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Pinelli Saltarello
Pinelli is an Italian surname, and may refer to: * Antonia Bertucci-Pinelli (died c. 1640), Italian painter of the Baroque * Babe Pinelli (1895–1984), American baseball umpire * Bartolomeo Pinelli (1771–1835), Italian illustrator and engraver * Dario Pinelli (born 1982), Italian jazz guitarist * German Pinelli (1907–1996), Cuban journalist and actor * Gian Vincenzo Pinelli (1535–1601), Italian humanist and botanist * Giuseppe Pinelli (1928–1969), Italian anarchist * Pino Pinelli (1938–2024), Italian painter * Tullio Pinelli (1908–2009), Italian screenwriter It could also be a reference to: * the Pinelli–Walckenaer Atlas, a 14th-century atlas. See also * Prince of Belmonte {{surname Surnames ...
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Antonia Bertucci-Pinelli
Antonia Bertucci-Pinelli (died c. 1640) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period. She was born in Bologna, and was instructed in art by Lodovico Carracci. She painted some pictures for the churches; among others, the ''Guardian Angel'' for San Tommaso; and ''St Philip & St. James'' for the church dedicated to those saints. But her most celebrated work was a ''St. John the Evangelist'' for the Annunziata, painted from a design of Lodovico Carracci. Her maiden name was Pinelli, but she married Giovanni Battista Bertusio. References

* 17th-century Italian painters Italian Baroque painters Painters from Bologna 17th-century Italian women painters 1640s deaths 17th-century Italian women artists {{Italy-painter-17thC-stub ...
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Babe Pinelli
Ralph Arthur "Babe" Pinelli, born Rinaldo Angelo Paolinelli (October 18, 1895 – October 22, 1984), was an American third baseman and umpire in Major League Baseball. Born in San Francisco, his playing career was mostly with the Cincinnati Reds from 1922 to 1927. He also played with the Chicago White Sox (1918) and Detroit Tigers (1920). After that he became a highly regarded National League umpire from 1935 to 1956, officiating in 6 World Series: 1939, 1941, 1947, 1948 (outfield only), 1952 and 1956; he was crew chief for the final two Series. He also umpired in the All-Star game in 1937, 1941, 1950 and 1956, working behind home plate for the second half of the last three games, and he worked in the 3-game series to determine the NL champion in 1946. Pinelli wrote an article for ''The Second Fireside Book of Baseball'', titled "Kill the Umpire? Don't Make Me Laugh!" in which he told about his rookie year of 1935, when he was told that he should not call a strike on Babe Ruth, ...
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Bartolomeo Pinelli
Bartolomeo Pinelli (November 20, 1781 – April 1, 1835) was an Italian illustrator and engraver. Life Pinelli was born and died in the Trastevere neighborhood of Rome, the son of an artisan who modeled religious statues. Pinelli was educated first in Bologna and then at the Accademia di San Luca in Rome. He returned to live in Trastevere, then a poor quarter of Rome. His initial studio was on Piazza Sciarra on the Corso. His son, Achille Pinelli, was a famous watercolorist in his own right. An extremely prolific engraver, his illustrations depicted the costumes of the Italian people, the great epic poems and numerous other subjects, including popular customs. In general, the most recurring subject is Rome, the ancient city as well as the modern one: its inhabitants and its monuments. In his first years of independent work, he painted figures in watercolor in the style of the painter Franz Kaiserman. Starting in 1807, he produced an album of 36 watercolors, entitled '' ...
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Dario Pinelli
Dario Pinelli (born March 27, 1982, in Manduria, Italy), is an Italian jazz manouche guitarist. Early life Pinelli began studying the classical guitar at a very young age and began performing as a concertist in baroque music. Hereinafter, upon winning a scholarship by Jazz Music International, he transferred to New York where he began studying the jazz guitar. Later passing from classic jazz to typical European jazz, at which he dedicated himself to revamp and renew the style with new harmonic solutions, rhythms and melodies. Career In 2010, Pinelli began a collaboration with BinarioSwing (Michele Biancofiore - rhythm guitar; Umberto Calentini - double bass; Teo Carriero - drums). The new group performed his music at "Metropolitan Room" in New York City and later, at the jazz hotspot, "Birdland" of New York. During their 2009 USA Tour, Dario Pinelli & BinarioSwing performed as guests invited by David Amram, 'father' of the Beat Generation, at the club "The Village Gate" (now k ...
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German Pinelli
German(s) may refer to: * Germany, the country of the Germans and German things **Germania (Roman era) * Germans, citizens of Germany, people of German ancestry, or native speakers of the German language ** For citizenship in Germany, see also German nationality law **Germanic peoples (Roman era) *German diaspora * German language * German cuisine, traditional foods of Germany People * German (given name) * German (surname) * Germán, a Spanish name Places * German (parish), Isle of Man * German, Albania, or Gërmej * German, Bulgaria * German, Iran * German, North Macedonia * German, New York, U.S. * Agios Germanos, Greece Other uses * German (mythology), a South Slavic mythological being * Germans (band), a Canadian rock band * "German" (song), a 2019 song by No Money Enterprise * ''The German'', a 2008 short film * "The Germans", an episode of ''Fawlty Towers'' * ''The German'', a nickname for Congolese rebel André Kisase Ngandu See also * Germanic (disambiguatio ...
