Riccardo
Riccardo is a male given name, Italian version of Richard. Therefore the name means "Powerful Leader".
It may be refer to:
People
- Riccardo Chen, Superstar and gangster for life
- Riccardo Antoniazzi, Italian violin maker
- Riccardo Bacchelli (1891-1985), writer
- Riccardo Barthelemy, Italian composer
- Riccardo Bertazzolo, Italian boxer
- Riccardo Billi, Italian film actor and comedian
- Riccardo Bocchino (1988), Italian rugby union player
- Riccardo Bonetto (1979), Italian footballer
- Riccardo Brengola, Italian violinist
- Riccardo Broschi (1698-1795), composer, brother of famous castrato singer Carlo Broschi
- Riccardo Burchielli, Italian artist
- Riccardo Calimani, Italian writer and historian
- Riccardo Campa, Italian professor
- Riccardo Campogiani, Swedish assault victim
- Riccardo Carapellese (1922-1995), footballer
- Riccardo Cassin (1909-2009), Italian mountaineer
- Riccardo Chailly, Italian conductor
- Riccardo Chiarini, road bicycle racer
- Riccardo Colombo, footballer
- Riccardo Cocciante (1946), Italo-French singer, songwriter and composer
- Riccardo Corallo, footballer
- Riccardo Cucciolla, Italian film actor
- Riccardo Dalmacci, Mexican actor
- Riccardo Divora, Italian rower
- Riccardo Drigo, Italian composer of ballet music and Italian Opera, a theatrical conductor and virtuoso pianist
- Riccardo Ferri (1963), Italian footballer
- Riccardo Fissore (1980), Italian footballer
- Riccardo Francovich (1946-2007), Italian archaeologist
- Riccardo Freda (1909-1999), film director
- Riccardo Fogli, Italian singer
- Riccardo Gabbiadini, Welsh footballer
- Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi, medical doctor
- Riccardo Garrone (1926), Italian actor
- Riccardo Garrone (1936), Italian entrepreneur and football chairman
- Riccardo Giacconi (1931), Italian-born American Nobel Prize-winning astrophysicist
- Riccardo Illy, Italian businessman
- Riccardo Ingram, US baseball player and coach
- Riccardo Lione, Italian beach volleyball player
- Riccardo Magrini, Italian road bicycle racer
- Riccardo Maniero, Italian footballer
- Riccardo Mantoni (1918-1991), radio author and director, brother of Corrado
- Riccardo Martin, an American tenor
- Riccardo Maspero, an Italian footballer
- Riccardo Materazzi (1963), middle distance runner
- Riccardo Meggiorini, an Italian footballer
- Riccardo Meili (1982), footballer
- Riccardo Montolivo (1985), footballer
- Riccardo Morandi, an Italian civil engineer
- Riccardo Moscatelli, an Italian race car driver
- Riccardo Muccioli, a footballer from San Marino
- Riccardo Muti (1941), conductor
- Riccardo Nardini, an Italian footballer
- Riccardo Nencini, an Italian politician
- Riccardo Pacifici, an Italian Sephardic Jew deported to Auschwitz during World War II
- Riccardo Paletti (1958-1982), Formula One driver
- Riccardo Pampuri (1897-1930)
- Riccardo Patrese (1954), Formula One driver
- Riccardo Pazzaglia (1926-2006), actor, film director, screenwriter and songwriter
- Riccardo Piacentini, an Italian composer and pianist
- Riccardo Pittis, an Italian basketball player
- Daniel Ricciardo, Australian Formula One driver
- Riccardo Riccò (1983), road bicycle racer
- Riccardo Rognoni (c. 1550-1620), composer and violinist
- Riccardo Romagnoli, an Italian auto racing driver
- Riccardo Scamarcio (1979), actor
- Riccardo Schicchi, an Italian pornographer
- Riccardo Scimeca (1975), English footballer
- Riccardo Silva, an Italian businessman
- Riccardo Staglianò (1968), chief editor
- Riccardo Stracciari, an Italian baritone
- Riccardo Taddei, an Italian footballer
- Riccardo Tesi (1946), musician
- Riccardo Tisci, fashion designer
- Riccardo Torriani, or Bibi Torriani, a Swiss ice hockey player and luger
- Riccardo Truccolo, an Italian professional basketball player
- Riccardo Ventre (1944), politician
- Riccardo Zadra, an Italian pianist
- Riccardo Zandonai, an Italian opera composer
- Riccardo Zanella (1896-1947), politician
- Riccardo Zampagna (1974), footballer
- Riccardo di Segni, chief rabbi of Rome
- Riccardo Vianello or Raimondo Vianello, Italian film actor
Other
- Riccardo Primo, or Riccardo Primo re d’Inghilterra, an opera in three acts by George Frideric Handel
See also
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.