-
Giordano Forzatè,
anglicized as
Jordan Forzatè (1158 – 7
August 1248), was a
Paduan Benedictine monk and
religious leader. For his
noble background, peacemaking...
-
Prime Minister. New York:
Basic Books, p. 47. "Offro fame, sete,
marce forzate,
battaglie e morte." Garibaldi's line has
appeared in
other versions. Trevelyan...
- the
position of podestà of that city. In
Padua he had the monk
Giordano Forzatè arrested and exiled.
Ezzelino was one of the
protagonists in the Ghibelline-Imperial...
- many
owned by
local neighborhood aristocratic families,
including the
Forzatè.
Further refurbishments occurred in the 17th and 18th-centuries. The bell-tower...
-
Scalabrini 1901 1997 John
Pibush 1601 1929
Jolenta of
Poland 1298 1927
Jordan Forzatè, OSB 1248 1767
Jordan of Pisa, OP 1311 1838
Jordan of Saxony, OP 1237 1825...
-
Saxony (d. 1237),
early leader of the
Dominican Order Blessed Giordano Forzatè (d. 1248),
Paduan religious whose body lies
uncorrupted in
Venice Blessed...
-
Urgell (d. 1208)
Fujiwara no Ietaka, ****anese waka poet (d. 1237)
Giordano Forzatè,
Italian religious leader (d. 1248)
Henry I,
Count of Bar,
French nobleman...
- – Otto III of Merania,
French nobleman and
knight August 7 –
Giordano Forzatè,
Italian religious leader (b. 1158)
September 13 – Kunigunde, Bohemian...
-
Present at the
signing of the
treaties was the
prominent peacemaker Giordano Forzatè, who had
probably acted as one of the
Paduan government's advisers. According...
- International.
XLIII (1): 32–33. ISSN 0043-0374. Dupuis,
Dobrillo (2014).
Forzate il blocco. 1940. L'odissea
della marina militare italiana. Res Gestae....