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Cesarini
Cesarini is an Italian surname and the name of an Italian noble family. Notable people mostly include members of the noble Cesarini family, who held various ecclesiastical titles. Notable members *Alessandro Cesarini (died 1542), Italian cardinal *Alessandro Cesarini (footballer) (born 1989), Italian footballer * Alessandro Cesarini (iuniore) (1592–1644), Italian Roman Catholic bishop *Carlo Francesco Cesarini (born 1666), Italian classical composer and violinist * Claudia Cesarini (born 1986), Italian modern pentathlete *David Cesarini, American economist *Davide Cesarini (born 1995), Sammarinese footballer *Ferdinando Cesarini (1604–1646), Italian poet and physicist *Filippo Cesarini (1610–1683), Italian Roman Catholic bishop *Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore (1466–1510), Italian cardinal *Julian Cesarini (1398–1444), Italian cardinal *Nino Cesarini (1889–1943), Italian model *Renato Cesarini (1906–1969), Italian Argentine footballer and manager *Virginio Cesarini Vi ...
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Alessandro Cesarini (footballer)
Alessandro Cesarini (born 19 June 1989) is an Italian footballer who plays as a forward for club Piacenza. Cesarini is called "Il Mago" (The Wizard) by his fans because he is a very technical and skiller player. Club career Born in La Spezia, Liguria, Cesarini started his senior career at Serie D club Sarzanese, a minor team in the Province of La Spezia. He was the member of Serie D representative team for 2010 Torneo di Viareggio. However Cesarini, along with Daniele Bernasconi were no longer eligible after they had signed by professional teams that month. Spezia On 20 January 2010 he was signed by Spezia, where he finished as the runner-up of the four division. The signing of Cesarini had cost Spezia €45,000. On 10 July 2010 Cesarini signed a new 4-year contract. On 29 August 2011 he was loaned to Viareggio. Cesarini only played once for Spezia in 2011–12 season in the first round of the cup, which Spezia was the champion of the third division as well as the champion ...
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Nino Cesarini
Antonio Cesarini (30 September 1889 – 25 October 1943), better known by the diminutive name Nino, was a model for several artists, such as the photographer Wilhelm von Plüschow, painters Paul Hoecker and Umberto Brunelleschi and sculptor Francesco Jerace during his youth. In his adulthood he modelled for Vincenzo Gemito, who presented him as a prototype of homoerotic masculine beauty. He was also known for his relationship with Baron Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen. His life was novelized by the French writer Roger Peyrefitte in his work ''The Exile of Capri'' (''L'exilé de Capri'') in 1959. Biography Childhood and teenage years Cesarini was born into a working-class family in 1889. According to Peyreffite, Baron Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen, who had been forced to leave Paris after a homosexual scandal, met him in Rome on 9 July 1904, when Cesarini was a fourteen-year-old construction worker and newspaper-seller. D'Adelswärd-Fersen obtained authorization from the boy's family ...
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Giuliano Cesarini, Iuniore
Giuliano Cesarini the Younger ( It.: ''Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore''; 1466–1510) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal. Biography Giuliano Cesarini, ''iuniore'' was born in Rome in 1466, the son of Gabriele Cesarini, ''Gonfaloniere'' of the Senate and Roman People (SPQR), and his wife Giulina (Godina). Her father was Giovanni Andrea Colonna, and her mother was Ambroscina de'Astalli. Giuliano had two brothers, Pietro Paolo and Giovanni Giorgio. Giovanni Giorgio succeeded his father as Gonfaloniere in 1499. A third brother, Giovanni Andrea, was married to Gerolama Borgia, daughter of Pope Alexander VI, but both spouses died in 1483. They were the grand-nephews of Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, ''seniore''.Salvador MirandaBiographical Dictionary of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church "Cesarini, Giuliano ''iuniore''"; retrieved: 2017-09-01. Giuliano also had four sisters: Antonina (wife of Carlo Muti), Caterina (wife of Antonino Albertoni), Alteria (who married a Margana), and L ...
