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Topic: Carlo Sforza


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In the News (Sun 15 Nov 09)

  
  Carlo Sforza - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Conte Carlo Sforza (January 24, 1872 - September 4, 1952) was an Italian diplomat and anti-Fascist politician.
Sforza was born at Montignoso, in Lunigiana (northern Italy).
Sforza lived in France until the German occupation in June 1940.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Carlo_Sforza   (296 words)

  
 Sforza - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Sforza, Italian ducal family that ruled Milan from 1450 to 1535.
Sforza, Francesco (1401-66), duke of Milan, son of Giacomuzzo Sforza (1369-1424), founder of the Sforza dynasty of Milan.
Sforza, Galeazzo Maria (1444-1476), duke of Milan, son of Francesco Sforza.
ca.encarta.msn.com /Sforza.html   (104 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for carlo   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Sforza, Carlo, Conte SFORZA, CARLO, CONTE [Sforza, Carlo, Conte], 1872-1952, Italian foreign minister.
Dolci, Carlo DOLCI, CARLO [Dolci, Carlo], 1616-86, Florentine painter.
Gozzi, Carlo, Conte GOZZI, CARLO, CONTE [Gozzi, Carlo, Conte], 1720-1806, Italian dramatist.
www.encyclopedia.com /SearchResults.aspx?Q=carlo&StartAt=11   (638 words)

  
 Famiglie storiche - pafg35 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
MUZIO ATTENDOLO SFORZA CONTE COTIGNOLA was born in 1396 in COTIGNOLA.
FRANCESCO I SFORZA DUCA MILANO was born in 1401.
BOSIO SFORZA CONTE COTIGNOLA was born in 1411.
xoomer.virgilio.it /ulamagni/fmglstoriche/pafg35.htm   (265 words)

  
 Untitled Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Carlo Durazzo had taken the throne of the Naples with force, from the main branch of the Anjou family after 30 years of fights.
The last descendants of the French Anjou dynasty was Giovanna I. After the death of Carlo Durazzo, the for-Anjou party would have had Louis II of Anjou on the Neapolitan throne, sweeping away the younger branch of Durazzo.
In the course of the war, Sforza was drowned in endeavoring to pass the river Pescara; the queen was thus again unarmed, and would have been driven out of the kingdom, but for the assistance of Filippo Visconti, the duke of Milan, who compelled Alfonzo to return to Aragon.
www.gicas.net /machiavelli/queen-giovanna.html   (442 words)

  
 Sforza, Carlo, Conte - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
SFORZA, CARLO, CONTE [Sforza, Carlo, Conte], 1872-1952, Italian foreign minister.
Sforza opposed Mussolini and resigned as ambassador to Paris in 1922.
In 1943, Sforza returned to Italy and played a major political role.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/s/sforza-c1.asp   (238 words)

  
 MONTIGNOSO
He was born in Montignoso in 1872 and he was the Foreign Secretary, who signed the Treaty of Rapallo in 1920, the Peace Treaty in the post-war period (1947), the Marshall Plan (1948) and the Atlantic Pact (1949).
Carlo Sforza was the scion of one of the family, who made the history of this land, and had a successful political career: he was Foreign Secretary with Giolitti between 1920 and 1921.
Another renowned person of the Sforza family was Giovanni, historian and man of letters, who wrote the "Historical Memories of Montignoso".
www.massacarrara-live.it /sitoininglese/montignoso.php   (1053 words)

  
 Sforza
He fought in the service of several Italian states, then became involved in the struggles for the succession to the kingdom of Naples and died while serving Queen Joanna II in her efforts to retain the throne.
Francesco I Sforza - Sforza, Francesco I, 1401–66, duke of Milan (1450–66); illegitimate son of Muzio...
Sforza, Carlo, Conte - Sforza, Carlo, Conte, 1872–1952, Italian foreign minister.
www.factmonster.com /ce6/people/A0844623.html   (575 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Sforza, Carlo, Conte (Italian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Sforza, Carlo, Conte[kAr´lO kOn´tA sfOr´tsA] Pronunciation Key, 1872–1952, Italian foreign minister.
He held high ministerial and diplomatic posts, became a senator, and as foreign minister (1920–21) negotiated the Treaty of Rapallo with Yugoslavia.
As foreign minister (1947–51) he supported the European Recovery Program and the settlement of the Trieste question.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/S/Sforza-C.html   (226 words)

