-
Giovanni Pontano (1426–1503),
later known as
Giovanni Gioviano (Latin:
Ioannes Iovi**** Pont****), was a
humanist and poet from
Cerreto di Spoleto, in...
- Jovian,
surnamed Hypatus or
Ceparius (Italian:
Gioviano Ceparico Ipato), was
Byzantine magister militum per
Venetiae in
charge of the
duchy of
Venice in...
-
pastor Michael Brüggemann (1583 – 1654) the
Italian humanist Giovanni Gioviano Pontano,
commonly known as Iovi**** Pont****
Johan Isaksson Pont****, author...
- Cornicola,
Magister militum (738)
Teodato Ipato,
Magister militum (739)
Gioviano Cepanico Ipato,
Magister militum (740)
Giovanni Fabriciaco,
Magister militum...
- 1661–1742
Angelo Poliziano Angelus Politi**** 1454–94
Silvae Giovanni Gioviano Pontano 1429–1503 De
amore coniugali; Baiae; Neniae; Erid****
speech and...
- the family's
reputed descent from the
ancient Roman emperor Galba.
Ipato Gioviano, Orso,
Teodato The
surname is
thought to be
derived from
imperial honorific...
-
reference to this city in one of his
Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium.
Giovanni Gioviano Pontano (d. 1503)
wrote his Two
Books of
Hendecasyllables on the pleasures...
- and trans. Mary P. Chatfield, trans.
Betty Radice, 2005 Baiae,
Giovanni Gioviano Pontano, ed. and trans.
Dennis G. Rodney, 2006 Letters,
Volume 1, Angelo...
-
Apostolo in Catanzaro, Italy; his mother,
Maria Paoli,
emigrated from
Gioviano in the
province of
Lucca in
Tuscany and
worked in a
paper flower factory...
-
modern Italian Republic and a
symbol of
republican ideals in Italy. Born in
Gioviano, a
frazione of
Borgo a Mozzano, at the time part of the
Grand Duchy of...