Raggi Med Apa
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Raggi Med Apa
Raggi is a surname and may refer to: * Andrea Raggi (born 1984), Italian footballer * Antonio Raggi (1624–1686), Italian sculptor * Camilla Salvago Raggi (born 1924), Italian poet and novelist * Giuseppe Salvago Raggi (1866-1946), Italian diplomat * Gonippo Raggi (1875–1959), Italian artists * Jorge Humberto Raggi (born 1938), retired Portuguese footballer * Lorenzo Raggi (1615–1687), Italian Catholic Cardinal * Maria Raggi (1552–1600), Catholic nun of Genoese descent from island of Chios * Mario Raggi (1821–1907), Italian sculptor * Ottaviano Raggi (1592–1643), Italian Catholic Cardinal * Pietro Paolo Raggi (1646–1724), Italian painter * Reena Raggi (born 1951), US federal judge * Virginia Raggi (born 1978), mayor of Rome See also * Raggio * Memorial to Maria Raggi * Raggi Bjarna (born 1934), Icelandic singer {{Surname, Raggi ...
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Andrea Raggi
Andrea Raggi (; born 24 June 1984) is an Italian retired professional footballer who played as a defender. He was a versatile player, being capable of playing both as a centre back and as a right back. Club career Raggi started his footballing career with Empoli, where he spent a total of four seasons with the first team. Palermo On 28 May 2008, Empoli announced his sale to Palermo for €7 million on a four-year contract. His failure to break into the first team led Palermo to send Raggi out on loan to a number of teams. In January 2009 he joined Sampdoria, then moving again to spend the whole of the 2009–10 season with Bologna. Bari loan In July 2010, he was loaned out for a third consecutive time, joining Bari. He was out-favoured by Giampiero Ventura in mid-season, who originally expected Raggi to play as a centre-back. Instead, Raggi was the starting right-back as Andrea Masiello, originally a right-back, remained as a temporary centre-back which Masiello already played ...
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Antonio Raggi
Antonio Raggi (1624–1686), also called ''Antonio Lombardo'', was a sculptor of the Roman Baroque, originating from today's Ticino. Biography He was born in Vico Morcote on the Lake Lugano. His mentor in Rome for nearly three decades was Gianlorenzo Bernini. He initially joined the studio of Alessandro Algardi, but none of his work there is independently recognized and by 1647, like Ercole Ferrata, Raggi was working for Bernini, for whom he was to become his closest and most prolific pupil. "In most cases Bernini supplied Raggi with detailed ''modelli'' and supervised his work closely enough so that Raggi's statues express Bernini's conceit almost as well as a statue from Bernini's own hand." He completed the stucco decoration of ''San Tomaso di Villanova'' in Castel Gandolfo (1660–1), the stucco decoration of Bernini's Sant'Andrea 1662–1665), the statues of ''Saint Bernardino'' and ''Pope Alexander VII Chigi'' for Duomo di Siena and the ''Virgin and Child'' in Saint Jose ...
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Camilla Salvago Raggi
Camilla Salvago Raggi (1 March 1924 – 6 April 2022) was an Italian poet and novelist. Born in Genoa, Italy, she was the recipient of the Rapallo Carige Prize for ''Prima del fuoco'' in 1993. In May 1970, she signed a notary deed in favour of the documentation center of the Faculty of Economics of the University of Genoa The University of Genoa () is a public research university. It is one of the largest universities in Italy and it is located in the city of Genoa, on the Italian Riviera in the Liguria region of northwestern Italy. The original university was fou ... to which were donated the works of Salvago Raggi, along with professors Giorgio Doria and Edoardo Grendi. Salvago Raggi died on 6 April 2022 at the age of 98.