  
 Felix Morrow: Washington's Plans for Italy (June 1943)
Their outstanding figure is Count Carlo Sforza, the King’s Minister of Foreign Affairs at the close of World War I and ambassador to France at the time of the “march” on Rome; since January 1942 his program is the democratic republic.
Sforza presumably had no doubt what the “concrete program” would be – a free Italy.
Sforza is in effect proposing that Washington and London attempt to repeat the experiment of the Weimar Republic – let subservient “democrats” rule defeated Italy.
www.marxists.org /archive/morrow-felix/1943/06/italy.htm   (3768 words)

  
 Sforza Family Crest   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
The name is from the Italian "sforza," which means "the forcer," and was taken on by powerful military families.
Some of the first settlers of this name or some of its variants were: Nicola Sforza, who arrived at New York on Jan. 13, 1882 aboard the "Elysia;" Allexsander Sforzo, who was Naturalized in Wayne County, Ohio in 1891; Angelo Sforza of Mirabella, who arrived at Ellis Island, New York in 1893.
In the Sforza coat of arms as in all coat of arms the crest is only one element of the full armorial achievement.
www.houseofnames.com /xq/asp.fc/qx/sforza-family-crest.htm?a=54323-224   (597 words)

  
 Memorandum of a Conversation with Marchese Carlo Bassano 8/28/44   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Memorandum of a Conversation with Marchese Carlo Bassano 8/28/44
There are six Cabinet members without portfolio, among which is senator Conte Carlo Sforza.
Conte Sforza has been put in charge of the Political Division as respects the gathering of information, the arrest and trial of extreme Fascists....
www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu:8000 /psf/box52/t470e09.html   (379 words)

  
 Chapter XV: Politics Will Not Wait
Count Sforza has not, in so far as Department of State is aware, stated in a broadcast that he approved the actions of the Badoglio Administration.
Sforza has telegraphed me text of identical personal letters to Eden and [Adolph A.] Berle [Jr.] with request that text should be forwarded by telegram to London and Washington....
Sforza also used his influence to induce the Party of Action to come into line, Badoglio hopes that the Democratic composition of his new cabinet will be favorably received by the Allied governments.
www.army.mil /CMH/books/wwii/civaff/ch15.htm   (16819 words)

  
 - Chapter 62   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Filippo Visconti has always been too arrogant, and Sforza has grown complacent with success." He was silent for a moment.
Had he been there to see the sight, Carlo Sforza—the famous "Wolf of the North"—would have finally recognized what he was about to face.
But Sforza was not there; nor were his master Visconti's spies.
www.webscription.net /10.1125/Baen/0743435230/0743435230__62.htm   (324 words)

  
 Sforza, Francesco I - ENCYCLOPEDIA - The History Channel UK
Sforza, Francesco I, 1401-66, duke of Milan (1450-66); illegitimate son of Muzio Attendolo Sforza.
He succeeded his father as leader of his band of mercenaries, and by his valor and sagacity he became one of the most powerful condottieri of his time.
Except as otherwise permitted by written agreement, the following are prohibited: copying substantial portions or the entirety of the work in machine readable form, making multiple printouts thereof, and other uses of the work inconsistent with U.S. and applicable foreign copyright and related laws.
www.thehistorychannel.co.uk /site/search/search.php?word=Sforza-F   (273 words)

  
 carlo goldoni - Books, journals, articles @ The Questia Online Library
Vero is a leitmotiv of Carlo Goldonis reform of Venetian comedy, and...paintings of Pietro Longhi.
It was in 1761 that Carlo Goldoni wrote a suite of three plays satirizing...Cambridge run of Country Fever with Goldoni came to an end, he and his cast...Moscow.
Carlo Goldoni was an 18th-century Venetian playwright, so it is only fitting to have a "theater" restaurant, Mr.
www.questia.com /search/carlo-goldoni   (1429 words)

  
 Maderno Carlo - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Maderno, Carlo (1556-1629), Italian architect, whose work prefigured the baroque style of the 17th century.
Fontana, Carlo (1638-1714), prominent Italian architect of the late baroque style, whose work was instrumental in leading architecture from the...
Search for books about your topic, "Maderno Carlo"
encarta.msn.com /Maderno_Carlo.html   (89 words)

