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Aristotele Fioravanti
Italian architect (c. 1415 – c. 1486) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ridolfo "Aristotele" Fioravanti (also spelled Fieraventi; Russian: Аристотель Фиораванти;[a] c. 1415 – c. 1486)[1] was an Italian Renaissance architect and engineer. He was active in Moscow from 1475, where he designed the Dormition Cathedral during 1475–1479.
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Little is known about Fioravanti's early years. He was born in Bologna around 1415 into a family of architects and hydraulic engineers.
He became renowned for the very innovative devices he used for the rebuilding of the towers belonging to the noble families of the city. Between 1458 and 1467, he worked in Florence for Cosimo de' Medici the Elder and in Milan, before returning to his native city. There, he created the plans for the Palazzo Bentivoglio, but the edifice was not finished (by Giovanni II Bentivoglio) until 1484–1494. In 1467, he worked for King Matthias Corvinus in Hungary.
In 1475, at the invitation of Ivan III, he went to Moscow where he built the Dormition Cathedral during 1475–1479,[2] taking inspiration from the Dormition Cathedral of Vladimir, a symbol of the center of the Russian Church, while introducing new influences at the same time.[3] This is the work for which he is best remembered and is considered to be evidence that Moscow attracted leading Italian masters.[4]
According to some accounts, he was thrown into prison by Ivan III when he asked to return to Italy, and died in captivity.[5] According to other accounts, he participated as a military engineer and artillery commander in the campaigns against Novgorod (1477–1478), Kazan (1482) and Tver (1485).[6]
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