Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Ercole Gonzaga (23 November 1505 – 2 March 1563) was an Italian Cardinal. Biography. Born in Mantua, he was the son of the Marquis Francesco Gonzaga and Isabella d'Este, and nephew of Cardinal Sigismondo Gonzaga. He studied philosophy at Bologna under Pietro Pomponazzi, and later took up theology.

  2. Hércules Gonzaga, em italiano Ercole Gonzaga (Mantua, 23 de novembro de 1505 - Trento, 2 de março de 1563), foi um cardeal italiano da Igreja Católica, e bispo de Mântua e de Tarazona. [1] Pertencia à Casa de Gonzaga, sendo o segundo filho do Marquês de Mântua, Francisco II Gonzaga e de Isabella d'Este. Referências

  3. Ruling Peacefully: Cardinal Ercole Gonzaga and Patrician Reform in Sixteenth-Century Italy. By Paul V. Murphy. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2007. xxi + 290 pp. $79.95 cloth. | Church History | Cambridge Core.

  4. Gonzaga, ERCOLE (HERCULES), cardinal; b. at Mantua, November 23, 1505; d. March 2, 1563. He was the son of the Marquess Francesco, and nephew of Cardinal Sigismondo Gonzaga (1469-1525). He studied philosophy at Bologna under Pomponazzi, and later took up theology.

  5. Four centuries have not lessened the difficulty in understanding Ercole Gonzaga, who stands as a widely recognized but not well-understood figure in the landscape of sixteenth-century Italian history. He was the second son of Francesco Gonzaga (1466-1519), Marquis of Mantua, and Isabella D'Est? (1474-1539), prominent figures in the world of Renais

  6. Cardinal Ercole Gonzaga is an attractive but ambiguous figure in sixteenth-century Italian religious history. A member of the ducal Gonzaga family as well as a bishop who for seventeen years was de facto ruler of Mantua, he had no precise Italian counterpart; closer would have been a German prince-bishop. Curiously

  7. Ercole Gonzaga. (Hercules.) Cardinal; b. at Mantua, 23 November, 1505; d. 2 March, 1563. He was the Son of the Marquess Francesco, and nephew of Cardinal Sigismondo Gonzaga (1469-1525). He studied philosophy at Bologna under Pomponazzi, and later took up theology.