29142098http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tm7gj3revised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-09-18machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-12T08:19:01machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-12T08:19:01humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-28machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonMedici, Cosimo de' 1389-1464presumedMedici, Cosimo de', 1389-1464.presumedCosimo, granduca di Toscana, 1389-1464presumedMedici, Cosimo de'presumedמדיצ'י, קוזימו דה, 1389-1464presumedMedici, Cosimo de' (Florentine statesman, banker, patron, 1389-1464)presumedMédicis, Cosme de, 1389-1464presumedMedici, Cosimo de', il Vecchio, 1389-1464presumedCosimo der Alte 1389-1464presumedMedici, Cosme l'Ancien 1389-1464presumedCosimo Medicejský 1389-1464presumedメディチ, コジモ・デpresumedCosimo de' Medici the ElderpresumedCosimo de' Medici il VecchiopresumedCosimo il Vecchio, 1389-1464presumedדה מדיצ'י, קוזימו 1389-1464presumedDe' Medici, Cosimo 1389-1464presumedMédicis, Côme de, 1389-1464presumedCosimo il Vecchio de' MedicipresumedCosme Medici 1389-1464presumedקוזימו דה מדיצ'י 1389-1464presumedCosimo "il Vecchio" de' Medici 1389-1464presumedCosimo de' Medici called il VecchiopresumedCosimo de' Medici, 1389-1464presumedCosimo de' Medici, il Vecchio, 1389-1464presumedCosimo de' MedicipresumedMédicis, Côme de 1389-1464presumedMedici, Cosimo 1389-1464presumed1389-09-271464-08-01ItaliansAristotle.Feinstone, Sol, 1888-1980,Medici, Averado de',Medici family.Ptolemy, 2nd cent.Medici, Cosimo de' 1389-1464Feinstone, Sol, 1888-1980,. Manuscripts and correspondence, 1575-1948.Feinstone, Sol, 1888-1980,Manuscripts and correspondence, 1575-1948.1 cubic ft.Miscellaneous correspondence and manuscripts, 1712-1948, include letters, engraved portraits, autographs, and documents of Benjamin Disraeli, Bret Harte, Thomas Mann, W. Somerset Maugham, Theodore Roosevelt, John Greenleaf Whittier, George Washington, Charles Dickens, Albert Einstein, James Garfield, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Louis Phillipe of France, Cosimo de Medici, Cardinal Richelieu, Talleyrand, and Kaiser Wilhelm. Materials related to William Shakespeare include letters and documents, 1575-1592, and letters of Sidney Lee and other Shakespeare scholars, 1897-1913. Materials concerning Robert Walpole include letters, warrants, and military documents, 1710-1713. Bound items include original manuscript "Rank and Riches" by Wilkie Collins; autograph albums of G. Danforth Cooper and Mademoiselle Mars (stage name of Anne Francoise Hippolyte Boutet de Monvel); receipt for a Negro boy signed by Patrick Henry, 1777; original manuscript "The Enchanted Island" by Washington Irving; and eight letters of John Ruskin to Henry Ritchie, 1871-1875. Campbell University, Wiggins Memorial LibraryMiscellaneous photostatic and photographic reproductions of manuscripts, circa, 1900-1999Miscellaneous photostatic and photographic reproductionsof manuscripts, circa 1900-1999132 volumes and a few separate itemsPhotostatic and photographic reproductions formerly held in the Treasure Room ofWidener Library with a few from other sources.Houghton LibraryRitratti nella gallaria [sic] del Sr. duca di Toscana, ca. 1610.Ritratti nella gallaria [sic] del Sr. duca di Toscana, ca. 1610.1 item (20 p.)This anonymous manuscript contains an inventory of 157 portraits in the gallery of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, according to their location: first those on the right side ("Banda destra"), then on the left side ("Banda sinistra"), and those around the turn of the gallery ("La Gallaria qui volta"). The list begins with Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici, and his son, Cosimo the Elder, "Padre dela Patria." The portraits include rulers, warriors, sultans and generals, nobles, popes, church leaders and monks, artists, writers, scientists, navigators, etc. Most are Italian, but some are from other countries and continents. The last Grand Duke