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Cappello
Cappello is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Antonio Cappello (1494–1565), Venetian noble *Bernardo Cappello (1498–1565), Venetian Renaissance humanist *Bianca Cappello (1548–1587), Italian noblewoman *Dominic Cappello, American writer *Gerolamo Cappello (died 1643), Italian Roman Catholic bishop *Gino Cappello (1920–1990), Italian footballer *Girolamo Cappello (born 1538), Venetian ambassador * Guido Cappello (1933–1996), Italian chess master * Frank Cappello, American screenwriter * Mary Cappello, American academic *Pierluigi Cappello (1967–2017), Italian poet * Tim Cappello, American musician *Vettore Cappello Vettore Cappello ( vec, Vettor Cappello; –1467) was a merchant, statesman and military commander of the Republic of Venice. After an early career as a merchant that gained him substantial wealth, he began his political career in 1439. His ascen ... (1400–1467), Venetian statesman and military commander See also * Capello {{s ...
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Vettore Cappello
Vettore Cappello ( vec, Vettor Cappello; –1467) was a merchant, statesman and military commander of the Republic of Venice. After an early career as a merchant that gained him substantial wealth, he began his political career in 1439. His ascent to higher offices was rapid. He is chiefly remembered for his advocacy of a decisive policy against the Ottoman Empire, and his command of Venetian forces as Captain General of the Sea during the lead-up to and the first stages of the First Ottoman–Venetian War. Origin and early life Vettore Cappello was born to Giorgio Cappello and Coronea Lando. The date of his birth is unknown; his epitaph records that he died at the age of 63, but when he was inscribed at the '' Balla d'Oro'' in 1420, he is recorded as being twenty years of age, and serving as a sailor in the trade convoy to Alexandria. His family was engaged in commerce, and Vettore appears to have been active in his family's commercial interests: along with his brothers, he main ...
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Bianca Cappello
Bianca Cappello (154820 October 1587) was an Italian noblewoman who was the mistress, and afterward the second wife, of Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany. Her husband officially made her his consort. Coincidentally, the creation of the fortunate term serendipity by the writer Horace Walpole is due to a portrait of Bianca. Biography Bianca was born in Venice, in 1548, the daughter of Venetian nobleman Bartolomeo Cappello (1519-1594) and Pellegrina Morosini, a member of the Morosini family, one of the richest and noblest Venetian families, and was noted for her great beauty. At the age of fifteen she fell in love with Pietro Bonaventuri, a young Florentine clerk in the firm of Salviati family, and on 28 November 1563 escaped with him to Florence, where they were married. In 1564 she had a daughter named Virginia, or, according to other sources, Pellegrina. The Venetian government made every effort to have Bianca arrested and brought back but the Grand Duke Cosi ...
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Antonio Cappello
Antonio Cappello (1494-1565) was a Venetian noble, a member of the San Polo branch of the ':it:Cappello (famiglia)''">:it:Cappello_(famiglia).html" ;"title="':it:Cappello (famiglia)">':it:Cappello (famiglia)'' A Procurator of St Mark's, he acted as ambassador to the court of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V at Ghent, Gand, but is mainly remembered for his role as one of the main promoters of public art and architectural projects in sixteenth-century Venice. He resided in the palazzo on San Polo now known as Ca Cappello Layard and oversaw its redevelopment. Political Beginnings He was born approximately in 1494, the son of Giambattista of Marino Cappello, a merchant and a nobleman, and Paola Garzoni, daughter of Marino Garzoni, who had been prominent in politics as '' procuratore de Citra'', ''podestĂ '' of Verona, ''podestĂ '' of Mantua and finally duke of Candia. Antonio Cappello began his political career at a young age. In 1511 he was vice-''podestĂ '' of Cologn ...
