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Individuals

Baldovini Riccomanni, Antonio di Andrea di Pannocchia di Manno di Jacopo

Birth Family Baldovini Riccomanni
Gender male
Age at Death unknown
Database ID 1908

Life Dates

1384 to 1403
active
April 6th, 1413 (year is approximate) a
death

Memorials (4 total)

S. Croce 282 tomb of Antonio d'Andrea del Pannocchia
June 24th, 1384 to present
S. Croce 282 tomb of Antonio d'Andrea del Pannocchia
Maybe April 6th, 1413 (date is uncertain)
b
S. Procolo 03.1 Altare di S. Antonio de Pannocchia
by April 6th, 1413
S. Procolo 03.1 Altare di S. Antonio de Pannocchia
circa 1409 (date is approximate)
c

Extended Family (37 total)

Children in law
Grandparents
Great grandparents
Great great grandparents
Great aunts and uncles
Great great aunts and uncles
Grandchildren
Third cousins
First cousins twice removed

Sources (3 total)

ASF, Catasto, 1427 vol. 37, fol. 1049v (monte credits) and 1051 (chapel); and 73, fol. 171v and 172v
ASF, Manoscritti, 618, Sep. S. Croce 1596 (copy) fol. 55v
ASF, Manoscritti, Carte Pucci vol. 593/1, ins. 15 (Baldovini Riccomanni del Pannocchia)

Notes

  • [a] Earnings from 1,865 florins in the public debt (monte comune) started going to the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova on April 6th, 1413, suggesting Antonio died on or around this date. For more on this bequest, see the 1427 catasto declarations of his daughter and grandson.
  • [b] It stands to reason that Antonio was buried in the tomb he himself installed. Antonio's widowed daughter Biagia and her son Piero di Niccolaio da Filicaia claimed portions of Antonio's testamentary bequest in their 1427 catasto declaration as financial obligations, including the earnings on a portion of her inherited monte credits that started on April 6th, 1413, suggesting that Antonio died on or slightly before that date. No burial records survive for 1413, making it impossible to verify that April 6th was indeed Antonio's date of death.
  • [c] Piero di Niccolaio da Filicaia notes in his 1427 catasto declaration (37, fol. 1051) that his grandfather Antonio had founded the family chapel in San Procolo ("sua chapella la quale fecie in san Brocolo di Firenze"). Whether he had secured patronage rights in San Procolo before or after his 1384 commission to install a tomb in Santa Croce is not known, but his testamentary wishes for masses at the family altar seem to have gone into effect on April 6th, 1413. Given that his heirs make no mention of paying for furnishings in their detailed declaration of chapel expenses in 1427, it seems likely that the painting, and thus the altar, was completed in 1409, the date reported by Giovanni Cinelli (p. 389).