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  1. Arco-Íris dos ovos. R$ 1,80. Pato Gigante Alemão. R$ 10,00. Galinha Capoeira\ caipira. R$ 3,00. Rhode Island White. R$ 20,00. Brahma Red Marmorizado.

  2. Maria Salviati was the wife of famous military leader Giovanni delle Bande Nere de' Medici (d. 1526) and the mother of Cosimo I (1519-1574), grand duke of Tuscany. The little girl holding her hand here is probably Giulia, a Medici relative who was left in Maria's care after the murder of the child's father, Duke Alessandro de' Medici (1511-1537).

  3. Abstract. Researchers from the Division of Paleopathology of Pisa University (Pisa, Italy) exhumed the well-preserved skeleton of Maria Salviati (1499–1543), wife of Giovanni de’ Medici, named “Giovanni of the Black Bands,” in Florence in 2012. Many lytic lesions had affected the skull of Maria on the frontal bone and on the parietal bones.

  4. Figura 4 – Editar configurações do filtro. Figura 5 – Manter o formato atual. Em seguida, escolheu-se o formato Unicode (UTF-8) e LF (Line Feed), ou seja, alimentação de linha, Figura 6. Figura 6 – Formato UTF-8 e LF. arquivo novo gerado com extensão txt foi aberto no Iramuteq e escolhidas as opções de abertura conforme figura 7.

  5. Maria Salviati was a Florentine noblewoman, the daughter of Lucrezia di Lorenzo de' Medici and Jacopo Salviati. She married Giovanni delle Bande Nere and was the mother of Cosimo I de Medici. Her husband died 30 November 1526, leaving her a widow at the age of 27. Salviati never remarried; after her husband's death she adopted the somber garb of a novice, which is how she is remembered today ...

  6. Giorgio Benigno Salviati (died 1520), Bosnian-born adopted member of the family, theologian and archbishop. Jacopo Salviati (1461–1533), married Lucrezia de' Medici. Giovanni Salviati (1490–1553), cardinal. Maria Salviati (1499–1543), daughter of Lucrezia di Medici and Jacopo Salviati, married Giovanni delle Bande Nere, mother of Cosimo I ...

  7. Portrait of Maria Salviati is an oil on panel painting attributed to Pontormo, executed c. 1543–1544, in the Uffizi, Florence. [1] It was acquired by the Uffizi early in the 20th century as a work by Domenico Beccafumi. Soon afterwards Lányi identified it as a portrait of Cosimo I 's mother Maria Salviati by Pontormo mentioned in Lives of ...