Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Carlo
Carlo Rossetti
Carlo Rossetti (Roscetti) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal, born of the noble Rossetti family in Ferrara. Earlier in his career he went to London as a secret nuncio on behalf of Pope Urban VIII. While in London, he was addressed as Lord Charles Rossetti and was referred to as Prince Rossetti, using his title as Italian nobility for his cover, rather than as a representative of the Roman Catholic Church to avoid persecution.
Carlo Vittorio Amedeo delle Lanze
Carlo Vittorio Amedeo Delle Lanze (1712–1784) was an Italian clergyman, a Roman Catholic cardinal. In his youth, Delle Lanze was supposed to be close to Jansenism, but in his late life he was a supporter of Jesuit and part of the zelanti.
Carlo Maratti
Carlo Maratta o Maratti fue un pintor italiano del "alto barroco", que trabajó principalmente en Roma.
Carlo Mazzantini
Carlo Mazzantini fue un filósofo y profesor universitario argentino, que desarrolló toda su carrera en Italia.
Charles III de Bourbon
Charles III de Bourbon, was Archbishop of Rouen, and the illegitimate son of Antoine de Bourbon, king of Navarre, and his mistress Louise de La Béraudière du Rouhet. His half-brother was King Henry IV of France.
Carlo Trenca
Carlo Crivelli
Carlo Crivelli fue un pintor italiano del Quattrocento, por tanto situado cronológicamente dentro del primer Renacimiento, pero con una sensibilidad decorativa propia todavía del Gótico tardío. Pasó sus primeros años en el Veneto, donde absorbió las influencias de Vivarini, Squarcione y Mantegna, y realizó la mayor parte de su obra en la Marca de Ancona, donde desarrolló un estilo distintivo personal que contrasta con su contemporáneo veneciano Giovanni Bellini.
Carlo Allorio
Carlo Anti
Carlo Anti was an archaeologist and an officer in the army in the First World War and until 1922.
Carlo Jachino
Carlo Jachino (1887–1971) was an Italian composer of the 20th century. Born in Sanremo on February 3, 1887, he studied in Leipzig under Hugo Riemann. Jachino's 3-act opera, Giocondo and his King won a national competition in (1922) and was premiered at the Dal Verme theater in Milan in 1924. In 1928 his Second Quartet in E minor shared the second prize with Harry Waldo Warner while Béla Bartók and Alfredo Casella shared the first prize at an international chamber music competition in Philadelphia. He was a proponent of dodecaphonic or 12-tone music. He wrote extensively about music, including Instruments of the Orchestra. He taught composition at the conservatories of Parma, Naples and Rome between 1927 and 1950. He was the director of the Naples conservatory from 1950 to 1953, and later director of the National Conservatory of Colombia in Bogotà. Jachino was also inspector of music curriculum for the Italian Ministry of Education.