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  1. May 31, 2022 · Giuliano della Rovere became Pope Julius II in 1503. By the time of his death in 1513, this man changed the political landscape of Renaissance Italy and the role of the Papacy. To many, he is…

  2. Pope Julius II. Julius II , POPE (GIULIANO DELLA ROVERE), b. on December 5, 1443, at Albissola near Savona; crowned on November 28, 1503; d. at Rome, in the night of 20-February 21, 1513. He was born of a probably noble but impoverished family, his father being Raffaelo della Rovere and his mother Theodora Manerola, a lady of Greek extraction.

  3. Quick Facts About Pope Julius II. He was born December 5th, 1443 in the settlement of Albisola within the Republic of Genoa. His given name was Giuliano della Rovere. He died on February 23rd, 1553. The months leading up to his death involved continually waning strength and illness.

  4. Feb 24, 2019 · Pope Julius II was also known as Giuliano della Rovere. He also became known as "the warrior pope" and il papa terribile. Pope Julius II was known for sponsoring some of the greatest artwork of the Italian Renaissance, including the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel by Michelangelo. Julius became one of the most powerful rulers of his time, and he ...

  5. May 25, 2011 · Julius II (Giuliano della Rovere, b. 1443–d. 1513, pope 1503–1513) is best known as the “warrior pope” who used warfare to accomplish his ends of gaining control of the Papal States after the alienation of sections to Cesare Borgia, the incursions and confiscation of the Venetians, and the rebellion of local lords.

  6. A key figure of the Italian Renaissance and a dynamic patron of Renaissance art in Rome, Giuliano della Rovere (1453-1513) - better known as Pope Julius II (1503-13) - was the nephew of Francesco della Rovere (1414-84), who himself ruled as Pope Sixtus IV (1471-84). A formidable personality, Julius was determined to make the papacy the most ...

  7. Nov 4, 2011 · The work was actually the product of two men, Michelangelo, the great sculptor and painter, and the man who commissioned him to paint the Sistine Chapel, Pope Julius II. Theirs was a rocky relationship. Michelangelo originally refused the commission, both because he considered himself a sculptor, not a painter, and because he disagreed with ...

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