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  1. Portrait Of Virginia de’ Medici. Jacopo Ligozzi (Italian, 1547 - 1627) Facebook Twitter Pinterest. Favourite Collect. Standard, 1335 x 1800px JPG, Size: 2.67 MB. Download. Max Size, 3487 x 4700px JPG, Size: 19.73 MB. Download. License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.

  2. A portrait usually identified as Maria de' Medici, daughter of Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who died at the age of seventeen. She was painted by Bronzino when she was eleven. One critic proposed that the portrait is of Maria's younger half-sister Virginia de' Medici. This portrait by Bronzino was identified as Maria de' Medici ...

  3. Virginia de' Medici (29 May 1568 – 15 January 1615) was an Italian princess, a member of the House of Medici and by marriage Duchess of Modena and Reggio. Regent of the Duchy of Modena and Reggio in 1601 during the absence of her husband, she was able to protect the autonomy of the city of Modena from the attacks of the local Podestà and Judge. Her husband's infidelities increased her ...

  4. Virginia de' Medici (29 May 1568 – 15 January 1615) was an Italian princess, a member of the House of Medici and by marriage Duchess of Modena and Reggio.. Regent of the Duchy of Modena and Reggio in 1601 during the absence of her husband, she was able to protect the autonomy of the city of Modena from the attacks of the local Podestà and Judge. Her husband's infidelities increased her ...

  5. Virginia tiene una superficie de 110 785 km² que la convierten en el 35.º estado estadounidense por su extensión. [9] Sus estados colindantes son Maryland y el Distrito de Columbia al norte y este; el océano Atlántico al este; Carolina del Norte y Tennessee al sur; Kentucky al oeste y Virginia Occidental al norte y oeste. Debido a una peculiaridad de sus estatutos originales, su frontera ...

  6. Whoever the author may have been, the 1575 Discours Merveilleux is best characterized as political rather than religious invective. The focus of its calumny is Catherine de Medici who, as the pamphlet makes clear from its title page, has “usurped the government of the Kingdom of France” and is solely responsible for the “ruin of the State.”

  7. Lucrezia de' Medici (14 February 1545 – 21 April 1561) was a member of the House of Medici and by marriage Duchess consort of Ferrara, Modena and Reggio from 1558 to 1561.. Married to the intended husband of her elder sister Maria, who died young, her marriage was short and unhappy.The Duchess died of pulmonary tuberculosis, but almost immediately after her death there were rumors that she ...