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Julian Cesarini
Julian Cesarini the Elder ( It.: ''Giuliano Cesarini, seniore'') (1398 in Rome – 10 November 1444 in Varna, Ottoman Empire) was one of the group of brilliant cardinals created by Pope Martin V on the conclusion of the Western Schism. His intellect and diplomacy made him a powerful agent first of the Council of Basel and then, after he broke with the Conciliar movement at Basel, of Papal superiority against the Conciliar movement. The French bishop Bossuet described Cesarini as the strongest bulwark that the Catholics could oppose to the Greeks in the Council of Florence. One of five brothers of a well-established Roman family of the minor nobility; his brother Giacomo was appointed papal Podestà of Orvieto and Foligno in 1444; his great-nephew, also Giuliano Cesarini Giuliano (1466–1510) was made a cardinal in 1493. He was educated at Perugia, where he lectured on Roman law and had Domenico Capranica among his pupils. When the schism was ended by the general recogniti ...
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Renato Cesarini
Renato Cesarini (; 11 April 1906 – 24 March 1969) was an Italian-Argentine football player and coach who most notably played for Juventus in Italy as a midfielder or forward. He was a dual international footballer and played for both the Argentina and Italy national teams. While playing for Italy, he was part of the successful runner-up 1931-32 Central European International Cup & gold winning 1933-35 Central European International Cup campaigns. Playing career Cesarini was born in Senigallia, near Ancona, in the Italian region of Marche, but when he was only a few months old he and his family emigrated to Buenos Aires, Argentina. In his early career he played for several clubs around the Buenos Aires area, during the amateur era in Argentine football, most notably Chacarita Juniors. Cesarini was signed by Italian giants Juventus in 1929, he made his debut against S.S.C. Napoli on 23 March 1930: the game ended in a 2–2 draw. He went on to win five league championships in ...
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Cesarini V
Cesarini is an Italian surname and the name of an Italian noble family. Notable people mostly include members of the noble Cesarini family, who held various ecclesiastical titles. Notable members *Alessandro Cesarini (died 1542), Italian cardinal *Alessandro Cesarini (footballer) (born 1989), Italian footballer * Alessandro Cesarini (iuniore) (1592–1644), Italian Roman Catholic bishop *Carlo Francesco Cesarini (born 1666), Italian classical composer and violinist * Claudia Cesarini (born 1986), Italian modern pentathlete *David Cesarini, American economist * Davide Cesarini (born 1995), Sammarinese footballer * Ferdinando Cesarini (1604–1646), Italian poet and physicist * Filippo Cesarini (1610–1683), Italian Roman Catholic bishop * Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore (1466–1510), Italian cardinal *Julian Cesarini (1398–1444), Italian cardinal *Nino Cesarini (1889–1943), Italian model *Renato Cesarini (1906–1969), Italian Argentine footballer and manager *Virginio Cesarini ...
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Ferdinando Cesarini
Ferdinando Cesarini (c. 1606–1646) was an Italian poet and physicist Life Born in Rome in a noble family. Brother of the better-known Virginio Cesarini (1596–1624) to whom Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) addressed ''Il Saggiatore'' he Assayer(Rome, 1623) in the form of a letter. Ferdinando Cesarini, as a '' referendarius utriusque signaturae'' and patron, corresponded with Benedetto Castelli (1577/8-1643), who described the Galilean thermoscope to him in a letter of September 20, 1638. Father Castelli also invited him to spread the ''Discorso sulla calamita'' iscourse on the loadstone also dedicated to Cesarini, within a limited circle of "trust" people. Fundamental was the ascending of Cesarini, who pushed Castelli to turn his thoughts around the most "noble fields of the philosophizing". Cesarini also had contacts with Giovanni Ciampoli, who presented him in a poem and with whom, in the late nineteenth century, he was counted among the prelates of his era inclined "to prom ...
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Virginio Cesarini
Virginio Cesarini (20 October 1595, in Rome – 1 April 1624, in Rome) was an Italian poet and intellectual. Youth and Education The son of Giuliano Cesarini, duke of Civitanova, and his wife Livia Orsini, he was sent together with his brother Alessandro to study at Parma, where he was hosted by duke Ranuccio I Farnese. During this period, as a result of a fall from a horse and an inept operation, his health, already delicate, became even more fragile. He returned to Rome in 1610, and pursued a range of interests including theology, jurisprudence, mathematics and astronomy, as was consistent with prevailing ideas about a cultural education, founded on Aristotelian philosophy. Career in Rome He was on friendly terms with Cardinal Robert Bellarmine and Maffeo Barberini (later Pope Urban VIII) as well as with Prince Federico Cesi, patron of the Accademia dei Lincei. In 1618, Cesarini became a member of the Accademia. It was here that he encountered both Galileo and Giovanni Ciampo ...
