![]() These initials might signify Iustina Picolomini Senensis. 10 The binding on the 1524-1531 volume of Boccaccio in the Bibliotheca Brookeriana has the initials “I S P” (or I P S) on its covers. The 1515 Aristophanes, in addition to the two and a half pages of manuscript, in Greek, on its endleaves, is reported to have the initials “IS?” on F6 recto and g6 recto. 9 Their son, Marcello, married in 1536 Giustina, daughter of Giovanni Battista Piccolomini, sister of Alessandro and Francesco Maria, successively bishops of Pienza (1535-1599) and Montalcino 1528-1599), and cousin of the humanist Alessandro Piccolomini (1508-1579). A son of Arcangelo, Niccolò, was married in 1513 to Cassandra d’Ugo d’Azzolino Ugurgieri, daughter of a prominent Sienese patrician. ![]() It is conceivable that he acquired some, and that they were rebound by a member of the family with a passion for displaying the family insignia. 8 As a Procurator of Siena, he assisted Leo X in 1516 during negotiations between the city, the papacy, and Lorenzo de’ Medici.Īrcangelo Tuti was both a resident of Rome and a scholar, however he died in 1524, too early to have commissioned the bindings on these books. ![]() 6 Arcangelo lived in the Borgo opposite the palazzo of Cardinal Adriano Castellesi, 7 and also, until about 1516, in a suburban residence ( vinea sub Monte Mario), where on 25 June 1508 he entertained on behalf of Julius II three ambassadors of the King of Spain. 1524), a professor of medicine and logic successively in Siena (1472-1499), Perugia (1500-ca 1505), and at La Sapienza, was appointed in October 1503 medicus to Pius III 5 he afterwards served Julius II, and became personal physician ( Archiatra pontificio) to Leo X. Gregorio Magno al Celio and Precettore of the Arcispedale di Santo Spirito in Sassia. 1505), a monk of the Congregazione Benedettina di Monte Oliveto, as Abbate of S. Alexander VI in 1497 named Benedetto di Giovanni Tuti (Benedictus de Senis d. 3 In 1462, Pius II appointed a Francesco Tuti as Podestà di Viterbo. A strong family association with the papacy is evidenced by a large escutcheon on the façade of the palace, bearing the arms of Pope Sixtus IV (1471-1484) flanked by shields bearing the Tuti family arms : d’azzurro al bastone nodoso posto in banda accompagnato da quattro foglie disposte in cinta, il tutto d’oro. The family palace was in Terzo San Martino in the Via Pantaneto, directly behind the Logge del Papa. ![]() The Tuti were a noble family, originally of Roccalbegna (Grosseto), arrived in Siena by the middle of the fifteenth century. ![]()
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