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Giuseppe Salvago Raggi
Giuseppe Salvago Raggi (17 May 1866 – 28 February 1946) was an Italian diplomat, born in Genoa. He was the son of Paris Maria Salvago and Violante Raggi. After his mother's death in 1867, he acquired Raggi as his second surname in January 1881, "in memory of his mother".Olindo de NapoliSALVAGO RAGGI, Giuseppe Maria on treccani.it. URL consulted on 25 August 2024. His father, a landowner with a Catholic-liberal orientation, was a deputy in the of the Kingdom of Italy. Giuseppe Salvago Raggi graduated on 29 May 1887 from the School of Social Sciences in Florence, which his father had helped to found. The school represented the pinnacle of training for the ruling class and in particular for the diplomatic class. After a suggestion from his father, he travelled to different countries in the Middle East. He documented these journeys in his ''Lettere dall'Oriente'' (Letters from the East). Back in Italy, began his diplomatic career in 1889. He was ambassador of Italy to China ...
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Gonippo Raggi
Gonippo Raggi (May 6, 1875October 22, 1959) was an Italian artist who provided murals for many churches and church institutions in the United States. Early childhood and education He was born in Rome, Italy, in 1875. He was a prize graduate of St. Luke's Royal Academy in Rome and his artistic talent brought him membership in the Pontifical Academy of Virtuosi al Pantheon. Artistic practice He came to the United States in 1904 at the invitation of Papal Marquis Martin Maloney to supervise the decoration of St. Catharine Church in Spring Lake, New Jersey. Maloney had erected the church as a memorial to his daughter, Catherine. Raggi drew the attention of Rev. Thomas J. Walsh, then Bishop of Trenton. When Walsh became Bishop of Newark, he encouraged Raggi to continue his work in the Newark diocese. Raggi was internationally acclaimed as a portraitist and ecclesiastical artist. and supervised the decoration of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Newark. He died in 1959. Severa ...
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Jorge Humberto Raggi
Jorge Humberto Raggi (born 17 February 1938), known as Humberto, is a Portuguese retired professional footballer who played as a striker. Football career Humberto played mostly for Académica de Coimbra during his professional career, starting and ending his nine-year career at the club. He also played for three seasons in Italy, with F.C. Internazionale Milano and Vicenza Calcio. With the ''Nerazzurri'', Humberto only appeared in two Serie A games, but he scored five goals in their 1961–62 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup campaign, including a hat-trick in the first round tie-breaker play-off game against 1. FC Köln. Personal life Jorge Humberto is pediatrician and is living in Macao Macau or Macao is a special administrative region of the People's Republic of China (PRC). With a population of about people and a land area of , it is the most densely populated region in the world. Formerly a Portuguese colony, the ter .... External linksInter archives 1938 births ...
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Lorenzo Raggi
Lorenzo Raggi (1615 – 14 January 1687) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal. Early life Raggi was born in 1615 in Genoa. He was the nephew of Cardinal Ottaviano Raggi; elevated in 1641 by Pope Urban VIII. He was educated in Rome and received a doctorate in philosophy. On 16 December 1641, the day his uncle became a cardinal, Raggi was appointed a cleric of the Apostolic Chamber. He later became that body's treasurer-general. He was appointed Commissary of the papal troops during the Wars of Castro and Intendant-General of the galleys of the Papal State.''Lorenzo Raggi''
by S. Miranda (, last updated May 2012)
At times when Cardinal < ...
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Maria Raggi
Maria Raggi di Scio (1552–1600) was a Catholic nun from the island of Chios. In 1647 Italian artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini depicted her in a sculpture which resides on a nave of Santa Maria sopra Minerva church in Rome. Life Maria was born in Chios to a Catholic family when the island was still part of the Republic of Genoa. She was forced to marry at an early age. Chios was captured by the Turks in 1566, and her husband was killed by Turkish forces in 1570. In 1571 she decided to become a nun. She departed for Rome in 1584, where she was offered hospitality at the Palazzo by the de Marini family, near Santa Maria sopra Minerva. An extremely pious woman, she spent much of her day in prayer and reportedly continually performed miracles. After she died in 1600, there was some possibility of her being canonised, but the general antipathy of Pope Urban VIII Pope Urban VIII (; ; baptised 5 April 1568 – 29 July 1644), born Maffeo Vincenzo Barberini, was head of the Catholic ...
