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    • Three children

      • The couple had three children: Maurizio Ferrante, 15th marquis of Vescovato, 3rd marquis of Vodice, count of Villanova, count of Cassolnovo and patrician of Venice (born in Rome on 4 September 1938) Corrado Alessandro (born in Rome on 10 July 1941), lord of Vescovato and patrician of Venice
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrante_Vincenzo_Gonzaga
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  2. The couple had three children: Maurizio Ferrante, 15th marquis of Vescovato, 3rd marquis of Vodice, count of Villanova, count of Cassolnovo and patrician of Venice (born in Rome on 4 September 1938) Corrado Alessandro (born in Rome on 10 July 1941), lord of Vescovato and patrician of Venice.

  3. Ferrante was succeeded in Guastalla by his son Cesare. He was the ambassador to Henry VIII of England in 1543. Children. Ferrante and Isabella had 11 children: Anna (1531), died young; Aloysius, first born son, denounced his title to join the church, later became a saint;

  4. Ferrante and Isabella had 11 children: Anna (1531), died young; Cesare (1533–1575), count of Guastalla, married Camilla Borromeo, sister of Charles Borromeo; Ippolita [it] (1535–1563), married in 1549 with Fabrizio Colonna, hereditary prince of Paliano, and in 1554 with Antonio Carafa, duke of Mondragone; Francesco (1538–1566), cardinal;

    • Early Years
    • The Military Career
    • The Armistice of 8 September 1943 and Death

    Prince Ferrante Vincenzo Gonzaga is the son of the general Prince Maurizio Ferrante Gonzaga, marquis of Vescovato and from 1932 marquis of Vodice. Ferrante Vincenzo inherited the titles of Prince of Holy Roman Empire, Marquis of Vescovato, marquis of Vodice, count of Villanova, count of Cassolnovo, lord of Vescovato and Venetian patrician on his fa...

    After participating in the Libyan war and the First World War, in 1926 he was assigned to the Command of the Rome Army Corps. Then, in 1936, as colonel, he commanded the 1st artillery regiment "Cacciatori delle Alpi" in Foligno. The Second World War saw him command the artillery of the XIII Army Corps in Cagliari (from 10 June 1940) and then promot...

    On February 10, 1943, Gonzaga del Vodice was given command of the 222nd Coastal Division, located in the Salerno area (a unit with a serious lack of staff and with officers and soldiers often not up to par). After the armistice of 8 September, the Germans started the Achse operation which involved the disarmament of all the Italian units. For some ...

  5. House of Gonzaga. The House of Gonzaga ( US: / ɡənˈzɑːɡə, ɡɒn -, - ˈzæɡ -/, [2] Italian: [ɡonˈdzaːɡa]) is an Italian princely family that ruled Mantua in Lombardy, northern Italy from 1328 to 1708 (first as a captaincy-general, then margraviate, and finally duchy ). They also ruled Monferrato in Piedmont and Nevers in France, as ...

  6. Vincenzo Ferrante Gonzaga was an Italian soldier who died in WWII, and he was awarded a gold and silver medal of military valour. The son of the soldier Maurizio Ferrante Gonzaga, Marquis of Vescovato and Vodice, inherited other noble titles on the death of his father in addition to the title of Marquis. After graduating in engineering from the University of Turin, he decided to pursue a military career.

  7. 1943-02-10. –. 1943-09-08. General Officer Commanding 222nd Coastal Division. 1943-09-08. Killed in action. Picture source: Courtesy of Anonymous. This is a brief biographical sketch of the military career of Brigadier-General Ferrante Vincenzo Gonzaga.