Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 15 de oct. de 2017 · The Jesuits in Genoa settled near the old Church of San Girolamo Del Rosso and enlarged their premises by buying some land on which to locate their College and schools. The building began to be used in 1640 and is now part of the University premises

    • Gabriella Bernardi
    • gabriella.bernardi@gmail.com
    • 2017
  2. With the dissolution, in 1773, of "Compagnia di Gesù" (The Society of Jesus, the name of the Jesuit Order), the Collegio (college) was renamed Università Pubblica (Public University) and came under the direct control of the Repubblica (Republic) of Genoa. ... Go to detail.

    • closed
    • closed
  3. In the last decades of the 17th century, the Genoa Jesuit College in Strada Balbi was still being built, and, at the end of the 1680s, the great hall of the Col- lege had been fully decorated 8 .

  4. 17 de jul. de 2007 · The Jesuit College was built on the side of the hill rising steeply from the road, so it was conceived vertically. Completed early in the eighteenth century, it became the property of the Republic in 1775, after the suppression of the Jesuit order.

  5. The University of Genoa, known also with the acronym UniGe (Italian: Università di Genova), is a public research university. It is one of the largest universities in Italy and it is located in the city of Genoa , on the Italian Riviera in the Liguria region of northwestern Italy.

  6. 13 de oct. de 2023 · The Jesuit College with the former church is an extraordinary example of an architectural complex where some of the most important artists and architects active in Genoa between the 17th and 18th centuries worked, commissioned by one of the most influential and richest families of the period.

  7. devote 1660 and 1661 to an inspection trip of the nineteen Jesuit colleges, all with schools, in the province of Milan. It was an arduous visitation, because the Jesuit province embraced what is now Lombardy, Piedmont, plus Ajaccio and Bastia in Corsica, at that time ruled by the Republic of Genoa. Visitation