- Scala,
whose members were
known as
Scaligeri (Italian: [skaˈliːdʒeri]) or
Scaligers (/ˈskælɪdʒərz/; from the
Latinized de Scalis), was the
ruling family of...
-
threatened by
Scaliger expansion.
These were
chiefly the
Republic of Venice,
antagonized by the
imposition of
taxes on
overland trade and the
Scaligers' threat...
-
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...
-
Joseph Justus Scaliger (/ˈskælɪdʒər/; 5
August 1540 – 21
January 1609) was a Franco-Italian
Calvinist religious leader and scholar,
known for expanding...
- The
Scaliger Tombs (Italian:
Arche scaligere) is a
group of five
Gothic funerary monuments in Verona, Italy,
celebrating the
Scaliger family, who ruled...
- The
Castel Vecchio Bridge (Italian:
Ponte di
Castel Vecchio) or
Scaliger Bridge (Italian:
Ponte Scaligero) is a
fortified bridge in Verona,
northern Italy...
-
Julius Caesar Scaliger (/ˈskælɪdʒər/; 23
April or
August 1484 – 21
October 1558), or
Giulio Cesare della Scala, was an
Italian scholar and physician, who...
-
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...
-
Comprehensive versions of authors'
works were
published by
Isaac Casaubon,
Joseph Scaliger and others. Nevertheless,
despite the
careful work of Petrarch, Politian...
-
Mosshammer 2008, pp. 80–85
Herschel 1849, p. 634
Diekamp 44, 45, 50
Scaliger 1629, p. 361
Scaliger used
these words in his 1629
edition on p. 361 and in his 1598...