Giulio Leonelli

Giulio Leonelli (died 1614) was a civil lawyer who, along with several other men, founded a library in Rome which housed more than forty-thousand works.[1] He was appointed as Governor of Turin by the Duke of Savoy[2] and later was "appointed by the Court of Rome to the main offices of the Marca, then of Umbria, and finally Avignon."[3]

Giulio Leonelli
Died1614
OccupationLawyer
TitleGovernor of Turin
SpouseVirginia Fornari
ChildrenMutatesia Leonelli, Innocenzo Leonelli, Ignatius of Jesus – (born Carlo Leonelli), and three daughters

He married Virginia Fornari and they had six children: three daughters, one a nun; and three sons – Mutatesia Leonelli; Innocenzo Leonelli; Carlo Leonelli, later known as Ignatius of Jesus.

References

Citations

  1. Barnard ed. (1870), p. 208.
  2. Vernarecci (1903), p. 652.
  3. Gargano (1868), p. 134  ("…e dapo idalla Corte di Roma alle principali cariche della Marca, e dell’ Umbria, e finalmente in Avignone.")

Bibliography

  • Henry Barnard, ed. (1870). "American Journal of Education". 20 (4). London: Office of American Journal of Education. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Gargano, Sebastiano (1868). Manuale statistico amministrativo storico ed artistico della provincia di Pesaro e Urbino [Statistical and historical administrative manual of the province of Pesaro and Urbino]. Pesaro: Nobili.
  • Augusto Vernarecci (1903). Fossombrone dai tempi antichissimi ai nostri con illustrazioni e appendice di documenti [Fossombrone from ancient times to ours with illustrations and appendix of documents]. Forni.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.