Jump to content

Stefano Colonna: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m →‎top: Fix surname links, replaced: Orsini family → Orsini family
m –{{Italy-politician-stub}}, +{{Italy-noble-stub}} using StubSorter
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 20: Line 20:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Colonna, Stefano}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Colonna, Stefano}}
[[Category:1265 births]]
[[Category:1340s deaths]]
[[Category:1360s deaths|Colonna, Stefanello]]
[[Category:Colonna family|Stefano]]
[[Category:Colonna family|Stefano]]
[[Category:Italian politicians]]
[[Category:Italian politicians]]
[[Category:13th-century Italian people]]
[[Category:14th-century Italian people]]




{{italy-politician-stub}}
{{Italy-noble-stub}}

Latest revision as of 00:44, 7 September 2023

Stefano Colonna was the name of several members of the Italian family of Colonna. The most important include:

  • Stefano Colonna the Elder (1265 – c. 1348) was son of Giovanni Colonna and one of the most important political figures in Rome in the first half of the 14th century. He was heir of the Papal fief of Palestrina. In 1290 he was named count of Romagna, and he was several times Senator of Rome and Imperial vicar in Italy. A staunch Ghibelline, he struggled for large part of his life against the Guelph Orsini family. He was a protector of Petrarch, who dedicated two sonnets and other works to him. He was also a fierce opponent of Cola di Rienzo, leader of the popular rebellion of Rome in 1347. He was brother to Sciarra Colonna.
  • Stefano Colonna the Younger (died 1347), son of the former, was Senator of Rome in 1306 and 1330. He was killed (together with his sons Giovanni and Camillo) at the battle of Porta San Lorenzo (1347) against the troops of Cola di Rienzo.
  • Stefanello (died c. 1368), son of the former, was the first of the Palestrina branch of the family.
  • Stefano Colonna di Palestrina (16th century). Commander of the Florentine militia during the siege of Florence.[1]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "L'assedio di Firenze:cronologia". cronologia.leonardo.it. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
[edit]