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  1. Infrared images reveal Bernardo Bembo's motto—Virtus et honor or “virtue and honor”—beneath Ginevra's. It is possible, but so far unproven, that he commissioned the portrait of Ginevra. Ginevra de' Benci (c. 1474 - 1478) by Leonardo da Vinci National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

  2. 24 de ago. de 2017 · This was the first Latin text—or, more strictly, the first text entirely in Latin—to be published by the Aldine Press at Venice, appearing in February 1496 (1495 more veneto). 3 Set in the Bembo country retreat that was known as Noniano, outside Padua, 4 it is cast in the form of a dialogue between Pietro and his father, Bernardo (1433–1519), that distinguished humanist, diplomatist, and ...

  3. Una pasión de la Bernardo Bembo que disfrutaba con orgullo y que Memling supo captar magistralmente. “Retrato de un hombre con una moneda romana”, de Hans Memling (hacia 1480). Óleo sobre tabla, 31 cm. × 23,2 cm. Museo Real de Bellas Artes de Amberes, Países Bajos.

  4. 21 de oct. de 2022 · Portrait of Bernardo Bembo by Hans Memling Renaissance Portraits in Rijksmuseum: Hans Memling, Portrait of Bernardo Bembo , c. 1471–1474, Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp, Belgium. This exquisite portrait by Hans Memling came from the collection of the Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp, which has been under a massive renovation project for many years and has just recently reopened.

  5. William S. Monroe, Curator of Medieval Manuscripts and Early Printed Books at the Brown University Library, writes about his discovery that one of the Library’s books belonged to Bernardo Bembo: Cecil Clough once noted that we can learn much about the life and travels of Bernardo Bembo from the books he owned, especially “because of his ...

  6. Bembo, Bernardo (1433–1519) in The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature Length: 59 words. Search for: 'Bernardo Bembo' in Oxford Reference ». (1433–1519).Venetian humanist and politician, who was in contact with figures such as Lorenzo de' Medici, Ficino, Landino, and Castiglione. He himself wrote speeches and letters, mostly in Latin.

  7. One piece of evidence for the close association of Bernardo Bembo and the circle assembled at Careggi is the dialogue held by Florentine humanists at Regnano in the Florentine countryside in which Giovanni Gavalcanti, Cristoforo Landino, Bernardo Nuzzi, and Bernardo Bembo were present (Ficino 2002:VII.1). [