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  1. Giovanni de Marignolli, auch Johannes von Marignola (* um 1290 in Florenz, Italien; † zwischen 1357 und März 1359 in Prag oder Bratislava ), war ein italienischer Franziskaner, Asien- Missionar, Päpstlicher Legat und Bischof . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben und Wirken. 2 Literatur. 3 Weblinks. 4 Einzelnachweise. Leben und Wirken.

  2. Giovanni de' Marignolli (Latin: Johannes Marignola; fl. 1338–53), variously anglicized as John of Marignolli or John of Florence, was a notable 14th-century Catholic European traveller to medieval China and India.

  3. Giovanni dei Marignolli (born before 1290, Florence [Italy]) was a Franciscan friar and one of four legates sent to the court of the Mongol emperor of China, Togon-Temür, at Khanbaliq (Beijing). Marignolli’s notes on the journey, though fragmentary, contain vivid descriptions that established him among the notable travelers to the Far East ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Giovanni de' Marignolli ( Firenze, ... – 1359) è stato un missionario e vescovo cattolico italiano, frate minore francescano . Indice. 1 Biografia. 2 Voci correlate. 3 Altri progetti. 4 Collegamenti esterni. Biografia. Da giovane ricevette il saio francescano presso la basilica di Santa Croce in Firenze.

  5. Article contents. Giovanni de' Marignolli: An Italian Prelate at the Court of the South-East Asian Queen of Sheba. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 August 2009. Brian E. Colless.

  6. GIOVANNI DE' MARIGNOLLI: AN ITALIAN PRELATE AT THE COURT OF THE SOUTH-EAST ASIAN. QUEEN OF SHEBA. Brian E. Colless. The year 1338 was the occasion of a great event in the life of a certain John of Florence, for in December of that year he set out from Avignon on a journey that was to take him, in his capacity of Papal Legate, to the court of ...

  7. GIOVANNI DE' MARIGNOLLI, a notable traveller to the Far East in the 14th century, born probably before 1290, and sprung from a noble family in Florence. The family is long extinct, but a street near the cathedral (Via de' Cerretani) formerly bore the name of the Marignolli.