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Francesco Cura (born 7 March 1977), is an American actor, singer, and fashion model.
Sometimes credited as Francis J. Cura or Francesco Maria Cura, he has starred in feature films such as Hannah Can't Swim, Singularity, The Deep and Dreamless Sleep, and The Wizards Return: Alex vs. Alex. He has also guest starred in such series as Criminal Minds and Scrubs.
With 1 125 081 bearers, Francesco is the 6th most common masculine given name in Italy (2014 Data).Source: https://forebears.io/forenames/francesco
Francesco is a strong Italian name. It has a lively sound.
I like the sound of this name, but then there's Francesco Bernoulli - ewwwwwwww!
Francesco Bernoulli is a character in the Pixar film Cars 2.
I prefer Francisco... but only slightly.
The name Francesco was given to 131 boys born in the US in 2015.
User Sweetbabe (above) needs a day job! Lol. Anyway... Francesco Quinn is the son of legendary Mexican-American film star, Anthony Quinn. Francesco was born to an Italian mother in Rome, Italy in 1963 and also became an actor before his untimely passing in 2011.
Though very popular in Italy, the name Francesco is relatively uncommon in other countries like the US. It was only given to 119 baby boys born here in 2012.
In the book 18, Francesco "Frank" Rutelli, an Italian immigrant, is Peter's bootlegging neighbor.
A strong, classic Italian name. Nicknames like frank, Frankie, Franco and even Cesco are adorable :) I know this name is very popular in Italy, but I think it deserves popularity. It's a name with historical popularity, unlike many popular names in the US that seem to all be part of fads that fade out in a decade at most.
Francesco della Rovere was the birthname of Pope Sixtus IV (Pontificate between 1471-1484).
Francesco Todesschini Piccolomini was the birthname of Pope Pius III (Pontificate between 1503-1503, pope for 26 days).
Francesco Castiglioni was the birthname of Pope Pius VIII (Pontificate between 1829-1830).
Francesco Carracci (1595-1622).
Francesco di Giovanni Botticini (1446-1498) was a Florentine painter.
Francesco Bibiena (1659-1739) was a member of the dynasty Bibiena (or Galli-Bibiena) which was a family of Italian architects, quadraturisti and stage designers.
Francesco Bartolozzi (1728-1815) was an Italian engraver active mainly in England. A founder member of the Royal Academy.
Francesco Barberini (23 September 1597 – 10 December 1679) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal.
Francesco Algarotti (1712-1764) was an Italian art critic.
Sheesh! This list above of well-known Francesco's is so long, I'm turned off by the popularity of this name already! Personally, I think this name (along with the Spanish 'Francisco') sucks. I prefer Franco over Francesco anytime. Not as common.
Francesco Stephen Castellucio, more commonly known as Frankie Valli, is an American musician, most famous as frontman of The Four Seasons.
My friend has this name but, people usually mistake it with Francisco. I don't get how they're totally different names.
It's such a handsome and friendly name. This name is youthful, but still mature at the same time. It's also my grandfather's name. If circumstances permit, when I have a son, I will name him Francesco (nickname Frankie).
Francesco Daniele Quinn (Born 22 March 1962) is an American actor. The son of Oscar winner Anthony Quinn, Francesco is perhaps best known in the breakout role as the underground drug lord Rhah in Oliver Stone’s Academy Award-winning Platoon (1986).
Francesco Albani or Albano (March 17 or August 17, 1578–October 4, 1660) was an Italian Baroque painter.
Francesco Borromini, byname of Francesco Castelli (b. Bissone, Ticino, September 25, 1599; Rome, August 3, 1667) was a prominent and influential Italian Swissborn Baroque architect in Rome.
Francesco Casanova (1732- ) was an Italian painter of the Rococo period, active mainly in Venice. Born in London, and trained with Francesco Simonini as a battle-painter. Philip James de Loutherbourg (1734-1812) was one of his pupils.
Francesco del Cossa (c. 1430 – c. 1477) was an Italian early-Renaissance (or Quattrocento) painter of the School of Ferrara.
Francesco Hayez (February 10, 1791 - December 21, 1882) was an Italian painter, the leading artist of Romanticism in mid-19th-century Milan, renowned for his grand historical paintings, political allegories and exceptionally fine portraits.
