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  1. E 04-Cavallaro(COLORE)-Felice della Rovere__ 26/01/18 15:53 Pagina 329 FELICE DELLA ROVERE A BRACCIANO 329 di, vestita con un abito nero fornito di ampio décolleté e un mantello scuro che le copre il capo, è seduta in uno spazio naturale, con un libro aperto che sostiene con la mano sinistra e sul quale poggia la mano destra (fig. 3).

  2. 4 de nov. de 2006 · Felice Della Rovere was a WOMAN unlike most of her counterparts for her day. According to the book, women were to bear children and have very little say over anything in life. Felice, being the daughter of Pope Julius II, changed that concept, at least for herself.

    • Caroline P. Murphy
  3. Painstakingly combing diplomatic and personal correspondence, account books, and notarial contracts and then filling gaps from the political and cultural historiography on Renaissance Italy, Caroline Murphy reconstructs the life of Felice della Rovere (ca. 1483–1536), a largely forgotten woman, almost unique in her family heritage, impressively resilient amidst the buffetings of a turbulent ...

  4. Felice della Rovere (c. 1483 – September 27, 1536), also known as Madonna Felice, was the illegitimate daughter of Pope Julius II. One of the most powerful women of the Italian Renaissance, she was born in Rome around 1483 to Lucrezia Normanni and Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere, later Pope Julius II.

  5. 6 de sept. de 2021 · The pope's daughter : the extraordinary life of Felice della Rovere by Murphy, Caroline, 1969-Publication date 2005 Topics

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Della_RovereDella Rovere - Wikipedia

    Francesco Della Rovere was born into a poor family in Liguria in north-west Italy in 1414, the son of Leonardo della Rovere of Savona. [1] A Franciscan who became Minister General of his order, then cardinal, he had a reptation for unworldliness until he was elected pope in 1471. As Sixtus IV he was both wealthy and powerful, and at once set ...

  7. Felice della Rovere (1483?–1536) emerges from obscurity to rival other great Renaissance women in this rendering of her life and legacy by Renaissance art scholar Murphy (Lavinia Fontana ...