- The
Cippus Perusinus is a
stone tablet (cippus)
discovered on the hill of San Marco, in Perugia, Italy, in 1822. The
tablet bears 46
lines of incised...
-
Matheolus Perusinus (Mattheolus de Perusio,
Mattiolo Mattioli,
Matthiolus de Matthiolis,
Matthiolus de Matthiolis) (died 1480) was a
professor of philosophy...
- inscriptions. The "Cippus Abell****" (in the
Oscan language), like the "Cippus
Perusinus", is not a tombstone.
Carthaginian cippi have a base
similar to Egyptian...
-
Paulus Perusinus or
Pusinus was an
Italian mythographer of the 14th century. He is
extensively quoted in
Giovanni Boccaccio's
Genealogia Deorum Gentilium...
- use the
printing press. He was born and died in Nuremberg.
Matheolus Perusinus served as his tutor.
Schedel is best
known for his
writing the text for...
-
based on the Doryphoros, such as that in the Louvre. It is
signed "Petrus
Perusinus pinxit" ('Pietro
Perugino painted [it]'). "Entry on Nationalmuseum.se"...
- –
contract text with a
length of 32
lines and
about 200
words Cippus Perusinus –
travertine block with 46
lines and
about 125
words from near Perugia...
- and to the
right Saint Peter. It was
originally dated and
signed PETRUS PERUSINUS P[INXIT] / A[NNO DOMINI]
MCCCCLVIII ('Pietro
Perugino painted [this] /...
- in
inscriptions written in
Etruscan (aule-si, 'to Aule', on the
Cippus Perusinus; as well as the
inscription mi mulu Laris-ale Velχaina-si,
meaning 'I...
- Perugino. It
shows him three-quarter
length and is
signed "P[I]E[T]RUS
PERUSINUS PINXIT" (Peter of
Perugia painted [this]) on the
arrow in his neck. It...