Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Giovanni II Bentivoglio (12 February 1443 – 15 February 1508) was an Italian nobleman who ruled as tyrant of Bologna from 1463 until 1506. He had no formal position, but held power as the city's "first citizen." The Bentivoglio family ruled over Bologna from 1443, and repeatedly attempted to consolidate their hold of the Signoria of the city.

  2. Giovanni II Bentivoglio ( Bologna, 15 febbraio 1443 – Milano, 16 febbraio 1508) è stato un nobile italiano, signore de facto di Bologna dal 1463 al 1506 . Indice. 1 Biografia. 2 Matrimonio e discendenza. 3 Ascendenza. 4 Note. 5 Bibliografia. 6 Voci correlate. 7 Altri progetti. 8 Collegamenti esterni. Biografia.

  3. A son of Giovanni II, Annibale II (1469–1540), married Lucrezia d'Este, an illegitimate daughter of Duke Ercole I of Ferrara, in 1487. He served as a condottiero. During a rebellion in 1511 against Julius II, Annibale II with the help of the French took control o Bologna, but he was able to rule for only a year.

  4. Giovanni II Bentivoglio. Italian leader. Learn about this topic in these articles: effect on Bentivoglio family rule. In Bentivoglio Family. Sante Bentivoglio established his family’s close relationship with the Sforza family of Milan, often an important ally during wars. Read More.

  5. Giovanni II Bentivoglio. (1443—1508) Quick Reference. (1443–1508), Ruler of Bologna, born on 15 February 1443, the posthumous son of Annibale Bentivoglio, who was ruler of Bologna until his murder, and Donnina Visconti. Giovanni became ‘first citizen’ ... From: Bentivoglio, Giovanni II in The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance »

  6. Provenance. Title: Giovanni II Bentivoglio 1443–1508, Lord of Bologna 1463–1506. Artist: Francesco Francia (Italian, Bologna ca. 1447–1517 Bologna) Date: 1494. Culture: Italian. Medium: Bronze. Dimensions: Diameter (Confirmed): 1 1/16 × 1/8 in. (27.5 × 2.7 mm) Classification: Medals and Plaquettes. Accession Number: 2023.569.20.

  7. On November 2, 1506, with the troops of Pope Julius II nearing the city, Giovanni II Bentivoglio, condottiere and lord of Bologna, fled with a troop of some 500 supporters. "La caccia" ended almost one hundred years of Bentivoglio preeminence in Bologna and forty-three years of Giovanni's relatively peaceful overlordship.