  
 Italian Foreign Policy, 1947–1951 - Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Alcide De Gasperi and Carlo Sforza between Atlanticism and Europeanism
The present study examines and delineates the foreign policy of the Italian Republic between 1947 and 1951 in terms of the changing nature and content of Italy’s national interest as defined by Prime Minister Alcide De Gasperi and Minister of Foreign Affairs Carlo Sforza.
The focus is placed on their contribution to Italy’s role, relevance, and influence on the Atlantic alliance and the process of European integration.
www.v-r.de /de/titel/389971301   (154 words)

  
 Foreign Affairs - The Case Against "Europe" - Noel Malcolm
Inevitability is, indeed, a word most often heard on the lips of those who have to turn the world upside down to achieve the changes they desire.
The origins of the "European" political project can be traced back to a number of politicians, writers, and visionaries of the interwar period: people such as the half?Austrian, half?Japanese theorist Richard Coudenhove?Kalergi, former Italian Foreign Minister Carlo Sforza, and Jean Monnet, a French brandy salesman turned international bureaucrat.
When their idea of a rationalized and unified Europe was first floated in the 1920s and 1930s, it sounded quite similar in spirit to the contemporaneous campaign to make Esperanto the world language.
www.foreignaffairs.org /19950301faessay5024/noel-malcolm/the-case-against-europe.html?mode=print   (629 words)

  
 49th Parallel Summer Issue 2004
The US did not look beyond integrating Italy into a western system favourable to themselves, as they were less interested in the international dimension to Italian reconstruction and drew a line between Italian international and domestic concerns.
Given the emphasis Italian leaders such as Sforza placed on Italy’s international status in Europe and the Mediterranean, it again highlights how Italian objectives, that were reliant on US backing, could only be realised if calls for American support were made in accordance with US Cold War concerns.
De Gasperi’s political astuteness allowed him to prevent the US from sending a covert shipment of arms but American determination in securing their interests in Italy meant they were happy to conduct operations that would not be disclosed to their Italian partners.
www.49thparallel.bham.ac.uk /back/issue14/mistry.htm   (5264 words)

  
 Museo della Scienza "Leonardo da Vinci" > Leonardo > Approfondimenti > Il cavallo > Bibliografia
BRUGNOLI Maria Vittoria, Il monumento Sforza, [The Sforza monument]
BRUGNOLI Maria Vittoria, Il monumento Sforza e il cavallo colossale, [The Sforza monument and the colossal horse]
PEDRETTI Carlo, Un disegno per la fusione del cavallo per il monumento Sforza, [A drawing for the casting of the horse for the Sforza monument]
www.museoscienza.org /leonardo/speciale/approfondimenti/cavallo/bibliografia.htm   (475 words)

  
 TIME Magazine Archive Article -- Look Homeward! -- Oct. 11, 1943   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Count Carlo Sforza, urbane, white-bearded, was about to begin a long trip home.
Sixteen years ago he and his family were hounded into exile by Fascismo's bullyboys, who burned down their villa and might have murdered them.
When Benito Mussolini, the proletarian, marched on Rome in 1922, Carlo Sforza, the aristocrat, 17th count of a venerable line, was Italian Ambassador in Paris.
www.time.com /time/archive/printout/0,23657,774654,00.html   (131 words)

  
 Endnotes for Chapter XV
Endnotes for Chapter XV Endnotes for Chapter XV This conversation between the King and the Chief of the Allied Military Mission took place as the result of an invitation from the King after he had received the agenda for the Malta Conference, at which the long-term armistice was to be signed.
2 Count Carlo Sforza, Italian Foreign Minister in years immediately preceding the Mussolini regime, had come to the United States as an exile from Fascism.
He had achieved an international reputation as statesman, as scholar, and as spokesman for anti-Fascist Italians.
www.army.mil /CMH/books/wwii/civaff/ench15.htm   (647 words)

  
 Arthur Livingston Papers, Series Descriptions
Arnaldo Segarizzi reports on the printing of Livingston's volume of Busenello sonnets and the activity of the periodicals, Ateneo and Nuovo archivio veneto, while also advising Livingston of necessary cuts in the Busenello volume in order to avoid violation of Italian obscenity laws.
Finally, there are typescripts of Count Giuseppe Volpi di Misurata's essays, "Four Years in Tripolitania" and "Italian Financial Policy," and Icilio Vanni's The Philosophy of Law.
As a result of Livingston's research on Lorenzo da Ponte, there are four folders of typescript transcriptions of Anderson Family correspondence, dating from 1823 until 1846, including a typescript poem by Louise Duncan, "On the Death of Lorenzo L. da Ponte, January 28th, 1840" and a biographical notice of Da Ponte.
www.hrc.utexas.edu /research/fa/livingston.series.html   (1535 words)

