV, Duke of Anjou
French noble
William II of Provence
Count of Provence
Gerberga, Countess of Provence
Countess suo jure of Provence (1060-1115)
Sancho, Count of Provence
Count of Provence
Douce II, Countess of Provence
French noble (1163-1172)
Geoffrey I of Provence
Count of Provence and Arles
Emma of Provence
countess suo jure of Provence

Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Provence
French count
Bertrand II of Provence
French noble
Fulk Bertrand of Provence
Count of Provence
William Bertrand of Provence
French noble
William IV
Count of Provence
William III of Provence
Count of Provence in France
Rotbold I, Count of Provence
French nobleman
Rotbold II, Count of Provence
Count and Margrave of Provence
Raymond Berengar of Andria
Prince of Piedmont

Geoffrey II of Provence
French noble
Leibulf of Provence
Occitan noble
Fulcrad
Fulcrad was the count of Arles in the middle of the ninth century, who was given military command over the other counts of the Provençal country and took the title of duke (Latin dux). His recorded activity took place after the treaty of Verdun (843), when Provence lay in the south of the kingdom of Middle Francia ruled by the Emperor Lothair I. As the leading man in Provence he seems to have succeeded Warin.