Mozzi (other)
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Mozzi (other)
Mozzi may refer to: People * Alessandro Mapelli-Mozzi (born 1951), British-Italian alpine skier * Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi (born 1983), British-Italian property developer and husband of Princess Beatrice, a granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II * Andrea dei Mozzi (died 1296), Italian bishop * Luigi Mozzi (1746–1813), Italian Jesuit controversialist * Mozzi Gyorio (born 1989), Canadian soccer player Places * Biblioteca Comunale Mozzi Borgetti, public library of Macerata, Italy * Palazzo Mozzi, an early Renaissance palace in Florence, Italy * Villa Mapolli-Mozzi, located in Ponte San Pietro, Italy See also

* Mosquito * Mossi (other) * Mozzie (other) {{disambig, surname, given name, place ...
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Alessandro Mapelli-Mozzi
Count Alessandro Mapelli-Mozzi (born 7 May 1951) is a retired British-Italian Alpine skiing, alpine skier. He competed for Great Britain in Alpine skiing at the 1972 Winter Olympics, three events at the 1972 Winter Olympics. He holds both British and Italian citizenship. He is the father-in-law of Princess Beatrice of York. In 2012, he was reported as residing in La Garde-Freinet, Var (department), Var department, Côte d'Azur, France. Ancestry Mapelli-Mozzi is born as a member of an ancient Italian nobility, Italian noble family, whose family seat is Villa Mapelli Mozzi. He is the only son of Count Gian Paolo Mapelli Mozzi (1922-1980) and his Malta, Maltese wife, Gigliola Stoppani (1926-2003). As Italian nobility was abolished in 1946, when the Italian Republic was proclaimed, his title of Count is not officially recognised in neither Italy nor the UK; he uses the title as a courtesy title, courtesy. That title of Count in the Kingdom of Italy was awarded to his family in 1913 ...
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Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi
Edoardo Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi (born 19 November 1983) is a British property developer descended from Italian nobility. He is the founder and chief executive of Banda Property, a property development and interior design company. He became a member of the British royal family in 2020 when he married Princess Beatrice, the elder daughter of Prince Andrew, Duke of York, and a niece of King Charles III. He has two daughters with Beatrice and a son from a previous relationship with architect Dara Huang. Background Mapelli Mozzi was born at the Portland Hospital in the West End of London, West End of London. He is the son of Alex Mapelli-Mozzi, Alessandro "Alex" Mapelli-Mozzi, a Great Britain at the 1972 Winter Olympics, British Olympian and member of a formerly titled Italian noble family whose ancestral seat is Villa Mapelli Mozzi in the Bergamo province of Italy. The BBC states that Mapelli Mozzi is a count; although titles of nobility are not officially recognized in the Itali ...
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Andrea Dei Mozzi
Andrea dei Mozzi (died 1296) was an Italian bishop, from the Mozzi family of bankers. He was a papal chaplain, for Pope Alexander IV and Pope Gregory IX. He was then appointed as Archbishop of Florence in 1287. He was transferred by Pope Boniface VIII to Vicenza, in 1295, in a scandal that made him a character in Dante Dante Alighieri (; most likely baptized Durante di Alighiero degli Alighieri; – September 14, 1321), widely known mononymously as Dante, was an Italian Italian poetry, poet, writer, and philosopher. His ''Divine Comedy'', originally called ...'s '' The Inferno''. He had a nephew of the same name. See also * Sartori family Notes 1296 deaths Roman Catholic archbishops of Florence 13th-century Italian Roman Catholic archbishops Year of birth unknown {{RC-bishop-stub ...
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Luigi Mozzi
Luigi Mozzi (26 May 1746 at Bergamo – 24 June 1813 near Milan) was an Italian Jesuit controversialist. Life He entered the Society of Jesus in 1763, and on its suppression was received into the Diocese of Bergamo, where he was shortly made a canon, and appointed archpriest and examiner of candidates for the priesthood. The zeal with which he opposed the progress of Jansenism in Italy gained him a reputation, and Pope Pius VI called him to Rome, where he became an Apostolic missionary. He was elected a member of the Accademia degli Arcadi. In 1804 he rejoined the Society, which had been restored in Naples. He retired to the residence of Marquis Scotti near Milan, where he died. Works Among his important writings are: * (1781) * (Ferrara, 1785) * (Venice, 1787) * (Foligno, 1792), all against Jansenism; * (Venice, 1779), a defence of Molinism. He translated from the English Anthony Ulrich, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel's "Fifty Reasons for preferring the Roman Cath ...
