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The Miami Metropolis, which later became The Miami News, was founded in 1896, and was the Herald ' s oldest competitor until 1988, when it went out of business. [ 11 ] During the Florida land boom of the 1920s , the Miami Herald was the largest newspaper in the world, as measured by lines of advertising. [ 12 ]
Carpaccio was born in Venice (between 1460 and 1465), [4] [5] the son of Pietro Scarpaza, a Venetian furrier in the parish of Arcangelo Raffaele. [4] [footnotes 1] Although Carpaccio's precise date of birth remains unknown, various documents have offered clues in order to narrow it down to a particular span of years.
The Zadar Polyptych is an oil-on-panel by Italian artist Vittore Carpaccio, painted around 1480–1490. It is now in the Museum of Sacred Art of the Zadar Cathedral , in southern Croatia . It was commissioned by Martin Mladošić, canon, notary and archpresbyter of Nin from Zadar , for the altar of St. Martin in Zadar Cathedral.
It was on June 16, 1970, that I transitioned from a Miami Herald file clerk in the paper’s library (or morgue as we called it), to a Miami Herald news reporter. That was 54 years ago, today.
Two years ago, David Lawrence Jr., former publisher of the Miami Herald, was the Sand in My Shoes recipient for 2021. In 1999, Ibargüen succeeded Lawrence as the Herald’s publisher.
The painting was commissioned for the Grand Hall of the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista, the seat of the eponymous brotherhood in Venice.The commission included a total of nine large canvasses by prominent artists of the time, including Gentile Bellini, Perugino, Vittore Carpaccio, Giovanni Mansueti, Lazzaro Bastiani and Benedetto Rusconi.
The restaurant also made news in 2013, ... told the Miami Herald that the company planned to find a temporary location for the restaurant in North Bay Village or Miami Beach’s North Beach ...
Two Venetian Ladies is an oil on panel painting by the Italian Renaissance artist Vittore Carpaccio. The painting, believed to be a quarter of the original work, was executed around 1490 and shows two unknown Venetian ladies. The top portion of the panel, called Hunting on the Lagoon is in the Getty Museum, and another matching panel is missing.