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Memorials

S. M. Maggiore 02b monumento di Deo di Vanni del Beccuto 1383

Rosselli Number 2.0
Memorial Type
Status extant
Current Repository in situ
Primary Installation floor
Secondary Installation no additional components
Tomb Form rectangular
Liturgical Orientation frn
Documented Types
  • monumento
Component Parts
  • slab
Decorative Elements
Database ID 12224

Dates

June 1st, 1383

Inscriptions (1 total)

1205 S. nOBILIS VIRI • dEI [Vannis] / dE BECVdIS SPECIARILI hOnO[rabilis qui prima die Junii anno Dñi MCCCLXXXIII dotavit altare præsentis cappellæ] / P ANIMA • SVA • 7 • SVO • dESCENDENTI The tomb of the noble man Deo di Vanni from the Beccuti family, honorable spicer, who on the first day of June in the year of the Lord 1383 endowed the altar of this present chapel for his soul and of his descendants

Individuals (6 total)

del Beccuto, Deo di Vanni di Castello di Lippo di M. Jacopo
June 1st, 1383
del Beccuto, Deo di Vanni di Castello di Lippo di M. Jacopo
June 1st, 1383 to circa 1885 (date is approximate) a
del Beccuto, Deo di Vanni di Castello di Lippo di M. Jacopo
circa 1386 (date is approximate)
b
del Beccuto, Deo di Deo di Vanni di Castello di Lippo
1386 to circa 1433 (date is approximate)
c
del Beccuto, Deo di Deo di Vanni di Castello di Lippo
after March 20th, 1433
d
Carnesecchi, Andreuola di Zanobi di Berto di Grazino di Durante (uxor Deo di Deo del Beccuto)
e

Groups (1 total)

del Beccuto
1383 to 1800s

Related Memorials (1 total)

S. M. Maggiore 02a Cappella di S. Biagio

Notes

  • [a] Though the tomb still exists, it was broken below the coat of arms at some point, perhaps during renovations undertaken beginning in 1885. The inscription is worn away to near illegibility.
  • [b] It stands to reason that Deo was buried in the tomb he established for himself and his family. He may have died in 1396.
  • [c] The chapel is listed among Deo di Deo's expenses in his 1427 catasto declaration that stemmed from honoring his father's will in 1386. ASFi, Catasto, 79, fol. 195
  • [d] Deo di Vanni dedicated the altar and tomb for himself and his descendants, making it likely that his son and heir Deo was buried in it. Given that Deo listed his responsibilities for funding the chapel in his 1427 catasto declaration, the use of this tomb seems almost certain.
  • [e] Though her Carnesecchi kin also had tombs in Santa Maria Maggiore, it seems more likely that Andreuola would have been buried with her husband in his father's tomb.