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Mozzi Gyorio
Mozesh "Mozzi" Gyorio (; born August 1, 1989) is a Canadian soccer player. Early life His parents were born in Gunaroš in today's Vojvodina, Serbia. His family moved from Yugoslavia to Hungary when he was two years old. Two years later, the family moved to Canada. He speaks English, Hungarian, French, Serbian and Croatian. Career Youth and College Gyorio moved to Canada with his parents when he was a small child, settling in Stratford, Prince Edward Island. He attended Charlottetown Rural High School, played for Sherwood Parkdale Rangers FC and Stratford Foxes FC, and spent time with the youth academy of the famed Dutch club NEC Nijmegen in 2007. He later returned to North America to continue his education. He subsequently played two years of college soccer at San Jacinto College, where he received honors such as being a NJCAA All-American honorable mention, selected to the NJCAA all-region team and NSCAA all-region 2nd team, and named the college's offensive MVP in his seni ...
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Biblioteca Comunale Mozzi Borgetti
The Biblioteca Comunale Mozzi Borgetti, founded in 1773, is the public library of Macerata, located on Piazza Vittorio Veneto 2 region of Marche, Italy. The name is sometimes hyphenated as ''Mozzi-Borgetti''. History The library was established in the building formerly belonging the Jesuit college in the town. The library was established upon suppression of the order, and had its nuclei in the Jesuit collection of 5000 volumes. The library was established with papal support (Clement XIV and Pius VI) and the patronage of Cardinal Guglielmo Pallotta. The library was open to the public in 1787. The collection was augmented by the donations of the lawyer Rota Francesco Mornati, and by Bartolomeo Mozzi. In 1833, the Dominican priest Tommaso Borgetti donated his collection. The 19th-century art biographer, Amico Ricci, also endowed the library with his works and notes. With further ecclesiastical suppressions in the late 19th century, further collections were added. In 1935, it acquired ...
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Palazzo Mozzi
Palazzo Mozzi or Palazzo de' Mozzi is an early Renaissance palace, located at the end of the Piazza de' Mozzi that emerges from Ponte alle Grazie and leads straight to the palace where via San Niccolò becomes via de' Bardi in the Quartiere of Santo Spirito (San Niccolò) in the Oltrarno section of Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy. The 13th-century palace housed the gallery of the highly successful antiquarian Stefano Bardini, of which the remnants were left to the commune, where they assembled the Museo Bardini or Mozzi Bardini, displaying Florentine art and artifacts up to the early Renaissance. The gardens elaborated against the hillside behind the palace were added mainly by Bardini. History The palazzo was built by the Mozzi family between 1260 and 1273 as a fortification for the Ponte alle Grazie. The prominent Mozzi family had been persecuted in the past for its Guelph leanings. The palace in the 13th and 14th-centuries hosted prominent visitors to Florence such as Pop ...
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Villa Mapolli-Mozzi
Villa Mapelli Mozzi, also known as Villa Mozzi or Villa Mapelli, is a large rural neoclassical-style palace in Locate Bergamasco, a ''frazione'' of Ponte San Pietro, which is located in the province of Bergamo, northern Italy. The roots of the building date back to 1460, when the property with the castle was acquired by the family. From 1770, when it was built in this form, until today, the villa has been the property of the Italian noble family of Mapelli-Mozzi. With the back façade reaching almost 40 meters, the avant-corps and the lateral parts, it embodies one of the grandest neoclassical villas in the province. Park of the Villa Mapelli Mozzi is accessible, while interiors of the villa are no longer open to visitors. History The site originally held a castle, property of the Mozzi family, but the current villa was completed after 1770 by the count Enrico Mozzi. The architect is not known definitively, but it could have been a local architect, Giovanni Moroni. He might h ...
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Mosquito
Mosquitoes, the Culicidae, are a Family (biology), family of small Diptera, flies consisting of 3,600 species. The word ''mosquito'' (formed by ''Musca (fly), mosca'' and diminutive ''-ito'') is Spanish and Portuguese for ''little fly''. Mosquitoes have a slender segmented body, one pair of wings, three pairs of long hair-like legs, and specialized, highly elongated, piercing-sucking mouthparts. All mosquitoes drink nectar from flowers; females of some species have in addition adapted to drink blood. The group diversified during the Cretaceous period. Evolutionary biology, Evolutionary biologists view mosquitoes as micropredators, small animals that Parasitism, parasitise larger ones by drinking their blood without immediately killing them. Parasitology, Medical parasitologists view mosquitoes instead as Disease vector, vectors of disease, carrying protozoan parasites or bacterial or virus, viral pathogens from one Host (biology), host to another. The mosquito life cycle cons ...
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Mossi (other)
Mossi may refer to: *Mossi people *Mossi language *Mossi Kingdoms * the Mossi, a Burkinabe variant of the Dongola horse * Mossi (given name) * Mossi (surname) *Mossi, a French fashion label founded by Mossi Traoré See also *Mossie (other) Mossie may refer to: People * Mossie Carroll (born 1957), Irish former hurler * Mossie Dowling (born 1946), Irish former hurler * Maurice Enright (died 1920), Irish-American gangster * Maurice Mossie Finn (1931-2009), Irish hurler * Mossie Guttorms ... * Mossy (other) * Mozzi (other) {{disambiguation, surname ...
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