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Genoa
Genoa ( ; ; ) is a city in and the capital of the Italian region of Liguria, and the sixth-largest city in Italy. As of 2025, 563,947 people live within the city's administrative limits. While its metropolitan city has 818,651 inhabitants, more than 1.5 million people live in the wider metropolitan area stretching along the Italian Riviera. On the Gulf of Genoa in the Ligurian Sea, Genoa has historically been one of the most important ports on the Mediterranean: it is the busiest city in Italy and in the Mediterranean Sea and twelfth-busiest in the European Union. Genoa was the capital of one of the most powerful maritime republics for over seven centuries, from the 11th century to 1797. Particularly from the 12th century to the 15th century, the city played a leading role in the history of commerce and trade in Europe, becoming one of the largest naval powers of the continent and considered among the wealthiest cities in the world. It was also nicknamed ''la S ...
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Mario Raggi
Mario Raggi (1821–26 November 1907) was an Italian sculptor who settled in England, where he received several public commissions for statues of civic figures. Biography Raggi was born in Carrara, Italy, where he learnt to sculpt, and won several prizes, at the local Accademia di Belle Arti di Carrara. He continued his training in Rome under Pietro Tenerani before moving in 1850 to London, where he first worked for Raffaelle Monti and then, for several years, for Matthew Noble. In 1875, Raggi established his own studio in London. Raggi was given some major commissions including memorials to Benjamin Disraeli at Parliament Square and Gladstone for Albert Square, Manchester. He completed three monumental statues of Queen Victoria for Hong Kong, Toronto and Kimberley in South Africa. A bronze statue by Raggi of Henry Vivian, 1st Baron Swansea, wearing a frock coat and gown stands in Swansea city centre. Raggi first exhibited a work, ''Innocence'' at the Royal Academy in 1854 but ...
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Ottaviano Raggi
Ottaviano Raggi (1592-1643) was a 17th-century Catholic cardinal. Before his appointment as Cardinal he rose in the ranks of civil and juridical administration of the Papal States and after he was one of the proponent of the Republic of Genoa into the College of Cardinals. Life Ottaviano Raggi was born in Genoa on 31 December 1592. Ottaviano completed his studies earning a doctorate in utroque iure in the University of Genoa. After graduation he moved to Rome and took up a career in the administration of the Papal States: in 1617 he was appointed Protonotary apostolic, in 1619 he became referendary of the Tribunals of the Apostolic Signature, in 1622 he became cleric of the Apostolic Camera. Between 1624 and 1625 he was in charge of the maintenance of the roads and streets of the Papal States, in 1626 he was appointed responsible for the customs. In 1629 he was appointed responsible for the provisions of foodstuffs in Rome, and he positively managed the famine of 1630. From 1637 ...
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Pietro Paolo Raggi
Pietro Paolo Raggi (1646–1724) was an List of Italian painters, Italian painter of the Baroque painting, Baroque period, active mainly in Northern Italy. Born in Genova, he received his first training in Venice, then came back to Genoa. He is considered a follower of the The Carracci, Caracci in his ''St. Bonaventure contemplating a Crucifix'' a large picture in the church of Basilica della Santissima Annunziata del Vastato, S.S. Annunziata del Vastato in Genoa. After visiting Turin, Savona and Lavagna, he established himself at Bergamo, where he painted a ''Magdalen borne to Heaven by Angels'' for the church of St. Martha and where he died in 1724. There are Bacchanal and landscape subjects painted by him. He is described by Luigi Lanzi as a ''man of a restless disposition, irascible, and dissatisfied with every place he inhabited... This truant disposition carried him to Turin, then to Savona, then afresh to Genoa, now to Lavagna, now to Lombardy, and last to Bergamo, where ...
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