Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Born in Florence, Piero Strozzi was the son of Filippo Strozzi the Younger and Clarice de' Medici . Although in 1539 he married another Medici, Laudomia di Pierfrancesco, he was a fierce opponent of the main line of that family. He fought in the army led by his father and other Florentine exiles from France to oust the Medici from Florence, but ...

  2. Filippo Strozzi the Elder was an Italian banker and statesman, a member of the affluent Strozzi family of Florence.

  3. Palazzo Strozzi is an example of civil architecture with its rusticated stone, [5] inspired by the Palazzo Medici, but with more harmonious proportions. Unlike the Medici Palace, which was sited on a corner lot, and thus has only two sides, this building, surrounded on all four sides by streets, is a free-standing structure.

  4. Filippo di Matteo di Smone Straozzi the famos merchant-prince, was born in 1426 and died on 15 May 1491, and was buried in S. M. Novella on 17 May. Bibliography Hill, Sir George, Francis, 'A Corpus of Italian Medals of the Renaissance before Cellini', Vol,1, (London : 1930), pp. 266-267.

  5. Giambattista detto Filippo Strozzi (m. 1538), importante uomo politico del Cinquecento, marito di Clarice de' Medici. Lucrezia (nata nel 1486) Caterina. La decisione di ribattezzare il secondo figlio con il nome del padre fu presa da Selvaggia dopo la morte prematura del padre. Filippo Strozzi il Giovane in effetti fu tra i suoi figli quello ...

  6. Address: Viale Filippo Strozzi, 1, 50129 Firenze FI, Italia. Opening hours: Open during temporary exhibitions and events. Guided tour by reservation only: 14-09-2023. 21-09-2023. from 16:00 to 19:00. Visits every hour.

  7. Filippo Strozzi the Younger (January 4, 1489 – December 18, 1538) was a Florentine banker, and the most famous member of the Strozzi family in the Renaissance. He is best remembered as a tragic hero and defender of the lost Florentine republic against the Medici dukes – yet this is almost entirely a nineteenth-century fiction of nationalist historians and dramatists.