List of grand council masters of Modeci
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Political parties
No. | Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Tenure | Election | Political Party |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Filippo Caladri (722–766) 44 years |
23th September 744 | 29th December 766 | 22 years, 3 months and 6 days | – | – | |
The first holder of the grand council mastership of an independent Modeci. | |||||||
98 | Apollonio Barbigia (1663–1713) 49 years |
18th May 1711 | 28th June 1713 | 2 years, 1 month and 10 days | 1711 | B ↓ L | |
99 | |||||||
99 | Nofri Querini (1659–1718) 58 years |
5th July 1713 | 23th March 1718 | 4 years, 8 months and 18 days | 1713 | P ↓ L | |
99 | |||||||
100 | Duccio Michiel (1664–1722) 57 years |
31th March 1718 | 1st February 1722 | 3 years, 10 months and 1 day | 1718 | C | |
101 | Lazzero Firavanti (1700–1729) 28 years |
8th February 1722 | 4th April 1729 | 7 years, 1 month and 27 days | 1722 | C | |
102 | Riccardo de Fiorino (1690–1741) 50 years |
11th April 1729 | 2nd March 1741 | 11 years, 10 months and 19 days | 1729 | L | |
Riccardo modernized the military, introducing new training methods, better organization, and advanced weaponry, ensuring the republic's defence against external threats. | |||||||
103 | Bella de Fiorino (1709–1762) 53 years |
8th May 1741 | 19th December 1762 | 21 years, 7 months and 11 days | 1741 | L | |
The first woman to hold of the grand council mastership of Modeci. She lead the nation through the 9 years war, doing so expanded its borders. Bella also initiated major infrastructure projects such as the construction of roads, bridges, and ports, which facilitated trade and improved the connectivity of the republic. | |||||||
104 | Lisabetta Fonte the Great (1726–1782) 56 years |
27th December 1762 | 11th July 1782 | 19 years, 6 months and 14 days | 1762 | L | |
Has been given the title of The Great. Lisabetta is seen as one of the greatest rulers of Modeci. She founded the Academy of the Fair Arts and was a patron of the arts and science. Lisabetta also founded schools across the nation to improve literacy rates, particularly among women and the lower classes. | |||||||
105 | Abramo Barbeta (1714–1782) 68 years |
29th July 1782 | 20th August 1782 | 22 days | 1782 | C | |
Died by a stroke after 22 days as grand council master, making his tenure the shortest in Modecian history. | |||||||
106 | Bartolo Baldovinetti (1715–1789) 73 years |
20th August 1782 | 23th September 1789 | 7 years, 1 month and 3 days | – | C | |
107 | Maria Fonte (1748–1801) 53 years |
29th September 1789 | 27th September 1801 | 11 years, 11 months and 29 days | 1789 | L | |
108 | Adovardo Gritti (1744–1815) 71 years |
29th October 1801 | 5th April 1804 | 2 years, 5 months and 7 days | 1801 | C ↓ R | |
108 | |||||||
109 | Giuseppe Morosini (1772–1831) 59 years |
15th May 1816 | 15th May 1824 | 8 years | 1816, 1820 | RP | |
110 | Tommaso de Calvenzano (1780–1856) 76 years |
15th May 1824 | 15th May 1828 | 4 years | 1824 | RP | |
– | Valeria Borgese-Fonte (1949–1986) 36 years |
15th May 1980 | 19th September 1986 | 6 years, 3 months and 30 days | 1980, 1984 | SDP | |
Was the first woman to hold of the grand council mastership of Modeci since the fall of the second republic, and was related to Lisabetta the Great. She died from injuries sustained in a car crash. Is considered as of the one the most popular grand council mistresses in modern history. | |||||||
– | Mathieu Bourcier (1932–1991) 59 years |
19th September 1986 | 15th May 1988 | 1 year, 8 months and 1 day | – | SDP | |
Took over after the death of madam Borgese-Fonte. | |||||||
– | Benito Priore (1941–1995) 60 years |
15th May 1988 | 15th May 1996 | 8 years | 1988, 1992 | PL | |
Was grand council master during the burst of the Modecian economic bubble. | |||||||
– | Rodrigo Padalino (1943–2006) 63 years |
15th May 1996 | 1st June 2006 | 10 years and 17 days | 1996 | PL ↓ PM | |
– | Took control over the state and proclaimed a state of emergency after the second Modecian civil war broke out. After the resolution of the civil war in 1998, he stayed in power with the support of the military. | ||||||
– | Nicoletta Padalino la Nonna (1936–2013) 76 years |
12th June 2006 | 21th March 2013 | 6 years, 9 months and 9 days | 2006, 2010 | PM | |
Legalized gay marriage and made terminating a pregnancy a guaranteed freedom in Article 36 of the constitution. She was given the nickname of la Nonna, as she was seen as the grandmother of the nation. Died after having a heart attack due to stress from the Real-estate bubble burst in 2013. | |||||||
– | Alessandro Padalino (born 1977) 47 years |
21th March 2013 | Incumbent | 11 years, 277 days | 2014, 2018, 2022 | PM | |
Became grand council master after a sudden change in the party's leadership in the hours after the death of the former grand council mistress. Rosa Padalino, the daughter of Nicoletta Padalino, was replaced with Alessandro Padalino. |