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  1. Ippolita Gonzaga (13 November 1503 in Mantua – 16 March 1570 in Mantua) was an Italian noblewoman and nun. [1] [2] [3] She is not to be confused with her niece Ippolita Gonzaga (1535–1563) the daughter of Ferrante Gonzaga, who married in 1549 Fabrizio Colonna, hereditary prince of Paliano, and in 1554 Antonio Carafa, duke of ...

  2. Title: Ippolita di Ferdinando Gonzaga (1535–1563) at the age of 16. Artist: Medalist: Leone Leoni (Italian, Menaggio ca. 1509–1590 Milan) Date: 1551–52. Culture: Italian. Medium: Bronze, cast. Dimensions: Diam. 2 5/8 in. (67 mm.) Classification: Medals and Plaquettes. Credit Line: Bequest of Gwynne M. Andrews, 1931.

  3. La representada es Ippolita Gonzaga (Palermo, 17/06/1535 - Nápoles, 09/03/1563), hija de Ferrante I Gonzaga, conde de Guastalla, virrey de Sicilia con Carlos V, y de Isabel de Capua; casó en primeras nupcias con Fabrizio Gonzaga en 1545, enviudandoen 1551, sin descendencia; una vez niuda reside en Milán, rodeada de literatos y artistas; en ...

  4. Ippolita Gonzaga was an Italian noblewoman and nun. She is not to be confused with her niece Ippolita Gonzaga (1535–1563) the daughter of Ferrante Gonzaga, who married in 1549 Fabrizio Colonna, hereditary prince of Paliano, and in 1554 Antonio Carafa, duke of Mondragone.

  5. Google Arts & Culture features content from over 2000 leading museums and archives who have partnered with the Google Cultural Institute to bring the world's treasures online.

  6. Ippolita was already famed for her beauty and accomplishments by the time she reached the age of 15, when Leoni cast this medal. She appears on the reverse as Diana, the huntress and moon goddess, and - as indicated by the presence of Pluto, Proserpina and Cerberus - as Hecate, goddess of the underworld.

  7. Ippolita Gonzaga (1535–1563), at the age of 17. Jacopo was trained as a gem engraver, sculptor, and architect. In addition to making portrait medals of prominent Milanese individuals, he engraved germs and fabricated objects in precious and semi-precious stones for Cosimo I, the duke of Florence.