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Mary Cappello
Mary Cappello is a writer and professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Rhode Island.University of Rhode Island, Faculty BiosMary Cappello She is the author of five books of literary nonfiction, and her essays and experimental prose have been published in '' The Georgia Review'',Mary Cappello"Getting the News" ''The Georgia Review'', volume 63, number 2, Summer 2009, 294-315. '' Salmagundi''Mary Cappello"For 'Anyone Interested in Learning What Makes Us Human' ''Salmagundi'', Spring-Summer 2008, 75-96. and '' Cabinet Magazine''.Mary Cappello, "Ingestion/Alone on Floor with a Pile of Buttons," ''Cabinet Magazine: A Quarterly of Art and Culture,'' Special Issue: Forensics, 43 (October 2011): 12-15. Her work has been featured in ''The New York Times'',Amanda SchafferDown the Hatch and Straight Into Medical History The New York Times, January 10, 2011. ''Salon'',Thomas Rogers“Swallow”: The strange things people swallow Salon, December 18, 2010. ''The Huffington P ...
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Gino Cappello
Gino Cappello (; 2 June 1920 – 28 March 1990) was an Italian footballer who played as a striker. Club career A native of Padua, Cappello began his career with Padova. After spending two seasons with the club in Serie B, he landed in Serie A with Milan Milan ( , , Lombard: ; it, Milano ) is a city in northern Italy, capital of Lombardy, and the second-most populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of about 1.4 million, while its metropolitan city h ... in 1940–41 Serie A, 1940. In the three seasons at Milan he was always the second leading scorer and unfortunately Milan was not a major title-contender at the time. After the war he went to Bologna F.C. 1909, Bologna where he played for ten straight seasons. He scored 80 goals in 245 games leaving a mark on the fans not to be forgotten. In his last two seasons he played for Novara Calcio, Novara in Serie B. In 1958, when he was still playing with Novara, he decided to retire havin ...
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Guido Cappello
Guido Cappello (14 April 1933 – 17 August 1996) was an Italian chess player, Italian Chess Championship winner (1960). Biography Born in Pisa, Guido Cappello moved to Gorizia at a young age, then in the 1960s to Milan. By profession he was an accountant. In the 1960s and 1970s Guido Cappello was one of the strongest Italian chess players. In 1960 he won the Italian Chess Championship in Perugia, ahead to Alberto Giustolisi, Federico Norcia and Enrico Paoli. Guido Cappello was awarded the title of National Chess Master in the same year. In the 1963 Italian Chess Championship in Imperia he still touched the title, ranking on equal points with the winner Ennio Contedini, who prevailed by technical play-off. Guido Cappello later achieved other excellent placings in this tournament: shared 3rd–5th place in 1965, 3rd place in 1967 and 1968, shared 2nd–4th place in 1972. Guido Cappello has had several successes in International Chess Tournaments, ranked 3rd in Savona (1967) a ...
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Pierluigi Cappello
Pierluigi Cappello (8 August 1967 – 1 October 2017) was an Italian poet. He was born in Gemona del Friuli, and raised in Chiusaforte Chiusaforte ( sl, Kluže, german: Klausen, fur, Sclûse) is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Province of Udine in the Italian region Friuli-Venezia Giulia. Geography It is located about northwest of Trieste and about north of Udine, on the .... Cappello won the 2010 Viareggio-Rèpaci prize for poetry with his collection ''Mandate a dire all'imperatore''. His other prizes include the Premio Montale for ''Dittico'' (Liboà editore in Dogliani, 2004), the Premio Bagutta and Premio Nazionale Letterario Pisa for ''Assetto Di Volo'' (Crocetti Editore, Milan 2006) and the Premio Terzani for his prose work, ''Questa libertà''. In 2013 BUR Rizzoli published his selected poems in the volume ''Azzurro Elementare. Poesie 1992-2010,'' and, in 2017, a group of thirty new poems, ''Stato Di Quiete.'' English translations of his work have appeared in '' ...