Francesco Lazzaro Guardi (October 5, 1712 – January 1, 1793) was a Venetian painter of veduta. He is considered to be among the last practitioners, along with his brothers, of the classic Venetian school of painting.
Francesco Granacci (1469–1543) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance. Born at Villamagna di Volterra, he trained in Florence at the studio of Domenico Ghirlandaio, and was employed painting frescoes for San Marco on commission of Lorenzo de'Medici. He is featured in Giorgio Vasari's Vite.
Francesco Laurana (de la Vrana), (c. 1430 – before 12 March 1502), was a Dalmatian-born Croatian sculptor and medallist, in Croatia also known as Frane Vranjanin.
Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola (11 January 1503 - 24 August 1540), also known as Francesco Mazzola or more commonly as Parmigianino (a nickname meaning "the little one from Parma") or sometimes "Parmigiano", was a prominent Italian Mannerist painter and printmaker active in Florence, Rome, Bologna, and his native city of Parma. His work is characterized by elongation of form and includes Vision of Saint Jerome (1527) and the Madonna with the Long Neck.
Francesco Mochi (1580 - 1654) was an Italian early-Baroque sculptor active mostly in Rome and Orvieto. He was born in Montevarchi and died in Rome. His early training was with the anti-Mannerist Florentine painter Santi di Tito, where he formed a taste for pictorial clarity and the primacy of disegno, exemplified in the sculpture of Giambologna and his studio and followers. He moved to Rome around 1599 and continued his training in the studio of the Venetian-trained sculptor Camillo Mariani. "The first to break with the formulas that had stultified late sixteenth-century Roman sculpture", Mochi was a contemporary of Gian Lorenzo Bernini's father, Pietro, as well as later with the son.
Francesco de' Rossi (1510-1563) was an Italian Mannerist painter from Florence, also active in Rome. He is known by many names, prominently the adopted name Francesco Salviati or as Il Salviati, but also Francesco Rossi and Cecchino del Salviati.
Francesco Zuccarelli (15 August 1702 - December 30, 1788) was an Italian Rococo painter. He was born at Pitigliano, in southern Tuscany, where he initially apprenticed with Paolo Anesi. He then worked in Rome with Giorgio Morandi, Pietro Nelli, and perhaps Andrea Locatelli.In 1732, he settled Venice, he became famous as one of the most desired landscape painters of the classicizing 18th century. Having visited England on a previous occasion, he was induced by some patrons to return there in 1752, remaining until 1773, when he settled in Florence, where he died in 1788.Zuccarelli, who was one of the founding members of the Royal Academy, enjoyed the patronage of royalty and of many wealthy English collectors, for whom he executed his principal works-generally a landscape or vedute with classic ruins and small figures.His paintings often bear a mark representing a pumpkin, a pictorial representation of his name, which signifies little pumpkin. He was reputed to have trained Giuseppe Zais, and influenced Vittorio Amadeo Cignaroli.
Francesco Vanni (1563 - 1610) was an Italian painter of the Mannerist style, active in Rome and his native city of Siena.
Count Francesco Algarotti (11 December 1712–3 May 1764) was an Italian philosopher and art critic. He also completed engravings.He was born in Venice to a rich merchant. He studied at Rome for a year, and then Bologna, he studied natural sciences and mathematics. At age of twenty, he went to Paris, where he became friendly with Voltaire and produced his Neutonianismo per le dame, a work on optics. Voltaire called him his "cher cygne de Padoue" ("dear swan of Padua").
Francesco de Sanctis (March 28, 1817 – December 29, 1883) was an Italian literary critic, considered the most important scholar of Italian language and literature in the 19th century.
Francesco Filelfo (July 25, 1398 – July 31, 1481), was an Italian Renaissance humanist.
Francesco Guicciardini (March 6, 1483 - May 22, 1540) was an Italian historian and statesman. A friend and critic of Niccolò Machiavelli, he is considered one of the major political writers of the Italian Renaissance. Guicciardini is considered as the Father of Modern History, due to his use of government documents to verify his "History of Italy."
Francesco Petrarca (July 20, 1304 – July 19, 1374), known in English as Petrarch, was an Italian scholar, poet, and one of the earliest Renaissance humanists. Petrarch is often popularly called the "father of humanism". Based on Petrarch's works, and to a lesser extent those of Dante Alighieri and Giovanni Boccaccio, Pietro Bembo in the 16th century created the model for the modern Italian language, later endorsed by the Accademia della Crusca. Petrarch is credited with developing the sonnet. His sonnets were admired and imitated throughout Europe during the Renaissance and became a model for lyrical poems. Petrarch was also known for being one of the first people to call the Middle Ages the Dark Ages.
