Amborgio de Franchi was a Genoese slaveholder and merchant active during the early fifteenth century. He was born Antonio de Pagana and assumed the Franchi surname after entering into their albergo in 1393.
Ambrogio Ardimento was a merchant active in the early fifteenth century who entered into the Scipionibus albergo in 1418 and occasionally assumed their surname.
The slaveholder named Benedetto Fieschi, identified as the count of Lavagna, leases out an enslaved Tatar woman named Maddalena, who is approximately 26 years of age, to a notary named Giacomo de Camulio, for a term of five years and total price of 26 Genoese lire. The payment is made in money of account from accounts held with the banker Percivale Vivaldi.
The slaveholder from Verona named Aloisio de Maffeis manumits an enslaved Tatar woman named Lucia, who is approximately 20 years of age. The enslaved Lucia agrees to serve in the household of Sebastiano di Negro for a term of 10 years as a condition of manumission. The contract was extracted.
The woolworker named Giovanni de Monleone, on behalf of himself and deceased son Damiano, manumits and liberates a certain Tommaso de Famagusta. The contract notes that Tommaso had been brought to Genoa from Famagusta by Damiano and subsequently served in their household, but was never lawfully enslaved. The rationale for the manumission is for the services provided by Tomasso and formal recognition of his freeborn status. The contract was extracted.