Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Bianca Cappello, segunda esposa de Francisco de Médici. Francisco I de Médici ( Florencia, 25 de marzo de 1541-Florencia, 19 de octubre de 1587), II gran duque de Toscana, de 1574 a 1587, fue el hijo mayor de Cosme I de Médici, II duque de Florencia y de su esposa Leonor Álvarez de Toledo, hija del virrey de Nápoles Pedro Álvarez de ...

  2. Bianca Cappello, second wife of Francesco de'Medici and grand duchess of Tuscany from 1578. Bibliography Attwood, Philip, 'Italian Medals c.1530-1600 in British Public Collections', Vol. 1.

  3. 23 de oct. de 2017 · Alessandro Allori, Ritratto di Bianca Cappello, 1572, Gallerie degli Uffizi, Firenze. Questo ramo dei Cappello era assai decaduto. Perciò Bianca non viene educata in monastero, come le giovinette d’elevata condizione, ma in casa, tra la servitù femminile, con quanto profitto sul piano culturale possiamo ben immaginare.

  4. Most importantly perhaps, Bianca Capello was declared ‘daughter of the Republic’, an honour bestowed before only on Caterina Cornaro, queen of Cyprus.12 In this way, an explicit connection between Bianca and this prototype of female Venetian virtue was established which did not go unnoticed.13 In 1489, Caterina, a member of the patrician Cornaro family who ruled the isle of Cyprus, was ...

  5. 16 de jul. de 2018 · L'histoire de Bianca Cappello qui fuit avec l'amant et devient Grande-duchesse de Toscane, pour mourir à la fin empoisonnée pour des raisons d'État: depuis toujours une histoire irrésistible, une histoire de la Renaissance entre Venise et Florence.

  6. 22 de feb. de 2020 · In 1534, the property passed to Bianca Cappello and the Palazzo was turned into a place for leisure and entertainment. The gardens, in particular, were the stage for numerous festivities staged by Bianca Cappello, some of which… quite profane! Palazzo Venturi-Ginori with a view of the Oricellari Gardens

  7. El palacio de Bianca Cappello, originalmente de la familia Corbinelli, se encuentra en el número 26 de via Maggio, en el barrio de Oltrarno, en Florencia . Pertenece al Centro histórico de la ciudad, declarado Patrimonio de la Humanidad por la Unesco en 1982.