Francesco Canero Medici (1886 - 1946) was an Italian diplomat. He worked with Luigi Amedeo, Duke of the Abruzzi and Italo Balbo.He was nominated as Governor of Addis Abeba in 1938 and served as such from 23 September to 1 January 1939. He was prefect of Tripoli between 1939 and 1941. Medici died in Rome.
Francesco Cossiga (born July 26, 1928) is an Italian politician and former President of the Italian Republic. He was also a professor of law at University of Sassari.
Francesco Crispi (October 4, 1819 – August 12, 1901) was a 19th-century Italian politician of Albanian Arberesh ancestry. He was instrumental in the formation of the united country and was its Premier from 1887 until 1891 and again from 1893 until 1896.
Francesco Fortugno (Brancaleone (RC), September 15, 1951 – Locri, October 16, 2005) was an Italian politician and the Vice President of the Regional Assembly of Calabria. He was killed by the 'Ndrangheta in October 2005, in Locri, a hotbed of 'Ndrangheta activity.
Francesco Musotto (born on 1 February 1947 in Palermo) is an Italian politician and Member of the European Parliament for the Islands (elected for the first time in 1999).A former member of the Italian Socialist Party, he is currently with Forza Italia (part of the European People's Party), sits on the European Parliament's Committee on Regional Development, is a substitute for the Committee on Fisheries, and of the Committee on Transport and Tourism. He is also the current President of the Province of Palermo.
Francesco Saverio Vincenzo de Paola Nitti (Melfi, July 19, 1868 - Rome, February 20, 1953) was an Italian economist and political figure. A Radical, he served as the prime minister of Italy between 1919 and 1920.According to the Catholic Encyclopedia ("Theories of Overpopulation"), Nitti (Population and the Social System, 1894) was a staunch critic of English economist Thomas Robert Malthus and his Principle of Population.
Francesco Rutelli, MP (born June 14, 1954) is an Italian politician, formerly Mayor of Rome, and former president of the centrist party Democracy is Freedom - Daisy. He was the Minister of Culture and Tourism in the cabinet of Prime Minister Romano Prodi. In 2008 Rutelli ran unsuccessfully for a new term as Mayor of Rome after the resignation of Walter Veltroni.
Francesco Enrico Speroni (born on 4 October 1946 in Busto Arsizio) is an Italian politician and Member of the European Parliament for North-West with the Lega Nord, part of the Non-Inscrits and sits on the European Parliament's Committee on Legal Affairs.He is a substitute for the Committee on Foreign Affairs and a member of the Delegation to the EU-Mexico Joint Parliamentary Committee.
Francesco Storace (Cassino, 25 January 1959) is an Italian politician. He began his career at the post-fascist newspaper Il Secolo d'Italia, until entering the ranks of the Italian Social Movement (MSI) and later of National Alliance (AN). He was elected to the Chamber of Deputies for the first time in 1994. At the time he was the spokesman of Gianfranco Fini.
Francesco Barozzi (in Latin, Franciscus Barocius) (August 9, 1537-November 23, 1604) was an Italian mathematician and astronomer.
Francesco Bianchini (December 13, 1662 – March 2, 1729) was an Italian philosopher and scientist. He worked for the curia of three popes, including being camiere d`honore of Clement XI, and secretary of the commission for the reform of the calendar, working on the method to calculate the astronomically correct date for Easter in a given year.
Francesco Brioschi (1824–1897) was an Italian mathematician. Brioschi was born in Milan in 1824. From 1850 he taught analytical mechanics in the University of Pavia. After the Italian unification in 1861, he was elected depute in the Parliament of Italy and then appointed twice secretary of the Education Minister. In 1863 he founded the Politecnico di Milano, where he worked until death; here, he taught mainly hydraulics, but sometimes he lectured analytical mechanics and construction engineering, too. In 1865 he entered in the Senate of the Kingdom. In 1870 he became member of the National Academy of the Lincei and in 1884 he succeed Quintino Sella as president of the National Academy of the Lincei. He directed the Il Politecnico (English translation: The Polytechnic) review and, between 1867 and 1877, Annali di matematica pura e applicata (English translation: Annals of pure and applied mathematics). He died in Milan in 1897.
