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Bendinelli Negrone | |
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133rd Doge of the Republic of Genoa | |
In office 16 September 1695 –16 September 1697 | |
Preceded by | Francesco Invrea |
Succeeded by | Francesco Maria Sauli |
Personal details | |
Born | 1627 Genoa,Republic of Genoa |
Died | 1707 Genoa,Republic of Genoa |
Bendinelli Negrone (Genoa,1627 - Genoa,1707) was the 133rd Doge of the Republic of Genoa and King of Corsica,Cyprus and Jerusalem.
His Dogate,the eighty-eighth in biennial succession and the one hundred and thirty-third in republican history,marked the end of the conflicts with the Order of malta,on the approval of Pope Innocent XII,allowing many Genoese nobles and patricians to enter the chivalric order. And in 1696,the important donation by his family of the "insignia of power" to be affixed to the statue of the Madonna located at the time inside the Genoa Cathedral and then in the Bank of Saint George. Negrone's mandate ended on 16 September 1697. He died in Genoa in 1707. [1]
The Republic of Genoa was a medieval and early modern maritime republic from the years 1099 to 1797 in Liguria on the northwestern Italian coast. During the Late Middle Ages,it was a major commercial power in both the Mediterranean and Black Sea. Between the 16th and 17th centuries,it was one of the major financial centres in Europe.
A doge was an elected lord and head of state in several Italian city-states,notably Venice and Genoa,during the medieval and Renaissance periods. Such states are referred to as "crowned republics".
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