Corrado II (or III) Trinci (died 1386) was the lord of Foligno from 1377 until his death. He was the son of Ugolino II Trinci.
In December 1377 he became lord of Foligno when the people arouse against the Ghibelline government which had killed his brother Trincia a few months before. His son Ugolino succeeded him after his death in 1386.
Year 1421 (MCDXXI) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar.
Ugolino is an Italian masculine given name, and may refer to:
Muzio Attendolo Sforza, was an Italian condottiero. Founder of the Sforza dynasty, he led a Bolognese-Florentine army at the Battle of Casalecchio.
Michael de la Pole, 1st Baron de la Pole, later 1st Earl of Suffolk was an English financier and Lord Chancellor of England.
Nocera Umbra is a town and comune in the province of Perugia, Italy, 15 kilometers north of Foligno, at an altitude of 520 m above sea-level. The comune, covering an area of 157.19 km², is one of the largest in Umbria.
Corrado IIITrinci was lord of Foligno from 1421 until 1439.
Ugolino III Trinci was Lord of Foligno in the early 14th century.
Niccolò I Trinci was the lord of Foligno from 1412. He inherited it from his father Ugolino III Trinci. He fought also as condottiero for the Republic of Venice. In 1404, he married Tora da Varano, daughter of Rodolfo III da Varano, lord of Camerino.
Guidantonio Manfredi was lord of Faenza and Imola in the early 15th century. He was also a condottiero.
David Stewart, Prince of Scotland, was a 14th-century Scottish magnate. He was the eldest son of the second marriage of King Robert II with Euphemia de Ross. King Robert, on 26 March 1371, the day of his coronation, is styled Earl of Strathearn, and on the following day his son David does homage to him under the title of Earl of Strathearn.
Bartolomeo Trinci was the lord of Foligno from 1415. He succeeded his father Ugolino III Trinci, jointly with his brothers Niccolò and Corrado.
Ugolino II Trinci was the lord of Foligno from 1343 until his death. He was the son of Nallo I Trinci and succeeded his brother Corrado I in the lordship in 1343.
The Trinci Palace is a patrician residence in the center of Foligno, central Italy. It houses an archaeological museum, the city's picture gallery, a multimedia museum of Tournaments and Jousts and the Civic Museum.
Sir Hugh Segrave or Seagrave was a Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and Treasurer of England under Richard II of England.
San Giacomo is a Gothic-style, Roman Catholic church located at the Piazza San Giacomo, Foligno, Italy.
Sir Nicholas Brembre was a wealthy magnate and a chief ally of King Richard II in 14th-century England. He was Lord Mayor of London in 1377, and again from 1383-5. Named a "worthie and puissant man of the city" by Richard Grafton, he became a citizen and grocer of London, and in 1372-3 purchased from the Malmains family the estates of Mereworth, Maplescomb, and West Peckham, in Kent. His ties to Richard ultimately resulted in his downfall, as the anti-Richard Lords Appellant effectively took control of the government and imprisoned, exiled, or executed most of Richard's court. Despite Richard's efforts, Brembre was executed in 1388 for treason at the behest of the Lords Appellant.
The Trinci were a noble family from central Italy, who were lords of Foligno, in Umbria, from 1305 to 1439.
Trincia IITrinci was lord of Foligno, in central Italy, from 1353; he was the son of Ugolino Novello Trinci.
Lord Roger de Scales (1354–1387) was one of the 'eminent persons' forced by the rebels to march with them upon the insurrection of Jack Straw in 1381. He was a commissioner of the peace for Cambridgeshire and Norfolk for many of the years between 1373 and 1386. He was summoned to Parliament from 1376 until his death in 1386. He attended the Coronation of Richard II in 1377.
Giovanni di Corraduccio, also called Giovanni Mazaforte, was an Italian painter of the Gothic style, active mainly in Umbria and Marche.
Preceded by Republic | Lord of Foligno 1377–1386 | Succeeded by Ugolino III |