-
known as
Dolcebuono (c. 1445 – 1504) was an
Italian architect and sculptor. Born
probably in Lugano, he was a
relative of
Giacomo Antonio Dolcebuono, who...
-
completely rebuilt,
starting in 1503,
under the
design of Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono in
collaboration with
Giovanni Antonio Amadeo. The
edifice was finished...
- Rocchi, who was soon
replaced by
Giovanni Antonio Amadeo and Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono. The
original project, with a nave and two
aisles flanked by semicircular...
-
Giovanni Nexemperger di Graz 1486
Giovanni Antonio Amadeo 1490 Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono 1506
Cristoforo Solari detto il
Gobbo 1512
Gerolamo della Porta 1519 Bernardo...
- Lombardy,
northern Italy. The
construction was
begun by Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono and
Giovanni Battagio in 1493, to
house a
miraculous icon of the Madonna...
- by
Giovanni Battagio (a
pupil of Bramante),
continued by Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono and
finished by
Giovanni Antonio Amadeo, and
built at
expenses of the...
- prin****lly by
Donato Bramante,
Giovanni Antonio Amadeo, Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono; however, only by 1898 were the façade and the dome
completed according...
- to a halt with the
death of
Guiniforte in 1478. In 1492 Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono took up the construction, ****isted on site, for he was
concurrently occupied...
- date
unknown Pedro Berruguete,
Spanish painter (born 1450) Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono,
Italian architect and
sculptor (born 1445)
Matteo Lappoli,
Italian painter...
- bronze-caster, engineer, and
sculptor (died 1506) 1445: Gian
Giacomo Dolcebuono -
Italian architect and
sculptor (died 1504) 1445:
Francesco Rosselli...