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  1. Ferrante d'Este (19 September 1477, Castel Capuano, Naples – February 1540, Ferrara) was a Ferrarese nobleman and condottiero. He was the son of Ercole I d'Este and Eleonora d'Aragona - he was named after his mother's father Ferdinand I of Naples.

  2. Ferdinando d'Este detto Ferrante (Napoli, 19 settembre 1477 – Ferrara, febbraio 1540) Figlio secondogenito del duca di Ferrara Ercole I d'Este, esercitò il mestiere del condottiero al servizio del re di Francia Carlo VIII.

  3. Ferrante d'Este's Letters as a Source for Military History; By Sergio Mantovani; Edited by Kelly Devries, Clifford J. Rogers; Book: Journal of Medieval Military History; Online publication: 12 September 2012

  4. Ferrante d'Este (19 September 1477, Castel Capuano, Naples – February 1540, Ferrara) was a Ferrarese nobleman and condottiero. He was the son of Ercole I d'Este and Eleonora d'Aragona - he was named after his mother's father Ferdinand I of Naples.

  5. Ferrante d'Este (19 September 1477, Castel Capuano, Naples – February 1540, Ferrara) was a Ferrarese nobleman and condottiero. He was the son of Ercole I d'Este and Eleonora d'Aragona - he was named after his mother's father Ferdinand I of Naples. His five siblings were Alfonso I d'Este...

  6. Ferrante d'Este (19 September 1477-February 1540) was a Ferrarese nobleman and condottiero. Ferrante d'Este was the son of Ercole I d'Este and Eleanor of Naples, and he was the brother of Alfonso d'Este, Ippolito d'Este, and Sigismondo d'Este. He was born in Naples, where his mother had gone...

  7. Ferrante d'Este is one of history's losers, a man remembered (if at all) as a failed conspirator against his elder brother Alfonso who lived the bulk of his adult life in prison. It was a sad come-down for the handsome youth who had once evoked comparisons with St George when he entered Florence in the train of Charles VIII of France.