Francesco Calogero (born February 6, 1935) is a distinguished Italian physicist and active in the community of scientists concerned with nuclear disarmamanent.
Francesco Paolo Cantelli (1875-1966) was an Italian mathematician. He was the founder of the Istituto Italiano degli Attuari for the applications of mathematics and probability to economics. His early papers were on problems in astronomy and celestial mechanics. The later work was all on probability and it is in this field where his name graces the Borel-Cantelli Lemma. A fair evaluation of the importance of Cantelli's role is clouded by the cultural differences that separated him from Kolmogorov, who represented a younger generation, and even from his contemporaries.
Francesco Carlini (January 7, 1783-August 29, 1862) was an Italian astronomer. Born in Milan, he became director of the observatory there in 1832. He published Nuove tavole de moti apparenti del sole in 1832. In 1810, he had already published Esposizione di un nuovo metodo di construire le taole astronomiche applicato alle tavole del sole. Together with Giovanni Antonio Amedeo Plana, he participated in a geodetic project for Austria and Italy, during which he also attempted to determine the weight of the earth. Carlini crater, on the Moon, is named after him.
Francesco Faà di Bruno (29 March 1825–27 March 1888) was an Italian mathematician and priest, born at Alessandria. He was of noble birth, and held, at one time, the rank of captain-of-staff in the Sardinian Army. Coming to Paris, he resigned his commission, studied under Augustin Cauchy, and Urbain Le Verrier, who shared in the discovery of the planet Neptune, and he became intimate with Abbé Moigno and Charles Hermite. On his return to Turin, he was ordained, but the remainder of his life was spent as Professor of Mathematics at the University. In recognition of his achievements as a mathematician, the degree of Doctor of Science was conferred on him by the Universities of Paris and Turin.
Francesco Maria Grimaldi (April 2, 1618 - December 28, 1663) was an Italian mathematician and physicist who taught at the Jesuit college in Bologna.
Francesco Severi (13 April 1879, Arezzo, Italy - 8 December 1961, Rome) was an Italian mathematician. He is famous for his contributions to algebraic geometry. He became the effective leader of the Italian school of algebraic geometry. Together with Federigo Enriques, he won the Prix Bordin from the French Academy of Sciences. He contributed in a major way to birational geometry, the theory of algebraic surfaces, in particular of the curves lying on them, and the theory of moduli spaces. He wrote prolifically, and some of his work has subsequently been shown to be inadequate, in investigations in particular by Oscar Zariski and David Mumford. At the personal level he was remarkably touchy, and he was involved in a number of controversies.
Francesco Antonioli (born 14 September 1969 in Monza) is an Italian football goalkeeper. He currently plays for Bologna F.C. 1909.
Francesco Baiano (born 24 February 1968 in Naples) is an Italian professional footballer. He is a well-known striker famous for his shooting technique.
Francesco Bellotti (born August 6, 1979 in Bussolengo) is an Italian professional road bicycle racer for UCI Professional Continental team Barloworld.
Francesco Bega is an Italian footballer who currently plays for Serie B side Brescia. He formerly played for Genoa and Cagliari.
Francesco Camusso (March 9, 1908 - June 23, 1995) was an Italian professional road racing cyclist. Camusso was born in Cumiana, Piedmont, and is ranked among the best Italian climbers ever. In his second year as professional, he won the 1931 Giro d'Italia. In the following year he won a stage at the Tour de France, finished third overall. His other results include a second place in the 1934 Giro d'Italia and a fourth in the 1935 Tour de France. He died at Turin in 1995.
Francesco Casagrande (born September 14, 1970 in Florence) is an Italian former professional road racing cyclist. Casagrande was a professional cyclist between 1992 and 2005.
Francesco Chicchi (born November 27, 1980 in Camaiore) is an Italian professional road bicycle racer for UCI ProTeam Liquigas.
Francesco Coco (born January 8, 1977 in Paternò) is a retired Italian football defender.
Francesco Cozza (born January 19, 1974 in Cariati) is an Italian football offensive midfielder who currently plays for Reggina of Italy's Serie A.
