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  1. Guidobaldo II della Rovere, Duke of Urbino (2 April 1514 – 28 September 1574) was an Italian condottiero, who succeeded his father Francesco Maria I della Rovere as Duke of Urbino from 1538 until his death in 1574. He was a member of the House of La Rovere.

  2. Guidobaldo II della Rovere duca d'Urbino nell'Enciclopedia Treccani - Treccani - Treccani. Figlio (Pesaro 1514 - ivi 1574) di Francesco Maria, al quale successe, ottenne in seguito al matrimonio con Giulia Varano il ducato di Camerino, che presto, però, dovette cedere (1539) al pontefice Paolo III.

  3. Shakespeare , Amleto , Atto III, Scena II ) e alle modalità di assassinio di Amleto farebbero pensare che lo scrittore si sia rifatto a qualche resoconto dell'epoca, trasmesso "in buon italiano". Si tratterebbe dell'episodio che portò alla morte nel 1538 del duca di Urbino Francesco Maria I della Rovere, marito di Eleonora Gonzaga , forse avvelenato da un sicario del marchese di Castel ...

  4. 3 de ene. de 2022 · The Malaspina family (Elizabeth della Rovere, sister of Guidobaldo II, who married Alberico I Cybo Malaspina, Marchese di Massa and Carrara). Abate Luigi Celotti, Venice, until 1837. Count Anatole Demidoff, Prince of San Donato (1812-1875), San Donato, Florence, 1837; his sale, Hotel Drouot, Paris, 3-4 March 1870, lot 187 (17,500 francs).

  5. In the case of Bronzino's portrait of Guidobaldo II della Rovere,1 pain-ted between April 1531 and April 1532,2 some of the same concerns are exhibited (fig. 2). The eighteen year-old son of the new line of dukes of Urbino (through Francesco Maria della Rovere and Eleonora Gonzaga) is seen in an elegant dark green and gold Milanese suit of armour.

  6. In 1933 the archivist and art historian Georg Gronau did a great disservice to Titian’s sensitive portrait of Guidobaldo II della Rovere, Duke of Urbino —now in the collection of the Yale University Art Gallery—when he published an essay that associated it with the wrong image.1 Since then, basing their judgment on an incorrect and unimpressive image, scholars have dis- missed the ...

  7. Guidobaldo was forced to flee Urbino in 1502 to escape the armies of Cesare Borgia, but returned after the death of Cesare Borgia's father, Pope Alexander VI, in 1503. He adopted as his heir Francesco Maria della Rovere, his sister's child and nephew of Pope Julius II, thus uniting the seigniory of Senigallia with Urbino.