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Paolo and Burali
In Spain, under Philip II, the Theatine Cardinal Paolo Burali d ' Arezzo, afterwards beatified, filled various embassies at the command of the viceroy of Naples.
It has also furnished one pope, Paul IV ( Giovanni Pietro Carafa ), 250 bishops, archbishops, and papal legates, and the cardinals: Blessed Giovanni Marinoni, Blessed Paolo Burali d ' Arezzo, Giovanni Bernardino Scotti, Francesco and Domenico Pignatelli, Giuseppe Capece-Zurlo, Francesco Maria Banditi, and Ferdinando Pignatelli, who was made cardinal by Pope Gregory XVI.

Paolo and d
* 1539 – Fausto Paolo Sozzini, Italian theologian ( d. 1604 )
* 1852 – Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza ( Pietro Paolo Savorgnan di Brazzà ), explorer ( d. 1905 )
* 1691 – Giovanni Paolo Panini, Italian painter and architect ( d. 1765 )
* 1755 – Paolo Mascagni, Italian physician ( d. 1815 )
* 1940 – Paolo Borsellino, Italian magistrate ( d. 1992 )
* 1831 – Paolo Mantegazza, Italian neurologist ( d. 1910 )
* March 5 – Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italian film director ( d. 1975 )
* June 17 – Giovanni Paolo Pannini, Italian painter and architect ( d. 1765 )
* January 25 – Paolo Mascagni, Anatomist ( d. 1815 )
* May 20 – Paolo Bellasio, Italian composer ( d. 1594 )
** Pier Paolo Vergerio, Italian religious reformer ( d. 1565 )
* April 26 – Gian Paolo Lomazzo, Italian painter ( d. 1600 )
* December 5 – Fausto Paolo Sozzini, Italian theologian ( d. 1604 )
* March – Giovanni Paolo I Sforza, Italian condottiero ( d. 1535 )
** Paolo Alboino della Scala, lord of Verona ( d. 1375 )
* July 23 – Pier Paolo Vergerio the Elder, humanist ( d. 1444 or 1445 )
** Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli, Italian mathematician ( d. 1482 )
** Paolo Uccello, Florentine painter ( d. 1475 )
In Urbino, he came into contact with the works of Paolo Uccello, previously the court painter ( d. 1475 ), and Luca Signorelli, who until 1498 was based in nearby Città di Castello.
* Paolo Ronchi, Una Forma di Democrazia Diretta: L ' Esperienza del Recall Negli Stati Uniti d ' America, in " Quaderni dell ' Osservatorio elettorale ", num.
* Giro d ' Italia won by Paolo Savoldelli of Italy
He was also responsible of the façade of San Paolo a Ripa d ' Arno.
In 2002, Dura-Ace equipped bikes were ridden to victory in the Tour de France ( Lance Armstrong ), Giro d ' Italia ( Paolo Savoldelli ), and Vuelta a España ( Aitor González ), marking the first time Shimano componentry had been used to win all three grand tours.
* The Death of Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta ( 1870 ), Musée d ' Orsay, Paris.
His ideas have attracted the attention of numerous philosophers and political theorists, including Walter Benjamin, Leo Strauss, Jacques Derrida, Étienne Balibar, Hannah Arendt, Giorgio Agamben, Antonio Negri, Gianfranco Miglio, Paolo Virno, Slavoj Žižek, Alain Badiou, Jacob Taubes, Gillian Rose, Chantal Mouffe, Eric Voegelin, Reinhart Koselleck, Álvaro d ' Ors, Ernst Jünger, Alain de Benoist, and Paul Gottfried.

Paolo and Arezzo
His father, Dono di Paolo, was a barber-surgeon from Pratovecchio near Arezzo ; his mother, Antonia, was a high-born Florentine.
* Pietro Paolo Gualtieri of Arezzo, conclavist to Bernardino Maffei during the papal conclave, 1549 – 1550
* Paolo di Arezzo, O. F. M.

Burali and Arezzo
The altarpiece, attributed to the Sicilian painter Francesco Manno ( 1754 – 1831 ), depict three Blessed Theatines: Marinoni, Burali D ' Arezzo and Tomasi.

d and Arezzo
Fresh material having come to light, a new edition of the poems ( Die Gedichte des Paulus Diaconus ) has been edited by Karl Neff ( Munich, 1908 ), who denies, however, the attribution to Paul of the most famous poem in the collection, the Ut queant laxis, a hymn to St. John the Baptist, which Guido d ' Arezzo fitted to a melody which had previously been used for Horace's Ode 4. 11.
Guittone d ' Arezzo rediscovered it and brought it to Tuscany where he adapted it to his language when he founded the Neo-Sicilian School ( 1235 – 1294 ).
* Guido of Arezzo, Italian musician ( d. 1050 )
It has a dodecagonal dome over the centre slightly altered by Margaritone d ' Arezzo in 1270.
* The Palazzo del Comune ( or Palazzo degli Anziani-Elders palace ), built in 1250, with lofty arched substructures at the back, was the work of Margaritone d ' Arezzo, and has been restored twice.
On March 17, 1981, a police raid on his villa in Arezzo led to the discovery of a list of 962 persons composed of Italian military officers and civil servants involved in Propaganda Due ( also known as " P2 "), a clandestine lodge expelled from the Grande Oriente d ' Italia Masonic organization.
Guido of Arezzo ( also Guido Aretinus, Guido da Arezzo, Guido Monaco, or Guido d ' Arezzo ) ( 991 / 992 – ( 17 May?
* Arezzo is home to an annual international competition of choral singing Concorso Polifónico Guido d ' Arezzo ( International Guido d ' Arezzo Polyphonic Contest )
* Guido d ' Arezzo, the most notable music theorist of the Middle Ages and inventor of modern music notation, was born there around the year 991.
: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Mio d ' Arezzo 1929
This contained both Latin versions and German translations and also included a translation of Rinuccio da Castiglione ( or dArezzo )' s version from the Greek of a life of Aesop ( 1448 ).
The 1250s saw a major change in Italian poetry as the Dolce Stil Novo ( Sweet New Style, which emphasized Platonic rather than courtly love ) came into its own, pioneered by poets like Guittone d ' Arezzo and Guido Guinizelli.
Roberto Assagioli ( Venice, February 27, 1888-Capolona d ' Arezzo, August 23, 1974 ) was an Italian psychiatrist and pioneer in the fields of humanistic and transpersonal psychology.
The aesthetic underpinning the use of these other intervals ( usually to do with the concept of a " boundary tone " to preserve the modal integrity, or in order to avoid harmonic tritones or accidentals foreign to the mode ) was explored in more detail by Guido d ' Arezzo in his Micrologus of around 1020.
The earliest examples of this style dating from around 1020-1050 ( the Micrologus of Guido d ' Arezzo and the Winchester Troper ) utilise parallel motion and oblique motion ( upper voice moving while the tenor holds one note ), but the introduction of contrary motion ( voices moving in opposite directions ) as well as similar motion ( voices moving in the same direction, but to different intervals ) led to progressively freer musical lines — a prerequisite element of counterpoint.
Concerning the diesis Guido of Arezzo wrote about 1026 in his treatise Micrologus that the diesis sharpens the usual tonus between re-mi ( a-b ; d-e ; g-h or h-i ) with the proportion 9: 8 by a proportion of 7: 6 ( a -˫; d -˧; g-Γ or h -˥).
Shortly after this, one to four staff lines — an innovation traditionally ascribed to Guido d ' Arezzo — clarified the exact relationship between pitches.

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