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Giorgio Benigno Salviati (died 1520), Bosnian-born adopted member of the family, theologian and archbishop; Jacopo Salviati (1461–1533), married Lucrezia de' Medici; Giovanni Salviati (1490–1553), cardinal; Maria Salviati (1499–1543), daughter of Lucrezia di Medici and Jacopo Salviati, married Giovanni delle Bande Nere, mother of Cosimo I ...
Beverly Heather D'Angelo (born November 15, 1951) is an American actress who starred as Ellen Griswold in the National Lampoon's Vacation films (1983–2015). [1] She has appeared in over 60 films and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for her role as Patsy Cline in Coal Miner's Daughter (1980), and for an Emmy Award for her role as Stella Kowalski in the TV film A Streetcar Named Desire ...
Lorenzo de' Medici: Giovanni Salviati (1490–1553) Cardinal: Lorenzo Salviati (1492–1539) Lorenzo II de' Medici (1492–1519) Duke of Urbino: Madeleine de La Tour (ca.1495–1519) Clarissa de' Medici (1493–1528) m. Filippo Strozzi: Elena Salviati (1495–1552) m.(1) Pallavicino Pallavicino m.(2) Iacopo V Appiani: Battista Salviati (1498 ...
Cesare Ripa (c. 1555, Perugia – () January 22, 1622 Rome) was an Italian iconographer who worked for Cardinal Anton Maria Salviati as a cook and butler. Life [ edit ]
Salviati was mostly known for having been a benefactor. In Rome, he refounded the Arcispedale of San Giacomo degli Incurabili (rebuilding the annexed baroque-style Church of San Giacomo in Augusta) and founded the Collegio Salviati at his own expense at the end of 16th century, then he gifted them to the city of Rome. Other funding from him ...
Don Lorenzo may refer to: Don Lorenzo, a 1952 Italian film; Don Lorenzo, Bolivia, a town in Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia This page was last edited on 28 ...
Francesco Salviati (1443 – 1478) was the archbishop of Pisa from 1474 to 1478. [1] He was one of the organisers of the Pazzi conspiracy , a plot to displace the Medici family as rulers of the Florentine Republic ; he was executed after the failure of the plot.
A possible portrait of Dragišić at the start of his Opus de natura caelestium spirituum quos angelos voca, a deluxe incunabulum printed at Florence in 1499. Juraj Dragišić (c. 1445 –1520), known in Italian as Giorgio Benigno Salviati (Latin: Georgius Benignus de Salviatis), was a Bosnian Franciscan theologian and philosopher of the Renaissance.