named in memorial inscription and/or represented by coat of arms
Alternate Names: dedicatee
Getty ID: 300404867
surmised
presumed role based on incomplete evidence; for burials, we know the burial is in this church, we think it is in this tomb; for patronage and other relationships, there is evidence to suggest the connection, but it has not been confirmed
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
individual has matriculated, joined, or been named to this group, including one who has joined a monastery, friary, or convent as a member or third order
[a] Stefano Rosselli noted two coats of arms on the marble altarpiece, those on the right showing the swaddled infant of Florence's foundling hospital, which led him to conclude they were being honored. He noted that Matteo di Simone Gondi had left his estate to the Innocenti, which has confused some into believing the unidentified arms on the dossal are those of that family, which instead had arms with < a href="https://sepoltuario.iath.virginia.edu/groups/375">two crossed maces, not two bends.