The ducal
fief of Nocera was created for the first time in December 1521 by Emperor
Charles V in his prerogatives as King of
Spain and
Naples, and was sold for 50.000 ducats to (?–1527), one of the many members of the noble
House of Carafa. The title was descendible in the legitimate male line and remained in the possession of Tiberio's descendants until 1648, when, upon the death without legitimate sons of (after 1616–1648), it was reincorporated into the Royal Treasury of the Kingdom Naples. The title was subsequently created for a second time in 1659 when it was bestowed upon aforesaid General Moura. This time, in accordance with Spanish law, the title was also descendible in the female line (of course in the absence of legitimate sons). Thus, when Moura died without male issue in 1675, he was succeeded, in order, by his daughters
Eleanor, who in turn died without surviving issue in 1706, and , who was first married to Italian Giberto
Pio di Savoia (ca 1637–1676), Prince of San Gregorio. Few months after her succession, however, following the conquest of the Kingdom of Naples by the
Habsbourgs in 1707, Juana was stripped of her titles for "felony", having refused to render homage to the new King Charles III (later to become
Holy Roman Emperor under the name of
Charles VI) and in 1709 her pro-Habsburg second-born son was invested with the duchy of Nocera in her stead, taking effective possession of it. When Juana died in 1717, she was nominally succeeded, according to Spanish law, by her eldest son
Francesco Pio di Savoia, who had meanwhile gained a prominent place in the Spanish
Bourbon court, and subsequently, on the latter's death in 1723, by his son (called in Spain Gisberto Pío de Saboya y Spínola), but the duchy effectively remained in Luigi's possession according to Austrian law then still in force in the Kingdom of Naples. In 1734, however, the Kingdom was again conquered, this time by the
Infante of Spain,
Don Carlos, and, the following year, the 1707 confiscation of Juana's titles was annulled and the same, including the duchy of Nocera, were reincorporated into the Pio di Savoia
majorat with Gisberto as its titular. No further opposition was offered by Luigi, at the time the
Austrian ambassador in
Venice, who had no legitimate children and of whom Gisberto was the legal heir as well. When Gisberto too died childless in 1776, the title passed to his sister , married in second marriage to Antonio José Valcárcel y Pérez Pastor, and then to her Valcárcel descendants. At the death with no issue of her grandson Antonio Valcárcel y Pascual de Pobil, the 8th Duke, in 1824, the dukedom became extinct until it was rehabilitated by
Alfonso XIII in 1922 under the name of "Duque de Nochera", on behalf of Alfonso Falcó y De La Gandara, great-great-grandson in the female line of the 7th Duke Antonio Valcárcel y Pío de Saboya. As the Falcó family too died out in 1970, the title has passed to a line of the Italian
Balbo Bertone di Sambuy family, also descended from the 7th duke. ==Dukes of Nocera==