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Dominic Cappello
Dominic Cappello is a strategist, writer, designer, and educator. He is the creator of the Ten Talks book series published by Hyperion in 2000 and 2001. Ten Talks received national attention when Oprah Winfrey created a show around the book on sex and character in October 2000, featuring parents who had used the books' approaches to family communication. Cappello is also the author (with Susan Duron, PhD) of the parent-focused HIV prevention program "Can We Talk?" developed by the National Education Association -Health Information Network through a cooperative agreement with the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Adolescent and School Health in 1999. Cappello, working for the New Mexico Department of Health, developed the youth injury prevention project called the ''Resiliency Corps''. The ''Resiliency Corps'' focused on the implementation of evidence-based youth injury, violence and substance misuse prevention strategies. The five year pilot project promoted c ...
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Gerolamo Cappello
Gerolamo Cappello, O.F.M. Conv. (died 1643) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Termoli (1626–1643). ''(in Latin)'' Biography Gerolamo Cappello ordained a priest in the Order of Friars Minor Conventual. On 26 November 1626, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Urban VIII as Bishop of Termoli. On 30 November 1626, he was consecrated bishop by Marcello Lante della Rovere, Cardinal-Priest of Santi Quirico e Giulitta, with Fabrizio Caracciolo Piscizi, Bishop of Catanzaro, and Giovanni Battista Altieri, Bishop of Camerino, serving as co-consecrators. He served as Bishop of Termoli until his death in 1643. See also *Catholic Church in Italy , native_name_lang = it , image = San_Giovanni_in_Laterano_-_Rome.jpg , imagewidth = 250px , alt = , caption = Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran in Rome, the ''cathedra'' seat of the Pop ... References External links and additional sources * (Chronolog ...
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Frank Cappello
Frank A. Cappello is an American filmmaker. His credits include writing the screenplay for ''Constantine'' and writing, directing and producing ''He Was a Quiet Man ''He Was a Quiet Man'' is a 2007 American black comedy drama film, written and directed by Frank Cappello. The film stars Christian Slater, Elisha Cuthbert, Jamison Jones, and William H. Macy. The films initially focuses on an office worker, wh ...''. Filmography References External links * * American film directors Living people Year of birth missing (living people) American film producers American male screenwriters {{US-film-director-stub ...
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Bernardo Cappello
Bernardo Cappello (1498 - 8 March 1565) was a Venetian humanist, writer and pupil of Pietro Bembo. Life Cappello was born in Venice, the son of the diplomat Francesco Capello and his wife Elena Priuli. He held various political posts until being exiled to the island of Rab in 1540 for suggesting that the power of the Council of Ten should be limited. He escaped from Rab in 1541 and took refuge in Rome under the protection of cardinal Alessandro Farnese, whom he followed to Florence, France and Parma. He later became lieutenant of Tivoli before becoming governor of Orvieto, Todi, Assisi and Spoleto in rapid succession. He died in Rome. Works * ''Rime'', a collection of 314 sonnets and 34 canzoni, dedicated to (among others) Pope Paul III, Pope Pius IV, Francis I of France, Margaret of Valois, Caterina de Medici, Charles V, Philip II of Spain, Ippolito d'Este, Alessandro Farnese, Guidobaldo II della Rovere, Pietro Bembo, Annibal Caro, Vittoria Colonna, marchesa of Pescara and P ...
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Girolamo Cappello
Girolamo Cappello (born 13 April 1538) was a Venetian ambassador. Cappello's first appointment as a Venetian ambassador came in 1567 when he was appointed Ambassador to Austria. From 1570-1573 he was Ambassador to Savoy, then for a short time Ambassador to Poland, and from 1576-1579 he was Ambassador to France. He served in some temporary ambassadorships and then was a member of the council that elected the Doge A doge ( , ; plural dogi or doges) was an elected lord and head of state in several Italian city-states, notably Venice and Genoa, during the medieval and renaissance periods. Such states are referred to as " crowned republics". Etymology The ... prior to his appointment as Bailo of Constantinople in 1589. Sources *Eric R. Dursteler. "The Bailo in Constantinople: Crisis and Career in Venice’s Early Modern Diplomatic Corps" in ''Mediterranean Historical Review''; Vol. 16 (2001): 1-25. 1538 births Year of death missing Ambassadors of the Republic of Venice to ...
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