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Alessandro Cesarini (iuniore)
Alessandro Cesarini, iuniore (1592 – 25 January 1644) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Cardinal-Deacon of Sant'Eustachio (1638–1644), Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Maria in Cosmedin (1637–1638), Bishop of Viterbo e Tuscania (1636–1638), Cardinal-Deacon of Santi Cosma e Damiano (1632–1637), and Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Maria in Domnica (1627–1632). Biography Alessandro Cesarini was born in Rome, Italy in 1592, the son of Giuliano Cesarini, marquis of Civitanova e Montecorato, and Livia Orsini. His family produced a number of cardinals including his great-grand uncle Cardinal Alessandro Cesarini, seniore (installed 1517); Giuliano Cesarini, seniore (installed 1426); and Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore (installed 1493). He attended the University of Parma and then obtained a doctorate in Rome. He served as papal prelate, Cleric of the Apostolic Chamber, and as the Governor of the conclave of 1623, in which Pope Urban VIII was elected. On 30 August 1627 he was c ...
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Alessandro Cesarini
Alessandro Cesarini (died 13 February 1542), bishop of Pistoia, was an Italian cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. Life Born in Rome, the son of Agabito Cesarini, he became close to the Medici family, particularly Cardinal Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici, the future Pope Leo X. He was made cardinal deacon on 1 July 1517 and received the deaconry of Sts. Sergius and Bacchus, opting for the deaconry of Santa Maria in Via Lata in 1523. He became known for his patronage of writers and artists. He served as apostolic administrator of Pamplona, Spain from 1520 to 1538; that of Alessano, Italy from 1526 to 1531; that of Otranto, Italy from 1526 to 1536; that of Gerace, Italy from 1536 to 1538; that of Catanzaro, Italy briefly in 1536; that of Oppido Mamertina, Italy from 1536 to 1538 (resigning in favor of his natural son, Ascanio Cesarini, who succeeded him in that see from 1538 to 1542); that of Jaën from 6 July 1537 to 14 June 1538; and that of Cuenca, Spain from 1538 to his ...
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David Cesarini
David Alexander Cesarini is an associate professor in the Department of Economics & Center for Experimental Social Science at New York University, a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, as well as affiliated researcher at the Research Institute for Industrial Economics (IFN). He is an empirically oriented economist with interests in social-science genetics, applied microeconomics and behavioral economics—especially known for his research in genoeconomics and the heritability Heritability is a statistic used in the fields of breeding and genetics that estimates the degree of ''variation'' in a phenotypic trait in a population that is due to genetic variation between individuals in that population. The concept of h ... of economic behaviors and attitudes, such as investing decisions and confidence. His early work on genetics and social science applied methods from behavior genetics to various economic outcomes. These studies sought to infer ...
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Carlo Francesco Cesarini
Carlo Francesco Cesarini, (c.1666 – after 2 September 1741) was an Italian composer born in San Martino al Cimino near Viterbo and active in Rome from 1690. In 1690 he entered into the service of Cardinal Benedetto Pamphili as the director of his music academy and remained in his service until the cardinal's death in 1730. Cesarini also served as the ''maestro di cappella'' in the Chiesa del Gesù from 1704 until 31 August 1741. He composed numerous oratorios and cantatas and was the joint composer of several operas. The opera ''Clearco in Negroponte'' which he composed with Giovanni Lorenzo Lulier and Tommaso Bernardo Gaffi inaugurated the public opening of the Teatro Capranica on 18 January 1695. He also set to music many oratorios on Benedetto Pamphilj's texts: ''San Vincislao'' (1704), ''Il figliol prodigo'' (1707), ''Oratorio per l'Assunzione della beatissima Vergine'' (1713), e ''Il trionfo del Tempo nella Bellezza ravveduta'' (1725). The last known records of him date f ...
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