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  1. Mother. Isabella Malaspina. Francesco II Pico della Mirandola (... - 1399) was an Italian condottiero and nobleman, belonging to the House of Pico, who in 1354 regained the family domains of Mirandola and Concordia, which had fallen into the hands of the Gonzagas, and was lord of them until his death (1399).

  2. Galeotto II. Galeotto II Pico della Mirandola, lord of Mirandola (Mirandola, 1508 – Paris, 20 November 1550), was an Italian condottiere . He was the son of Ludovico I Pico, who died in 1509 and Francesca Trivulzio and grew up under the tutelage of his mother, who ruled the state in his name until 1511. He learned from it the hatred of his ...

  3. Municipality of Mirandola. The Civic Museum of Mirandola is a museum housed in the castle of the Pico in Mirandola, in the province of Modena, Italy, dedicated to the archaeology of the territory, religious commissions, ancient furnishings and paintings, coins and medals of the ancient mint of Mirandola. The museum is also enriched by maps from ...

  4. Lucrezia Quistelli was born on October 19 in 1538 in Florence, Italy. Quistelli was baptized in 1541. She is the daughter of Alfonso Quistelli and Giulia Santi. She was known for her paintings and studied under Alessandro Allori. Quistelli married Count Clemente Pietra and they had eight children, six daughters and two sons.

  5. Catarina Pico della Mirandola (pt) , Galeotto I Pico (en) , Antonio Maria Pico della Mirandola (en) e Lucrezia Pico della Mirandola (en) Giovanni Pico della Mirandola naceu en Ferrara o 24 de febreiro de 1463 e faleceu o 17 de novembro do ano 1494, en Florencia. Foi un humanista e pensador italiano.

  6. br.wikipedia.org › wiki › MirandolaMirandola - Wikipedia

    Mirandola a zo ur gumun eus Italia e proviñs Modena, e rannvro Emilia-Romagna ...

  7. 3 de jun. de 2008 · Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463–94) is, after Marsilio Ficino, the best known philosopher of the Renaissance: his Oration on the Dignity of Man is better known than any other philosophical text of the fifteenth century. Pico was also remarkably original—indeed, idiosyncratic.