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Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio [1] (died 14 March 1509) was an Italian canon lawyer and Cardinal. [2] Agostino Oldoino calls him the leading jurisconsult of his age. [3] Kenneth Pennington has called him one of the ‘last two great commentators on feudal law’.
People with the name San Giorgio or Sangiorgio include: The Master of the Antiphonal Q of San Giorgio Maggiore (active between 1440 and 1470), an Italian painter of illuminated manuscripts Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio (died 1509), Italian canon lawyer and Cardinal of Alessandria
Eusebio da San Giorgio or Eusebio di Jacopo di Cristoforo da San Giorgio (c. 1470 – c. 1550) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance period. Biography [ edit ]
Born in Milan, Sangiorgio studied at the city's Accademia di Brera.During his early career he worked for the Fabbrica del Duomo di Milano; later he received numerous commissions for large public sculptures in places including Turin (a Castor and Pollux for the Palazzo Reale), Milan, Brescia and Casale Monferrato (an equestrian portrait of Charles Albert of Piedmont-Sardinia).
Victor Sangiorgio was born in Italy but his family moved to Australia when he was four, and settled in Perth, Western Australia.He completed his initial training at Perth Modern School, as a member of the school's music scholarship programme.
Giorgio is a male Italian given name derived from the Greek Georgios and sometimes a surname. It is equivalent to the English name George . Notable people with the name include:
On 16 December, San Giorgio was appointed Judge of the Constitutional Court of Italy by the Supreme Court of Cassation. She is the first woman to be chosen as a Judge of the Constitutional Court of Italy as a magistrate of a higher jurisdiction by the Court of Cassation. [2]
The Bank of Saint George (Italian: Casa delle compere e dei banchi di San Giorgio or informally as Ufficio di San Giorgio or Banco) [1] was a financial institution of the Republic of Genoa. It was founded on 23 April 1407 [2] to consolidate the public debt, which had been escalating due to the war with Venice for trading and financial dominance ...