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Santa Croce

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Santa Croce is one of the six sestieri of Venice , northern Italy.

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11-545: (Redirected from Sestiere Santa Croce ) Santa Croce is Italian for 'Holy Cross' and may refer to: Santa Croce (Venice) , one of the six sestieri (districts) of Venice, Italy. The Pontifical University of the Holy Cross (Italian: Pontificia Università della Santa Croce ) in Rome, Italy. Many churches, including: Santa Croce, Florence , built 1294–1385 and

22-576: A commune in Campobasso, Molise Santa Croce di Roccaromana , a commune in Caserta, Campania Santa Croce del Sannio , a commune in Benevento, Campania See also [ edit ] Santa Cruz (disambiguation) Sainte-Croix (disambiguation) Holy Cross (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

33-626: A noble Roman family. To this belongs among others: Prospero Santacroce , 16th-century cardinal Fabiano Santacroce (born 1986), Italian-Brazilian football player Isabella Santacroce (born 1970), Italian novelist Girolamo Santacroce , a 16th-century Italian sculptor and painter Places [ edit ] Santa Croce sull'Arno , town in Tuscany Santa Croce Camerina , town in Sicily Villages [ edit ] Santa Croce di Magliano ,

44-639: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Santa Croce (Venice) During the eleventh century, in 1273, it was administered by the Hungarian nobleman and crusader knight Giovanni, member of one of the biggest Christian families in Hungary Renoldi , as reported by the book published in 1866 in Florence book of the Venetian noblemen for

55-483: Is the area of the city most affected by the opening of the lagoon road in April 1933. 45°26′15.58″N 12°19′09.15″E  /  45.4376611°N 12.3192083°E  / 45.4376611; 12.3192083 This Venice -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Renoldi The House of Renoldi is a noble family , historically of probable Hungarian or Frankish provenance. In

66-890: The burial place of several notable Italians Santa Croce della Foce , Gubbio, Umbria, built in the 13th century Basilica di Santa Croce (Lecce) , built 1549–1646 Santa Croce, Parma , built 1222–1666 Santa Croce, Padua , built 1737–1749 Santa Croce in Fossabanda, Pisa , built 1325–19th century Santa Croce e San Bonaventura alla Pilotta , Rome, built 1625–19th century Santa Croce in Gerusalemme , Rome, consecrated around 325 Santa Croce alla Lungara , Rome, consecrated 1619 Santa Croce degli Armeni , Venice, built 13th century, consecrated 1688 Santa Croce in Via Flaminia , Rome, built 1913, consecrated 1981 People [ edit ] House of Santacroce,

77-726: The city in which cars can travel. The tourist attractions lie mostly in the eastern part of the quarter, and include the churches of San Nicolo da Tolentino , San Giacomo dell'Orio , and San Zan Degola ; the Fondaco dei Turchi ; the Museum of the History of Fabric and Costume at Palazzo Mocenigo; the Patrician Palace ; and Ca' Corner della Regina . The area was once part of the Luprio swamp, but has been steadily reclaimed. It

88-618: The earliest period the Italian branch of the family established in Italy around the eleventh century , after serving as crusader knights in several crusades they settled down in Venice . In 1273 the family came to a dominant role in the political scenario of Venice with Giovanni who was the head of the Sestiere of Santa Croce until his death. The family remained as an influential entity in

99-527: The first time shown . It occupies the north west part of the main islands, and can be divided into two areas: the eastern area being largely mediaeval , and the western - including the main port and the Tronchetto - mostly lying on land reclaimed in the 20th century. The district includes the Piazzale Roma , home to Venice's bus station and car parks , and around which is the only area of

110-699: The republic of Venice and as a strong connection with the House of Habsburg. The family is composed of three main branches: The German-Swedish in its variation of Reinhold , The Italian in the form Renoldi and The Austro-Hungarian as Von Renoldi-Staud . The family retains the title of Count in Austro-Hungarian Empire and later in the Hungarian Monarchy until 1946. During the Second World War , Dr. Otto von Renoldi

121-430: The title Santa Croce . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Santa_Croce&oldid=1254938500 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Articles containing Italian-language text Short description

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