Francesco Damiani (born October 4, 1958 in Bagnacavallo) was an Italian boxer who at age 25 won the Super Heavyweight Silver medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. He was the first WBO heavyweight champion.
Francesco Flachi (born April 8, 1975 in Florence) is an Italian footballer. A deep-lying striker with valuable scoring abilities, Flachi is currently contracted with Empoli F.C., but will not be able to make his debut before January 2009 due to a cocaine-related ban he received on early 2007.
Francesco "Ciccio" Graziani (born December 16, 1952) is an Italy football manager and former player.
Francesco Lodi (born 23 March 1984 in Naples) is an Italian footballer. As of 2006, he plays for Frosinone, on loan from Empoli. Lodi has been in sensational form for Frosinone during the season 2007-2008 and is one of the top performers in Serie B. His role as a 2nd striker has seen him score 20 goals and draw the attention of Napoli in Serie A.
Francesco Marianini (born May 6, 1979 in Pisa) is an Italian football (soccer) midfielder. He currently plays for Empoli.
Francesco Millesi (born July 24, 1980 in Catania) is a football midfielder for Catania. Previous clubs are Ragusa, Igea Virtus, Avellino and a loan spell for Spezia. He has shirt number 31.
Francesco Modesto (born February 16, 1982 in Crotone) is an Italian football (soccer) which plays as lateral defender or winger. He currently plays for Genoa.
Francesco Montervino (born May 7, 1978) is an Italian Midfielder for S.S.C. Napoli. He was born in Taranto, Italy. He has the jersey number 4. He is also the capitan of Napoli.
Francesco "Checco" Moriero (born 31 March 1969 in Lecce) is a retired Italian football (soccer) player turned manager. He played for several clubs, including US Lecce, Cagliari, AS Roma, Inter Milan and SSC Napoli. He played for the Italian national team, scoring two goals in eight matches, and was a participant at the 1998 FIFA World Cup.
Francesco Moser (born June 19, 1951 in Palù di Giovo, a province of Trento) nicknamed " Lo sceriffo" (The sheriff) is an Italian former professional road bicycle racer. He was one of the dominant riders from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s, and won the 1984 Giro d'Italia, the 1977 world road racing championship and six victories in three of the five classics. He began his professional career in 1973. He had an almost effortless pedal stroke that provided great power. Moser was intimidating on a bicycle but his powerful build meant he wasn’t a gifted climber.
Francesco Parravicini (born 31 January 1982 in Milan) is an Italian football midfielder who currently plays for Parma F.C.
Francesco Pisano (born 29 April 1986 in Cagliari) is an Italian football (soccer) defender. He currently plays for Cagliari Calcio. Pisano can play as a Left back or Left Wing Back. His impressive performances this season (and ever present for Cagliari in the league) have earned him a call up to the Italy Under-21 in December and has two caps to his name.
Francesco Pratali (born January 17, 1979 in Pontedera) is an Italian football (soccer) defender. He currently plays for Empoli.
Francesco Rocca (born August 2, 1954) is an Italian former football player.
Francesco Ruopolo (born 10 March 1983 in Aversa, Caserta) is an Italian football striker who currently plays for AlbinoLeffe.
Francesco Scardina (born 11 December 1981 in Turin) is an Italian football defender.
Francesco "Ciccio" Tavano (born 2 March 1979 in Caserta) is an Italian footballer. He is a pacy forward who as well as being prolific, possesses very good passing qualities for a striker. He has been called up to the Italy national football team but hasn't played.
Francesco Toldo (born December 2, 1971 in Padua) is an Italian football goalkeeper, who currently plays for Inter.
Francesco Volpe (born 3 March 1986 in Naples) is an Italian football player. He currently plays for Livorno.
Francesco Cafiso (born in Vittoria, Sicily on May 24, 1989) is an Italian jazz musician who plays Alto saxophone. He began playing at age nine and premiered in 2001. In 2003 he toured Europe with Wynton Marsalis. In 2005, at age sixteen, he won Italy's version of the Golden Django. He has recently received a diploma for flute.
Francesco Cilea (July 23, 1866 – November 20, 1950) was an Italian composer. Today he is particularly known for his operas L'arlesiana and Adriana Lecouvreur.
Francesco De Gregori (born April 4, 1951) is a renowned Italian singer-songwriter and maker of organic olive oil called "Le Palombe".
