Adamo AbateW
Adamo Abate

Saint Adamo Abate was an Italian medieval Benedictine abbot, a promoter of the unification of the Southern populations in Italy under Roger II of Sicily.

Aleramo, Marquis of MontferratW
Aleramo, Marquis of Montferrat

Aleram was the first Marquis of Montferrat and Liguria in Northern Italy until his death. He was son of William I of Montferrat and is mentioned in documents for the first time in 933 when he received a fief near Vercelli by Hugh of Italy. In 955 he was invested of lands in what is now the province of Alessandria.

Berengar I of ItalyW
Berengar I of Italy

Berengar I was the king of Italy from 887. He was Holy Roman Emperor between 915 and his death in 924. He is usually known as Berengar of Friuli, since he ruled the March of Friuli from 874 until at least 890, but he had lost control of the region by 896.

Crescentius the YoungerW
Crescentius the Younger

Crescentius the Younger, son of Crescentius the Elder, was a leader of the aristocracy of medieval Rome. During the minority of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III, he declared himself Consul of Rome and made himself de facto ruler of Rome. After being deposed, he led a rebellion, seized control of Rome, and appointed an antipope, but the rebellion failed and Crescentius was eventually executed.

Shabbethai DonnoloW
Shabbethai Donnolo

Shabbethai Donnolo was a Graeco-Italian Jewish physician, and writer on medicine and astrology.

FantinusW
Fantinus

Fantinus was an Italian saint. He is sometimes called Fantinus of Calabria or Fantinus the Younger to distinguish him from Fantinus the Wonderworker, an earlier Calabrian saint.

Gandulf of PiacenzaW
Gandulf of Piacenza

Gandulf or Gandolf was a Frankish nobleman in the medieval kingdom of Italy. He rose from relatively low rank to become the count of Piacenza and finally a marchio (marquis). He is an ancestor of the Da Palazzo family.

MaroziaW
Marozia

Marozia, born Maria and also known as Mariuccia or Mariozza, was a Roman noblewoman who was the alleged mistress of Pope Sergius III and was given the unprecedented titles senatrix ("senatoress") and patricia of Rome by Pope John X.

Theodora (senatrix)W
Theodora (senatrix)

Theodora was a senatrix and serenissima vestaratrix of Rome.