Giunti

Last updated

Giunti may refer to:

People

Other

Related Research Articles

Est, EST or Est. may refer to:

Printer or Printers may refer to:

Ignazio Giunti was an Italian racing driver. He competed in Formula One as well as in saloon and Sports Car Racing.

Aldo may refer to:

Soncino may refer to:

Ferrari 512 Car model

Ferrari 512 S is the designation for 25 sports cars built in 1969–70, with five-litre 12-cylinder ("512") engines, related to the Ferrari P sports prototypes. The V12-powered cars were entered in the 1970 International Championship for Makes by the factory Scuderia Ferrari and private teams. Later that year, modified versions resembling their main competitor, the Porsche 917, were called Ferrari 512 M. In the 1971 International Championship for Makes, the factory focused on the new Ferrari 312 PB and abandoned the 512 which was only entered by privateers. From 1972 onwards, the 512 was withdrawn from the world championship following a change in the regulations, and some 512s in private hands were entered in CanAm and Interserie races.

Federico Giunti is an Italian former footballer turned manager, who played as a midfielder in the role of deep-lying playmaker. He is the current manager of Milan Primavera.

Fabri is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim German printers active in Italy, 1400s, sometime partners

Arnold Pannartz and Conrad Sweynheym were two printers of the 15th century, associated with Johannes Gutenberg and the use of his invention, the mechanical movable-type printing press.

Giunti (printers)

The Giunti were a Florentine family of printers. The first Giunti press was established in Venice by Lucantonio Giunti, who began printing under his own name in 1489. The press of his brother Filippo Giunti (1450–1517) in Florence, active from 1497, was a leading printing firm in that city from the turn of the sixteenth century. Some thirty members of the family became printers or booksellers. A press was established in Lyon in 1520. By about 1550 there were Giunti bookshops or warehouses in Antwerp, Burgos, Frankfurt, Lisbon, Medina del Campo, Paris, Salamanca and Zaragoza, and agencies in numerous cities of the Italian peninsula, including Bologna, Brescia, Genoa, Livorno, Lucca, Naples, Piacenza, Pisa, Siena and Turin, as well as the islands of Sardinia and Sicily.

Junta may refer to:

Giunta is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Ignazio is a masculine Italian given name. Notable people with the name include:

Lötter was the last name of a family of German printers, intimately connected with the Reformation.

Zonta is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

Massimo Giunti is a former Italian cyclist. He tested positive for EPO in March 2010.

Lucantonio Giunti

Lucantonio Giunti or Giunta was a Florentine book publisher and printer, active in Venice from 1489, a member of the Giunti family of printers. His publishing business was successful, and among the most important in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Through partnerships, often with members of his family, he expanded the business through much of Europe. At about the time of his death in 1538 there were Giunti presses in Florence and Lyon, Giunti bookshops or warehouses in Antwerp, Burgos, Frankfurt, Lisbon, Medina del Campo, Paris, Salamanca and Zaragoza, and agencies in numerous cities of the Italian peninsula, including Bologna, Brescia, Genoa, Livorno, Lucca, Naples, Piacenza, Pisa, Rome, Siena and Turin, as well as the islands of Sardinia and Sicily.

Matteo Capcasa

Matteo Capcasa was a printer and typographer from Parma, in Emilia in central Italy, which at that time was subject to the Duchy of Milan. He was active as a book printer and typographer in Venice from 1485, when he printed a Vocabularium utriusque iuris and an anonymous Fior di virtù. His workshop was in San Paterniano, where he worked with his brother Giovanni.

Johann Emerich

Johann Emerich was a printer and typographer from Udenheim, near Speyer, in the Rhineland in the Holy Roman Empire. He was active as a book printer and typographer in Venice from 1487, when he collaborated with Johannes Hamman of Landau in the printing of a breviary and a missal, until about 1499, when he spent almost six months on the printing of an illustrated Graduale secundum morem sancte Romane Ecclesie for the Florentine publisher Lucantonio Giunti. Emerich is thought to have died at about this time. His fonts and equipment passed to Giunti and enabled him to establish his own printing workshops.

Giovannantonio is a masculine blended given name that is a combination of Gianni and Antonio. Notable people known by this name include the following: