- Scala,
whose members were
known as
Scaligeri (Italian: [skaˈliːdʒeri]) or
Scaligers (/ˈskælɪdʒərz/; from the
Latinized de Scalis), was the
ruling family of...
-
Joseph Justus Scaliger (/ˈskælɪdʒər/; 5
August 1540 – 21
January 1609) was a Franco-Italian
Calvinist religious leader and scholar,
known for expanding...
-
family of the
Scaliger, or Scaligeri, were
Lords of
Verona from the 13th to
early 15th century.
Scaliger (crater)
Scaliger Tombs Scaliger may also refer...
- The
Scaliger War was a
conflict fought in 1336–1339
between the
Scaliger lords of Verona,
Mastino II
della Scala and
Alberto II
della Scala, who had built...
-
Julius Caesar Scaliger (/ˈskælɪdʒər/; 23
April or
August 1484 – 21
October 1558), or
Giulio Cesare della Scala, was an
Italian scholar and physician, who...
- The
Scaliger Tombs (Italian:
Arche scaligere) is a
group of five
Gothic funerary monuments in Verona, Italy,
celebrating the
Scaliger family, who ruled...
-
Scaliger is a
prominent lunar impact crater in the
southern hemisphere on the far side of the Moon. It is
attached to the
northwest rim of the
walled plain...
-
different ideas as to how the leap
years went. The
above scheme is that of
Scaliger (1583) in the
table below. He
established that the
Augustan reform was...
-
references say that the
Julian in "Julian Period"
refers to
Scaliger's father,
Julius Scaliger, at the
beginning of Book V of his Opus de
Emendatione Temporum...
- acquisitions. In 1336, the
Rossi family's
control was
disrupted by the
Scaliger family, who were ****ociated with the
opposing Ghibelline faction. The Rossi...