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  1. Lorenzo de Médici (en italiano: Lorenzo di Piero de' Medici; Florencia, 1 de enero de 1449-Villa medicea de Careggi, 8 de abril de 1492), [1] también conocido como Lorenzo el Magnífico por sus contemporáneos, fue un estadista italiano y gobernante de facto [2] de la República de Florencia, mecenas de las artes, diplomático, banquero, poeta y filósofo renacentista, perteneciente a la ...

  2. 23 de sept. de 2017 · El escritor italiano Lorenzo de Medici no sólo carga con el nombre de quien fue príncipe de Florencia durante el Renacimiento, aquel que fue mecenas de artistas como Miguel Ángel o Leonardo da ...

  3. The Brilliant Life and Violent Times of Lorenzo deMedici, 2008), pp. 216-17: by the end of 1473 Lorenzo had fathered five children: Lucrezia in 1470, premature twin boys who died in 1471, Piero in 1472, and Maddelena in 1473. Giovanni was born in 1475, Luigia and Contessina both in 1478, and Giuliano in 1479.

  4. But it seems all good things one day must end, as did the Medici dynasty in the mid-1700s. Hard to believe that such a powerful family could wither and fade, but by 1743 Anna Maria Luisa de Medici Dowager Electress Palatine, the last remaining Medici, died of “oppression on the breast” (as written in a letter by Sir Horace Manna, a British resident in Florence).

  5. 13 de mar. de 2019 · Lorenzo de’ Medici, (January 1, 1449 – April 8, 1492) was a Florentine politician and one of the most prominent patrons of arts and culture in Italy. During his reign as de facto leader of the Florentine Republic, he held together political alliances while sponsoring artists and encouraging the peak of the Italian Renaissance .

  6. 14 de abr. de 2023 · Portrait of Anna Maria Luisa de' Medici, electress of the Palatine (1667-1743)

  7. 25 de feb. de 2015 · He was the eldest son of Lorenzo deMedici, called Il Magnifico; he was the grandchild of his namesake, Piero di Cosimo deMedici, known as Piero the Gouty. And like that namesake, his reign as de facto ruler of Florence was not as esteemed as is father’s or his great-grandfather’s, Cosimo, Pater Patriae (father of the fatherland).