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  1. Der Palazzo Muti Bussi ist ein Palast in Rom, Rione X Campitelli, mit der Adresse Via dell’Aracoeli 2. Der Palazzo (links) auf einem Druck von Giuseppe Vasi

  2. Sulle facciate del palazzo Muti Baglioni, sono infisse due chiavi di volta, una sull’arco del portale d’ingresso in Calle de Ca’ Muti e una sull’arco di volta del portale d’acqua sul Rio de San Cassan. (1) Giuseppe Tassini. Alcuni palazzi ed antichi edifici di Venezia. Tipografia Fontana 1879

  3. Alessandro Specchi Palazzo del marchese Pompeo Muti Papazzurri in piazza dell’Olmo, da G.B. Falda, Il nuovo teatro delle fabriche et edificii in prospettiva di Roma moderna, Roma 1699 1 BIBLIOGRAFIA Barbanera-Freccero 2008 M. Barbanera, A. Freccero (a cura di), La collezione di antichità di Palazzo Lancellotti ai Coronari, Roma 2008.

  4. The Palazzo Muti Baglioni is a Baroque architecture palace located near San Cassiano in the Sestiere San Polo of Venice, Italy. In 1602, at the site of some businesses, this palace was erected by the Muti family. By the 1670s, the palace was sold to the Acquisti family, who had been admitted in 1686 into the Venetian aristocracy.

  5. Palazzo Muti Bussi. This palazzo was designed by Giacomo della Porta for the Muti family in the late 16th century. It has five different sides, with one running on Piazza dell’Aracoeli. It is a pale salmon-pink color, with contrasting rusticated edges, doors and window decorations. Suggest edits to improve what we show.

  6. That building, which James III was to occupy until his death in 1766, and which his son Prince Charles would then occupy for several years until his own death in 1788, has always been called — incorrectly — the Palazzo Muti. Every book on Jacobitism, and all the biographies of James III and his two sons, call it by that name.

  7. The Palazzo Muti is a large townhouse in the Piazza dei Santi Apostoli, Rome, Italy, built in 1644. Together with the neighboring Palazzo Muti Papazzurri, it originally formed part of a complex of adjoining palazzi and other houses owned by the Muti Papazzurri family. During the 18th century this entire range of buildings was, by courtesy of ...