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  1. Issue. Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici. Francesco de' Medici. Antonia de' Medici. Father. Salvestro de Medici 'il Chiarissimo'. Averardo de' Medici (1320 – 1363), also known as Everard De Medici or Bicci to disambiguate with his two homonymous ancestors, was the son of Salvestro de' Medici (1300, Florence – 1346, Florence; son of ...

  2. 1 de ene. de 2019 · Los Médici fueron mecenas de los artistas más relevantes de la época como Miguel Ángel, a quien Lorenzo el Magnífico financió sus obras…. La dinastía de los Médici, que dominó la vida de Florencia y la Toscana durante tres siglos, comenzó con Giovanni di Averardo (1360-1429), quien dio impulso a la banca familiar al tomar ...

  3. Averardo de' Medici (1488–1495) Ginevra de' Medici m. Giovanni degli Albizzi: Ippolito de' Medici (1511–1535) Cardinal) Pierfrancesco de' Medici (the Younger) (1487–1525) m. Maria Soderini: Laudomia de' Medici m. Francesco Salviati: Vincenzo de' Medici: Lorenzo de' Medici: Giovanni Salviati (1490–1553) Cardinal: Lorenzo Salviati (1492 ...

  4. A distant cousin of Salvestro was Averardo deMedici (or Bicci), whose progeny became the famous Medici of history. His son Giovanni di Bicci de’ Medici (1360–1429), considered the first of the great Medici, inherited the family business based on cloth and silk manufacturing and on banking operations and made the family powerfully ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Averardo de' Medici (1320 – 1363), also known as Everard De Medici or Bicci to disambiguate with his two homonymous ancestors, was the son of Salvestro de' Medici (1300, Florence – 1346, Florence; son of Averardo II de' Medici, 1270–1319), "il Chiarissimo" (English meaning "the fairest" for his complexion, or also interpreted as "the ...

  6. This sort of courtly novel presents as a progenitor a certain Averardo de 'Medici - a name later recurring in the family between two and four hundreds, who was a commander of the army of Charlemagne, emperor and' refounder 'of Florence.

  7. Foligno's expressed concern over the decline in the position of his house is indeed remarkable, when one considers that in the following century the de- scendants of his first cousin, Averardo (called Bicci), achieved a degree of political authority in Florence unequalled by any family in the history of the city. In- formation on the role of the Medici during the fourteenth century is of some