Giulio Leonelli
Giulio Leonelli (died 1614) was a civil lawyer who, along with several other men, founded a library in Rome which housed more than forty-thousand works.[1] He was appointed as Governor of Turin by the Duke of Savoy[2] and later was "appointed by the Court of Rome to the main offices of the Marca, then of Umbria, and finally Avignon."[3]
Giulio Leonelli  | |
|---|---|
| Died | 1614 | 
| Occupation | Lawyer | 
| Title | Governor of Turin | 
| Spouse(s) | Virginia Fornari | 
| Children | Mutatesia Leonelli, Innocenzo Leonelli, Ignatius of Jesus – (born Carlo Leonelli), and three daughters | 
He married Virginia Fornari and they had six children: three daughters, one a nun; and three sons – Mutatesia Leonelli; Innocenzo Leonelli; Carlo Leonelli, later known as Ignatius of Jesus.
References
    
    Citations
    
- Barnard ed. (1870), p. 208.
 - Vernarecci (1903), p. 652.
 - Gargano (1868), p. 134 ("…e dapo idalla Corte di Roma alle principali cariche della Marca, e dell’ Umbria, e finalmente in Avignone.")
 
Bibliography
    
- Henry Barnard, ed. (1870). "American Journal of Education". 20 (4). London: Office of American Journal of Education. 
{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires|journal=(help) - Gargano, Sebastiano (1868). Manuale statistico amministrativo storico ed artistico della provincia di Pesaro e Urbino [Statistical and historical administrative manual of the province of Pesaro and Urbino]. Pesaro: Nobili.
 - Augusto Vernarecci (1903). Fossombrone dai tempi antichissimi ai nostri con illustrazioni e appendice di documenti [Fossombrone from ancient times to ours with illustrations and appendix of documents]. Forni.
 
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