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Ancient Cerignola family. From 1598 to 1729 he owned the noble fief of Manco in Calabria Citra. On April 22, 1836 Filippo Fiordelisi was declared admissible in the RR. Bodyguards. The coat of arms of the Fiordelisi family is: Of blue to the gold band accompanied on the head by a cornflower between two stars, and on the tip by a lion in crouching majesty, resting the head on three flowering branches of a cornflower each, all gold. The family participated in the history of Naples and its events during the past, contributing not a little to the nobility and institutional offices of the same city, made by the kings who reigned in the Duchy of Naples. Many kingdoms have passed over this Byzantine province, ruled by a dux. In 638 Naples was dependent on the governor of Sicily and later ruled directly by the emperor. Duke-Bishop Stefano II was the first of the elective dukes to succeed each other for about a century, followed by the hereditary dukes. In addition to Naples, the duchy included Pozzuoli, Cuma, Sorrento and the Terra del Lavoro. The golden age was the tenth century, under the reigns of Gregory III, Sergius II, Athanasius II, Gregory IV and John II; in this period the dukes implemented an effective defense of their independence and a strong action to remove Muslims from the lower Tyrrhenian Sea, ennobling numerous families, including the same. Towards the eleventh century, the decline of the duchy began, after a series of defeats inflicted by the Byzantines and the Lombards of the principality of Capua, for which Sergio IV was forced to seek help from the Normans as soon as they appeared in the South; as a reward for such help, their leader, Rainolfo Drengot, had to be rewarded with the concession