Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Estos tarot fueron encargados por Filippo Maria Visconti, duque de Milán, y por su sucesor y yerno Francisco I Sforza. Tuvieron un impacto significativo en la composición visual, numeración e interpretación de los modernos mazos de cartas.

  2. Filippo Maria (12 de diciembre de 1449 — 1492), Conde de Córcega. Sforza Maria (18 agosto 1451 — 29 julio 1479), Duque de Bari de 1464 a 1479. Francesco Galeazzo Maria (5 de agosto de 1453/54) murió joven. Ludovico Maria (3 de agosto de 1452 a 27 de mayo de 1508), Duque de Bari de 1479 a 1494 y Duque de Milán de 1494 a 1499.

  3. Filippo Maria Visconti formó una liga con Venecia y Florencia y se puso del lado de los angevinos; más tarde, en uno de sus frecuentes cambios de alineamiento pasó con los aragoneses pero fue derrotado por los antiguos aliados, encabezados por el condottiero mercenario Francisco Sforza. En 1441 Filippo Maria firmó la Paz de Cremona, con la ...

  4. The Sforza family began to reign the Duchy of Milan, substituting the Visconti family, in 1450 with Francesco Sforza (1401-1466). Already in 1425 the Duke of Milan, Filippo Maria Visconti called Francesco to his service but it was not until 1431 that he had the fortune of having him stably at his service promising to donate his daughter, Bianca Maria, in marriage, as effectively he did in 1441.

  5. Gli Sforza e il primo Rinascimento. Dopo l’apogeo toccato con Gian Galeazzo Visconti (morto nel 1402) la signoria dei Visconti decade: la Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia strappa al ducato di Milano i territori di Bergamo e di Brescia. L’ultimo duca Visconti, Filippo Maria, muore nel 1447, senza eredi maschi.

  6. 8 de abr. de 2024 · Entering the service of Filippo Maria Visconti, duke of Milan, Sforza fought alternately for and against him in the succeeding 20 years. During periods of uneasy truce he became betrothed (1433) to and married (1441) the duke’s illegitimate daughter and only child, Bianca Maria.

  7. Francesco Sforza (1401 - 1466) was a mercenary soldier (what Machiavelli would have called a "condottiero", i.e. a military contractor) and the son of a prominent mercenary whose practice centered on the Duchy of Milan, which included the city-state of Milan, a cluster of dependent cities (including the some-time capital city of Pavia) and the surrounding territory in the northern thigh of Italy.