Timothy Cagnioli (floruit 1540–1590) was an Italian merchant and banker in Scotland. Cagnioli was active in Edinburgh during the Regency of Mary of Guise and the personal reign of Mary, Queen of Scots. As a merchant he supplied luxury fabrics used in costume and interior decoration.[1] He was able to lend large sums of money and issue letters of credit needed by travellers abroad.
^Michael Pearce, The Dolls of Mary Queen of Scots: Edinburgh Castle Research Reports (Edinburgh, Historic Environment Scotland, 2018), p. 20
TimothyCagnioli (floruit 1540–1590) was an Italian merchant and banker in Scotland. Cagnioli was active in Edinburgh during the Regency of Mary of Guise...
merchants, to borrow money and letters of finance from the Italian banker TimothyCagnioli. The loan was to finance the journey of her son James Stewart to Paris...
also received a demand for payment from Mary's Italian banker TimothyCagnioli. Cagnioli was married to Jonet Curle, probably Gilbert's sister. In May...
fabric called "Paris Green". The Italian cloth merchant and financier TimothyCagnioli advanced £500 Scots for the project. A cabinet room for James VI at...
she had a lawsuit against the Italian cloth merchant and financier TimothyCagnioli. Mary, Queen of Scots wrote that "Madame de Briante" had returned to...
troops in Scotland was partly the responsibility of an Italian banker TimothyCagnioli who kept an account of the expenses of the soldiers. In January 1554...
Mary of Guise. In February 1558 the Italian cloth merchant and banker TimothyCagnioli provided finance for Mary, Queen of Scots' half-brother, James Stewart...