recorded in the inventory is Ferdinand I de' Medici, who reigned from 1587 to 1609. Getty Research InstituteAristotle. De moribus ad Nicomachum : manuscript, [14--].Aristotle.Medici, Cosimo de', 1389-1464.Argyropoulos, Iōannēs, d. 1486.University of Chicago. Library. Special Collections Research Center.University of Chicago. Library.De moribus ad Nicomachum : manuscript, [14--].1 v. ; 29 cm.Argyropulos' translation of Ethica Nicomachea made for Cosime de Medici. University of Chicago LibraryMedici, Cosimo de', 1389-1464. Autograph letter signed : Florence, to Averado de' Medici, 1427 Dec. 22.Medici, Cosimo de', 1389-1464.Medici, Averado de',Autograph letter signed : Florence, to Averado de' Medici, 1427 Dec. 22.1 item (1 p.) ; (4to)Pierpont Morgan Library.Medici family. Business records, ca. 1400-1600 (inclusive) [microform].Medici family.Business records, ca. 1400-1600 (inclusive) [microform].15 linear ft. (144 v.)These records cover the activities of several generations of one family and one firm devoted largely to the manufacture of wool. They cover a period of great significance in the history of international trade, a period which also marked the acme and decline of the wool industry in Florence. The collection falls into three groups: account books, letter books, and letters. The account books include ca. 136 volumes, and belong for the most part to the firm of Medici & Company, merchant-employers, a firm established in 1431 and continuing until 1579. The entries record the management of estates, and the sale and purchase of raw wool, finished cloth, Spanish leather, works of art, land, and houses. The 4 letter books cover the years from 1500 to 1521 in unbroken sequence and contain copies of the letters written by Francesco de Medici and his son Raffaello to their agents in Italy and France, as well as copies of letters written by Giovanni di Francesco Maringhi (later associated with them in business) to his principals in Florence. These letters are copies of business correspondence and are concerned for the most part with shipments and sales of merchandise. The unbound letters include a few written to Cosimo de Medici; a much larger number written by Lorenzo the Magnificent to Pietro Alamanni, Florentine ambassador; and even more written by the order of the Otto di Pratica to Alamanni. Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker LibraryAristotle. De moribus ad Nicomachum : manuscript, [14--].Aristotle.Medici, Cosimo de', 1389-1464.Argyropoulos, Iōannēs, d. 1486.University of Chicago. Library. Special Collections Research Center.University of Chicago. Library.De moribus ad Nicomachum : manuscript, [14--].1 v. ; 29 cm.Argyropulos' translation of Ethica Nicomachea made for Cosime de Medici. Texas Christian UniversityPtolemy, 2nd cent. Cosmographia : manuscript, [ca. 1400-1415]Ptolemy, 2nd cent.Bracciolini, Poggio, 1380-1459.D'Angelo, Jacopo,Medici, Cosimo de', 1389-1464,San Marco (Monastery : Florence, Italy),Phillipps, Thomas, Sir, 1792-1872,Cosmographia : manuscript, [ca. 1400-1415]232 leaves, bound : vellum ; 28 cm.Houghton LibraryRitratti nella gallaria [sic] del Sr. duca di Toscana, ca. 1610.Ritratti nella gallaria [sic] del Sr. duca di Toscana, ca. 1610.1 item (20 p.)This anonymous manuscript contains an inventory of 157 portraits in the gallery of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, according to their location: first those on the right side ("Banda destra"), then on the left side ("Banda sinistra"), and those around the turn of the gallery ("La Gallaria qui volta"). The list begins with Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici, and his son, Cosimo the Elder, "Padre dela Patria." The portraits include rulers, warriors, sultans and generals, nobles, popes, church leaders and monks, artists, writers, scientists, navigators, etc. Most are Italian, but some are from other countries and continents. The last Grand Duke recorded in the inventory is Ferdinand I de' Medici, who reigned from 1587 to 1609. Getty Research Institute