King Umberto II of Italy died on March 18, 1983 at the age of 78.
King Umberto II of Italy was born on September 15, 1904.
King Umberto II of Italy was born on September 15, 1904.
King Umberto II of Italy died on March 18, 1983 at the age of 78.
Umberto II of Italy was born on 1904-09-15.
Umberto II of Italy died on 1983-03-18.
Italy is a republic, so it does not have a king. It has a president. The current President is Giorgio Napolitano.
There is no "owner" of Italy. The last known king of Italy is Umberto II, whose reign ended on March 18th 1983, when he died.
Umberto Bindi died on May 23, 2002, in Rome, Lazio, Italy.
Louis IX was a French monarch! Italian Kings were Humbert ( Umberto, no H at the beginning of a word in Italian), Victor Immanuel l and II and ( Buck General)- he wore the uniform of a brigadier General- Umberto II. The Queens were Margherita Di Savoia, Elena di Savoia ( died l952) and for about a month- Maria Jose, wife of Umberto II. No Luigis in the pie!
Victor Emmanuel III was born in Naples, Italy, in 1869, the son of King Umberto I, Italy's second reigning monarch. Victor Emmanuel III came to the throne when his father was assassinated at Monza in 1900. He was so small that he was nicknamed the 'dwarf' by Kaiser Wilhelm II. Following the overthrow of Benito Mussolini in July 1943, King Victor Emmanuel handed over his constitutional functions to his son. Victor Emmanuel III withdrew from private life and died in exile in Egypt in 1947. The King's son was made Lieutenant General of the Realm but he left Italy for safety in Egypt. After the war, he returned and was crowned King Umberto II in 1946. A few weeks later a referendum was held to decide the fate of the monarchy. The ballot was in favor of a Republic. The monarchy formally ended on June 12, 1946--- King Umberto II was king for only 33 days.
Umberto I [March 14, 1844-July 29, 1900] was Italy's leader in the decade, 1890-1900. In fact, as King of Italy, he led the country as of January 9, 1878. History has given him the nickname 'il Buono', which means 'the Good'. But his rule ended with his death by four well aimed pistol shots of Gaetano Bresci [November 11, 1869-May 22, 1901].