- communes, from
Spoleto to the
County of Savoy,
elected or
appointed gonfalonieri. The
Bentivoglio family of
Bologna aspired to this
office during the...
-
Dodici Buonomini, with
twelve members,
while the second, the
Sedici Gonfalonieri,
consisted of
sixteen people.
Other councils, such as the Ten of War...
-
Byzantine Empire, the
previous rulers of the region. For 337
years 12
Gonfalonieri,
mercenaries from
Perast (modern day Montenegro), were
appointed by the...
-
member of the
family is
Cambio di Salvi, who in 1335 was
among both the
gonfalonieri and the priori [it]. In all,
twenty members were
gonfaloniere and sixty-two...
-
guilds of
artisans and
craftsmen (Italian: arti e mestieri) and the
gonfalonieri,
leaders of
military units connected with city's parishes. In the Republic...
- (literally, standard-bearer), who was not
required to be a councilor. The
gonfalonieri were
chosen by the
secretary of state,
while the
elders were
chosen by...
- Barzanti".
European Parliament. 24
January 1939.
Retrieved 22 May 2019. "
Gonfalonieri, podestà e
sindaci di
Siena dal 1787" (in Italian).
Retrieved 22 May...
-
sharing responsibilities with
Enrico Butti,
Luigi Secchi,
Francesco Gonfalonieri,
Donato Barcaglia,
Enrico C****i,
Riccardo Ripamonti, and
Lodovico Pogliaghi...
-
prominence in
early modern France. In Florence, the
Bonsi supplied three gonfalonieri and 26 priori. The
first Bonsi in
France was
Domenico Bonsi [it], son...
- the
first memories go back to 1160
giving to the city Priori, Consoli,
Gonfalonieri and Dottori, but the most
important are the
Sicily line and the Nevers...