Francesco Guccini (born June 14, 1940) is a Italian singer-songwriter and author. His songs are renowned for their poetic and literary value, and in 1990 he won the Premio Eugenio Montale for verses in music.
Francesco Onofrio Manfredini (June 22, 1684 – October 6, 1762) was an Italian Baroque composer, violinist, and church musician.
Francesco Molino (also known as François Molino) (June 4, 1775–1847) was an Italian guitarist and composer.
Francesco Maria Piave (18 May 1810 – 5 March 1876) was an Italian librettist who was Verdi's life-long friend and collaborator. Like Verdi, Piave was an ardent Italian patriot, and in 1848, during Milan's "Cinque Giornate," when Radetsky's Austrian troops retreated from the city, Verdi's letter to Piave in Venice was addressed to "Citizen Piave."
Francesco Renga (born in Udine, June 12, 1968) is an Italian singer-songwriter. He won the Sanremo Music Festival in 2005 with the song Angelo. He is romantically involved with actress Ambra Angiolini, who has borne him two children, Jolanda and Leonardo.
Count Francesco Baracca (May 9, 1888–June 19, 1918) was Italy's top fighter ace of World War I.
Francesco Bussone, often called Count of Carmagnola (c. 1382 – May 5, 1432), was an Italian condottiero.
Prince Francesco Caracciolo (January 18, 1752 - June 30, 1799) was a Neapolitan admiral and revolutionist.
Francesco Ferruccio (or Ferrucci) (1489 – August 3, 1530), was a Florentine captain who fought in the Italian Wars.
Francesco I Sforza (July 23, 1401 - March 8, 1466) was an Italian condottiero, the founder of the Sforza dynasty in Milan, Italy. He was the brother of Alessandro, with whom he often fought.
Francesco Rosi (born November 15, 1922 in Naples) is an Italian film director. He is the father of the actress Carolina Rosi.
Francesco Salvi (born February 7, 1953) is an Italian actor, comedian and singer. Born in the northern town of Luino, near the Italian border with Switzerland, Salvi started his career in the mid-eighties. His performances over the years have included but are not limited to: cabaret, cinema, animated cinema, music, writing, theatre and television.
Francesco Accolti (c. 1416 - 1488), also called Francesco d'Arezzo, was an Italian jurist. The brother of Benedetto Accolti, he professed jurisprudence at Bologna from 1440 to 1445, and afterwards at Ferrara, Siena, and Pisa.
Francesco Yoshihiro Bellissimo (ƒxƒŠƒbƒVƒ‚Eƒtƒ‰ƒ“ƒ`ƒFƒXƒREŠìL, Berisshimo Furanchesuko Yoshihiro?, born January 3, 1979 in Rome) is an Italian manga artist, chef and famous Italian television personality transplanted in Japan. He studied at the Fourth State 'Liceo' specializing in art subjects "Alessandro Caravillani" in Rome. He was the first Italian mangaka to publish his own Italian-style comic series in Japan: "Roma-kun", publisher: NHK (Japan Broadcast Publishing).
Francesco Farnese (May 19, 1678 - May 26, 1727) was Duke of Parma and Piacenza from 1694 until his death. He was the second son of Ranuccio II Farnese.
Francesco Foscari (1373 – November 1, 1457) was doge of Venice from 1423 to 1457, at the height of the Italian Renaissance.
Francesco Marchisano (born June 25, 1929) is an Italian Cardinal who has worked in the Roman Curia since 1956. Born in Turin, he was ordained a priest there by Maurilio Fossati in 1952.
Francesco Saverio Merlino (born September 9, 1856 in Naples; deceased June 30, 1930 in Rome) was an Italian lawyer, anarchist activist and theorist of libertarian socialism.
Francesco di Marco Datini (c. 1335 - 1410) was an Italian merchant born in Prato.
Francesco Redi (February 18/19, 1626–March 1, 1697) was an Italian physician.
Francesco Cardinal Zabarella (10 August 1360 - 26 September 1417) was an Italian cardinal and canonist.
There is a Italian player called Francesco Totti who plays soccer for Italy. I live in Austalia. I'm part Italian (and French-Canadian) and ever since the world cup where Australia got an UNFAIR penalty shot against them which was put in the goals by Francesco Totti I've learnt to hate him. I hate it when ever I hear the name Francesco because it reminds me of him. :(
I like it! In Italy Francesco is very popular.

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