Trincia II Trinci

Last updated

Trincia II (or I) Trinci (died 18 September 1377) was lord of Foligno, in central Italy, from 1353; he was the son of Ugolino Novello Trinci.

His initial titles were gonfaloniere del popolo and capitano del popolo , but was recognized as apostolic vicar (at the time Foligno was namely part of the Papal States). He was also vicar of Bevagna starting from 1371, as well as Papal commander and gonfaloniere of the Duchy of Spoleto. He married Giacoma d'Este, daughter of Niccolò I d'Este, lord of Ferrara.

He was assassinated at Foligno on 18 September 1377 during a Ghibelline uprising, from which a short-lived republic arose. One of his sons, Ugolino, was later lord of Foligno.

See also

Related Research Articles

Ugolino is an Italian masculine given name that is a diminutive form of Ugo. It may also refer to:

House of Montefeltro

Da Montefeltro is the name of an historical Italian family who ruled Urbino and Gubbio and became Dukes of Urbino in 1443. The family extinguished in the male line in 1508 and the duchy was inherited by the Della Rovere family.

Ugolino della Gherardesca

Ugolino della Gherardesca, Count of Donoratico, was an Italian nobleman, politician and naval commander. He was frequently accused of treason and features prominently in Dante's Divine Comedy.

Bernabò Visconti

Bernabò or Barnabò Visconti was an Italian soldier and statesman who was Lord of Milan.

Astorre Manfredi was an Italian condottiero. He was the son of Giovanni Manfredi, who had been lord of Faenza and other castles in the area before the Papal reconquest. Astorre lived for a while in Pistoia after his father had lost his last possession in Romagna; three years after the latter's death, in 1375, he managed to recover Granarolo.

Malatesta II Malatesta, best known as Guastafamiglia was an Italian condottiero and lord of Rimini.

Galeazzo I Visconti

Galeazzo I Visconti was lord of Milan from 1322 to 1327.

Corrado IIITrinci was lord of Foligno from 1421 until 1439.

Ugolino III Trinci was Lord of Foligno in the early 15th 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.

Bartolomeo Trinci was the lord of Foligno from 1415. He succeeded his father Ugolino III Trinci, jointly with his brothers Niccolò and Corrado.

Corrado IITrinci was the lord of Foligno from 1377 until his death. He was the son of Ugolino II Trinci.

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.

Da Varano Italian noble family

The Da Varano was an Italian noble family who had an important role in the medieval and Renaissance history of central Italy, as rulers of Camerino and other lands in the Marche and Umbria.

Palazzo Trinci

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.

The Trinci were a noble family from central Italy, who were lords of Foligno, in Umbria, from 1305 to 1439.

Guido Gonzaga

Guido Gonzaga was an Italian condottiero, son of Ludovico I Gonzaga capitano del popolo of Mantua and imperial vicar.

Matteo I Visconti

Matteo I Visconti (1250–1322) was the second of the Milanese Visconti family to govern Milan. Matteo was born to Teobaldo Visconti and Anastasia Pirovano.

Ludovico I Gonzaga

Ludovico I Gonzaga was an Italian lord, the founder of the Gonzaga family who was the first capitano del popolo of Mantua and imperial vicar.

Lattanzio Pagani was an Italian painter of the late-Renaissance or Mannerist period, active mainly in Umbria.

References


Preceded by
Ugolino II
Lord of Foligno
1353–1377
Republic