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  1. History. Some sources trace the origins of the family to a Gottifredo who lived in Florence in the twelfth century. [2] . The first documented member of the family is Cambio di Salvi, who in 1335 was among both the gonfalonieri and the priori [ it]. [2] . In all, twenty members were gonfaloniere and sixty-two occupied the position of priore. [2]

  2. Bindo Altoviti (26 November 1491 – 22 January 1557) of the Altoviti family was an Italian banker and one of the most influential papal bankers of his generation.

  3. Jacopo de' Pazzi (1423 – 26 April 1478) was a Florentine banker who became head of the Pazzi family in 1464, and the younger child of Andrea de' Pazzi and Costanza de' Bardi. [1] He commissioned Palazzo Pazzi between 1462 and 1472. [2]

  4. Andrea de' Pazzi was born in Florence in 1372, son of Guglielmo de' Pazzi and Costanza de' Bardi, two prestigious dynasties of wealthy bankers, belonging to the Guelph political faction. Andrea began his political career in 1411 as Councilor of the Republic. In 1413 he was Captain of the Guelphs.

  5. Francesco Salviati (Francesco de' Rossi) Italian. ca. 1545. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 612. Having made politically astute loans to popes, the Venetian state, and French monarchs, Bindo Altoviti was one of the wealthiest and most powerful bankers of the sixteenth century.

  6. La famille Salviati est une importante famille de banquiers florentins et romains de la Renaissance qui furent notamment au service du pape Sixte IV au XVe siècle.

  7. Clement VII's tumultuous pontificate was dominated by a rapid succession of political crises—many long in the making—that resulted in the sack of Rome by the armies of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V in 1527 and rise of the Salviati, Altoviti and Strozzi as the leading bankers of the Roman Curia.