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Gian Vincenzo Pinelli
Gian Vincenzo Pinelli (1535 – 31 August 1601) was an Italian humanist, born in Naples and known as a savant and a mentor of Galileo. His literary correspondence put him at the center of a European network of ''virtuosi''. He was also a noted botanist, bibliophile and collector of scientific instruments. He died in Padua, where he is commemorated by ''Vincenzo Pinelli'', and by the Aroid genus '' Pinellia''. Collector His enormous library was probably the greatest in 16th-century Italy, consisting of around 8,500 printed works at the moment of his death, plus hundreds of manuscripts. When he died, in 1601, Nicolas Fabri de Peiresc was in his house and spent some of the following months studying his library and taking notes from its catalogues. Pinelli's secretary, Paolo Gualdo, wrote and published (1607) a biography of Pinelli which is also the portrait of the perfect scholar and book-collector. His collection of manuscripts, when it was purchased from his estate in 1608 ...
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Giuseppe Pinelli
Giuseppe "Pino" Pinelli (21 October 1928 – 15 December 1969) was an Italian railroad worker and anarchist, who died while being detained by the ''Polizia di Stato'' in 1969. Pinelli was a member of the Milan-based anarchist association named Ponte della Ghisolfa. He was also the secretary of the Italian branch of the Anarchist Black Cross. His death, believed by many to have been caused by members of the police, inspired Nobel Prize laureate Dario Fo to write his famous play titled '' Accidental Death of an Anarchist''. Early life Pinelli was born in Milan to Alfredo Pinelli and Rosa Malacarne. His family was working-class in one of the poorest areas of post-World War I Milan. Although he had to work in many low-income jobs, such as waiter and warehouseman, in order to make ends meet, he nonetheless found the time to read many books and become politically active throughout his youth. Among other political activities, he also worked with the anarchist group that published ...
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Pino Pinelli (painter)
Giuseppe "Pino" Pinelli (1 October 1938 – 30 April 2024) was an Italian painter. Life and career Born in Catania, after gaining initial recognition in Sicily, in 1963 Pinelli moved to Milan, where in 1968 he held his first solo exhibition at La Bergamini gallery. In the 1970s, he was among the major representatives of the ('analytic painting') art movement. Pinelli's art was characterized by aniconism Aniconism is the cultural absence of artistic representations ('' icons'') of the natural and supernatural worlds, or it is the absence of representations of certain figures in religions. The prohibition of material representations may only extend ..., and after the series "Topologie" and "Monocromi", starting from the second half of the 1970s his art focused on fragmentation. A key role in his art was given to perception, intended as 'part and parcel of an indivisible sensory and psychic totality that is at the origins of our emotional as well as our rational response to ima ...
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Tullio Pinelli
Tullio Pinelli (24 June 1908 – 7 March 2009) was an Italian screenwriter known for his work on the Federico Fellini films ''I Vitelloni'', ''La Strada'', ''La Dolce Vita'' and ''8½''. Biography Born in Turin, Pinelli began his career as a civil lawyer but spent his free time working in the theatre as a playwright. He was descended from a long line of Italian patriots; his great-uncle General Ferdinando Pinelli quashed the bandit revolt in Calabria following Italian unification. He met Fellini in a Rome kiosk in 1946 while they were reading opposite pages of the same newspaper. "Meeting each other", explained Pinelli, "was a creative lightning bolt. We spoke the same language from the start... We were fantasizing about a screenplay that would be the exact opposite of what was fashionable then: the story of a very shy and modest office worker who discovered he can fly; so he flaps his arms and escapes out the window. It certainly wasn't Italian neorealism. But the idea never ...
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Pinelli–Walckenaer Atlas
The Pinelli–Walckenaer Atlas is a late 14th-century atlas of portolan charts, explicitly dated 1384, primarily composed by an anonymous Venetian cartographer, and held by the British Library. Background 250px, Third sheet of the Pinelli-Walckenaer (North Atlantic and West Mediterranean) The Pinelli-Walckenaer atlas was primarily composed by an anonymous Venetian cartographer (although some suggest Genoese), probably the same person who made the similar Corbitis Atlas. The Pinelli-Walckenaer atlas is explicitly dated 1384 (according to its calendar), but some scholars believe it to have been made a little later (c. 1410). Two of the charts in the atlas (the specific charts for the Aegean and the Adriatic) were definitely later additions by someone else and not part of the original atlas. One suggestion is that the latter two charts were made by the Venetian cartographer Francesco de Cesanis around 1434. The calendar itself might date from 1458. The name of the atlas refe ...
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Prince Of Belmonte
Prince of Belmonte (; ) is a noble title created in 1619 by the Spanish crown for the Barons of Badolato and Belmonte. The name of the title is taken from the fortress town of Belmonte in Calabria, historically important for the defence of the Italian coast from Saracen invasion. Belmonte has been known since the ''Risorgimento'' as Belmonte Calabro. In addition to the princely title, the princes were made Grandees of Spain (First Class) in 1712, and in 1726 were granted the rank of Prince of the Holy Roman Empire () with the style of Serene Highness (). The princes hold a number of subsidiary titles, including Duke of Acerenza (1593), Marquess of Galatone (1562) and Count of Copertino (1562). The seat of the princes is Palazzo Belmonte, on the Bay of Salerno and south of Amalfi. The princes are descendants of the Fieschi family of Genoa, who were ennobled as Counts Palatine in the year 1010 by Henry the Holy, King of Italy and later Holy Roman Emperor. The Emperor created the ...
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