Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. En esta ocasión, una producción única de esta obra maestra casi infernal de Mozart llega a la edición 2021 del Festival de Salzburgo bajo la dirección de Teodor Currentzis, uno de los directores más excepcionales de nuestra época. Esta puesta en escena presentada en el Grosses Festspielhaus está firmada por el legendario Romeo ...

  2. Giovanni Medici. Giovanni Medici may refer to: Don Giovanni de' Medici (1567-1621), Italian military commander and diplomat. Giovanni de' Medici (cardinal) (1543–1562), Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church. Giovanni delle Bande Nere (Ludovico de' Medici, 1498–1526), Italian condottiero. Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici (c. 1360–1429), Italian ...

  3. Between 1615 and 1620, Benedetto Blanis (c.1580-c.1647), a Jewish scholar and businessman in the Florentine ghetto, sent 196 letters to Don Giovanni dei Medici (1567-1621), an influential member of the ruling family. Blanis served Don Giovanni as palace librarian—organizing and cataloging the library’s contents, acquiring books from various ...

  4. rence, Don Giovanni was not alone in his intellectual pursuits. His nephew Don Antonio, Francesco I deMedici’s illegitimate son, devoted his life to seeking scientific alternatives to Neoplatonic kabbalah and produced a text known as Segreti dell’ecc.mo sig. principe Don Antonio deMedici.8 4Medicea Laurenziana Library, Florence, Plut.

  5. Don Giovanni and Don Garzia de' Medici. The painting features two of the eleven children of Cosimo I de' Medici and Eleonora di Toledo, Giovanni and Garzia. Both- the first destined for the religious career, the second one for military life - die in 1562 for malarial fevers, near Pisa, together with the mother Eleonora. Photo: Simone Lampredi.

  6. Don Giovanni de' Medici (May 13, 1563 – July 19, 1621) was an Italian military commander and diplomat. Born in Florence , he was the illegitimate son of Cosimo I de' Medici , Grand Duke of Tuscany , and Eleonora degli Albrizzi.

  7. Program notes. On 29th October 1787, the curtain of the National Theater in Prague rose upon the set of Mozart’s Don Giovanni, now regarded as one of the world’s greatest operatic masterpieces. Over two centuries later, the magic lives on in the Staatsoper Berlin’s spectacular adaptation under the musical direction of Thomas Guggeis!