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Memorials

S. Croce cemetery 032.2 sons of S. Zanobi di S. Mino de Brunacci

Rosselli Number 32.0
Memorial Type
Status lost
Current Repository na
Primary Installation floor
Secondary Installation unk
Tomb Form unk
Liturgical Orientation unk
Documented Types
  • sepoltura
Decorative Elements
Database ID 11053

Dates

after 1440 a

Inscriptions (1 total)

2269 S. Filiorum S. Zanobi S. Mini de Brunaccis The tomb of the sons of ser Zanobi di ser Mino from the Brunacci [Bonaccolti] family

Individuals (8 total)

Malescotti Bonaccolti, Caterina (mona) di Bonaccolto di Filippo di Lapo di Baldovinetto (uxor ser Zanobi di ser Mino Brunacci)
after 1440
b
Brunacci, Zanobi (ser) di S. Mino di S. Domenico
after 1440 through the 1770s c
Brunacci, Zanobi (ser) di S. Mino di S. Domenico
after 1440
d
Brunacci, Jacopo di S. Zanobi di S. Mino
after 1440
e
Malescotti Bonaccolti, Caterina (mona) di Bonaccolto di Filippo di Lapo di Baldovinetto (uxor ser Zanobi di ser Mino Brunacci)
after 1446
f
Brunacci, Piero di S. Zanobi di S. Mino
after August 31st, 1457
g
Brunacci, Gianpaolo di S. Zanobi di S. Mino
before December 28th, 1468
h
Brunacci, Buonaccolto di S. Zanobi di S. Mino
after December 16th, 1485
i

Groups (1 total)

Brunacci
after 1440 through the 1770s j

Related Memorials (2 total)

S. Croce cemetery 031 ser Ridolfo Petrasini
after 1440 k
S. Croce cemetery 032.1 Bonaccolti family
after 1440 l

Notes

  • [a] The inscription honoring the sons of ser Zanobi was not mentioned in the 1439 sepoltuario or any of its copies until Stefano Rosselli and the Priorista Mariani. Its absence from the 1596 copy is difficult to explain.
  • [b] The 1439 sepoltuario indicates that Caterina inherited a cemetery tomb that had belonged to her birth family, sometimes called the Bonaccolti. The 1596 sepoltuario only records the tomb's original inscription: S. de Bonaccoltis. Stefano Rosselli, followed by the Priorista Mariani, notes the original inscription as well as its replacement: S. filiorum S. Zanobi S. Mini de Brunaccis. While it is tempting to see Caterina as the new slab's patron, her absence from its inscription raises the possibility that one or more of her sons installed the new marker with the patrilineal name and coat of arms.
  • [c] The tomb inscription naming ser Zanobi was first mentioned by Stefano Rosselli in the mid-seventeenth century. The north cemetery seems to have been destroyed in the early 1780s.
  • [d] If we are correct that ser Zanobi was laid to rest in his wife's ancestral tomb, then his body would have remained in place when the new or refurbished tomb slab carrying his name was installed by his widow and/or sons.
  • [e] If we are correct that Jacopo di ser Zanobi died between his appearance in his mother's 1427 catasto declaration and the scrutiny of 1439 that listed his brothers but does not seem to have included him, then he was likely buried in his mother's inherited Bonaccolti tomb. His body would have remained in place when the new or refurbished tomb slab honoring him and his brothers was installed by his mother and/or brothers.
  • [f] Though not referenced in the inscription, Mona Caterina was surely buried in the grave in the north cemetery of Santa Croce given that the original tomb marker carried the name of her paternal ancestors. Gravedigger records could confirm both her burial date and location, and additional research among Santa Croce records after 1440 could shed light on when the new tomb slab was commissioned and by whom.
  • [g] It is quite likely that Piero was buried in the Santa Croce cemetery tomb identified as for him and his brothers. He was certainly alive through his priorate of July-August 1457, but gravedigger records could confirm both his burial date and location.
  • [h] It is quite likely that Giampaolo was buried in the Santa Croce cemetery tomb identified as for him and his brothers. He was certainly dead by December 28th, 1468, but gravedigger records could confirm both his burial date and location.
  • [i] Buonaccolto was drawn but not seated as Guild Consul on December 16th, 1485. It is quite likely that he was buried in the Santa Croce cemetery tomb identified as for him and his brothers. Gravedigger records could confirm both his burial date and location.
  • [j] A slab with an inscription naming naming ser Zanobi's family as the Brunacci was first mentioned by Stefano Rosselli in the mid-seventeenth century. The north cemetery seems to have been destroyed in the early 1780s.
  • [k] Absent from the 1439 Santa Croce sepoltuario, the tomb of the sons of ser Zanobi was installed at some point between the mid-fifteenth and mid-seventeenth centuries.
  • [l] Mona Caterina, widow of ser Zanobi, had inherited the Bonaccolti family tomb by 1439, but its refurbishment with a new slab honoring her husband's sons does not appear in the sepoltuari until Stefano Rosselli in the mid-seventeenth century.