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Francesco de' Pazzi (28 January 1444 – 26 April 1478) was a Florentine banker, a member of the Pazzi noble family, and one of the instigators of the Pazzi conspiracy, a plot to displace the Medici family as rulers of the Florentine Republic. His uncle, Jacopo de' Pazzi, was one of the main organizers of the conspiracy. [1]
The Pazzi conspiracy (Italian: Congiura dei Pazzi) was a failed plot by members of the Pazzi family and others to displace the Medici family as rulers of Renaissance Florence. On 26 April 1478 there was an attempt to assassinate Lorenzo de' Medici and his brother Giuliano. Lorenzo was wounded but survived; Giuliano was killed.
Francesco de' Pazzi was one of the instigators of the Pazzi conspiracy in 1477–78. He, Jacopo de' Pazzi and Jacopo's brother Renato de' Pazzi were executed after the plot failed. [2]: 141 Raffaele de' Pazzi was a condottiere; he died at the Battle of Ravenna in 1512. [6]
From Ted Bundy to John Wayne Gacy, we've got 12 meals that prisoners on death row ordered as their last meal. While fried chicken seemed to be a popular menu choice, others have the most simple ...
N.C.-based Wikipedia editors Emily Jack, Gaurav Vaidya and Danielle Colbert-Lewis pose for a portrait in Chapel Hill, N.C. on Thursday, Aug. 11, 2022.
Here are the three death row inmates that weren’t on the president’s commutations list: Robert D. Bowers. Bowers is the gunman behind the deadly 2018 antisemitic Tree of Life synagogue attack ...
He then cuts Pazzi's belly and throws him from the window, hanging him from the neck and spilling his bowels in the ground, in a similar manner to Francesco de' Pazzi. He then notices Crawford staring at him in the ground, who furiously enters the Palazzo Capponi. Lecter anticipates Crawford, taunting him for Bella's death.
Jacopo de' Pazzi (1423 – 26 April 1478) was a Florentine banker who became head of the Pazzi family in 1464, and the younger child of Andrea de' Pazzi and Costanza de' Bardi. [1] He commissioned Palazzo Pazzi between 1462 and 1472. [2] Stefano di Ser Niccolo da Bagnone served as a secretary to Jacopo and tutor to his daughter Caterina. [3]