  
 The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Special Exhibitions
[Pedretti, Carlo, ed.] "Views and Previews." Achademia Leonardi Vinci: Journal of Leonardo Studies and Bibliography of Vinciana 5 (1992), pp.
"The Sforza Horse in Context." In Ahl 1995, pp.
Edited by Carmen C. Bambach, with contributions by Carmen C. Bambach, Alessandro Cecchi, Claire Farago, Varena Forcione, Martin Kemp, Anne-Marie Logan, Pietro C. Marani, Carlo Pedretti, Carlo Vecce, Françoise Viatte, and Linda Wolk-Simon.
www.metmuseum.org /special/Leonardo_Master_Draftsman/draftsman_biblio.asp?setNo=30&refPage=codex   (799 words)

  
 Carlo Sforza
He entered the diplomatic service and after the First World War became foreign minister under
Sforza was ambassador to France but resigned from office when
After Italy surrendered in September 1943, Sforza returned to his country and in June 1944 he accepted the offer of Invanoe Bonomi to join his provisional antifascist government.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /2WWsforza.htm   (181 words)

  
 Istria on the Internet - History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Representing Italy were the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Carlo Sforza and the War Minister Bonomi, Senator Salata, the Chief of Naval High Command Admiral Acton and Generai Badoglio.
For the tranquillity of the citizens of Rapallo, Count Sforza on 13th November, when leaving the Riviera city reassured the Mayor, Mr.
Ricci, confirming that the agreement would take the name of "The Treaty of Rapallo" an affirmation he later supported by sending a copy of the historical document with an autographed letter dated 17th November, 1920.
www.istrianet.org /istria/history/ww1/1920_treaty-rapallo2.htm   (880 words)

  
 Anthony Capraro Inventory
Among his friends were the journalist Carlo Tresca whose murder in 1942 in New York is still unsolved, and the poet Arturo Giovannitti.
"Toscanini, Arturo al Conte Carlo Sforza" - photocopy of a letter, Oct. 1, 1943, from Toscanini to Sforza.
"Tresca, Carlo (Rubens-Poyntz Case) (Telegram on Dr. Tresca death)" clippings pertinent to kidnapping of Juliet Poyntz, 1938, and telegrams relevant to death of Carlo s brother, 1942.
www.ihrc.umn.edu /research/vitrage/all/ca/ITAcapraro.htm   (7470 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Libya - The United Nations and Libya | Libyan Information Resource
At British urging, he resumed permanent residence in Cyrenaica in 1947; in 1949, with British backing, he unilaterally proclaimed Cyrenaica an independent amirate.
In the meantime, Britain and Italy had placed the Bevin-Sforza plan (after Ernest Bevin and Carlo Sforza, foreign ministers of its respective sponsors) before the UN for its consideration.
Under this plan, Libya would come under UN trusteeship, and responsibility for administration in Tripolitania would be delegated to Italy, in Cyrenaica to Britain, and in Fezzan to France.
reference.allrefer.com /country-guide-study/libya/libya31.html   (1401 words)

  
 Guide to the Girolamo Valenti Papers 1925-1977 (Bulk 1930-1958) Tamiment 040 Processed by Tamiment staff   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
The papers include correspondence, radio scripts, manuscripts (article-length), clippings and obituaries, the majority in Italian, relating to labor and political issues concerning Italy and Italian Americans, and to his radio career.
Among the letters are two from Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst regarding Circolo Matteotti, and a few letters each from Velia Matteotti, Pietro Nenni, Count Carlo Sforza, and Ignazio Silone.
Included are scripts from Italian language radio shows on current events that were broadcast on WOV (New York), WHNC (New Haven, Connecticut), Italy, and elsewhere; a file containing obituaries and other biographical portraits, a file on Generoso Pope, and letters to Valenti's wife, Sylvia, after his death, including several from Norman Thomas.
dlib.nyu.edu:8083 /tamwagead/servlet/SaxonServlet?source=/valenti.xml&style=/saxon01t2002.xsl&part=body   (446 words)

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