[1] Jerome (Girolamo) Frescobaldi supplied luxury goods to the court of James IV of Scotland, and some textiles for the coronation of Henry VII of England in 1485.
The chronicle writer Edward Hall noted that Leonardo Frescobaldi and Antonio Cavilari supplied cloth of gold and silks to the court.
[8] Leonardo Frescobaldi stood as a guarantor with John (Giovanni) Cavalcanti for the Florentine artist Pietro Torrigiano when he was contracted to make the tomb of Margaret Beaufort in 1511.
[17] In 1513, Leonardo Frescobaldi was given an annuity or pension by Henry VIII as a vendor of cloth of gold and silver, and he was made an usher of the king's chamber,[18] with an income of 50 marks.
[22] The Frescobaldi company undertook to convey money from Henry VIII to Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor in 1516, according to Edward Hall, in partnership with "Anthony Caveler of Genoa".