- The
Papafava (sometimes also Pappafava, more
precisely Papafava dei Carraresi) were an
aristocratic family of Padua, a
junior branch of the Carraresi...
- The
Palazzo Pesaro Papafava or
Palazzo Papafava is a 15th-century
Gothic style palace in the
sestiere of
Cannaregio of Venice, Italy.
Located on the Canale...
-
Luigi Papafava (1838–1908) was an
Italian painter and engraver. He was born and
resident of
Padua then part of the
Austrian Empire. He
trained under Vincenzo...
-
Palazzo Papafava dei
Carraresi is a
palace in Padua,
located in the
historic center of the city. It was
erected in 1763 by the
order of
Count Giambattista...
- of
Padua (died 1338) Ubertinello, lord of
Padua (died 1345)
Marsilietto Papafava, lord of
Padua (died 1345)
Jacopo II, lord of
Padua (d. 1350) Francesco...
- of Marsilio.
Marsilietto Papafava da Carrara [it] 27
March 1345 6 May 1345
Distant relative of Ubertino, from the
Papafava branch of the
Carrara family...
- Padua. In May 1345
Jacopo murdered the in****bent prince,
Marsiglietto Papafava. He in turn was ********inated in 1350. At his
death he was
still illiterate...
- Timbuktu,
among others. Dei, Benedetto. La
cronica dall’anno 1400 all’anno 1500. Ed.
Roberto Barducci;
preface by
Anthony Molho. Florence: F.
Papafava, 1985....
- da
Carrara sent
Pietro de' Rossi,
Ubertino da Carrara, and
Marsilietto Papafava [it] (from a
cadet branch of the
Carrara family) with an army of German...
- the
decoration with
subjects from the
Iliad (1818) of the
Palazzo Pesaro-
Papafava. He
painted a
Triumph of
Rossini (1822) in the
Palazzo Treves de' Bonfili...