Renaissance Papacy during 15th and early 16th C.

 

POPES: Martin V Colonna Roman noble 1420 enters Rome as first Pope after Schism
                            Florentine connection: Cosimo di Medici as papal banker

Eugenius IV 1434 Roman uprising led by Colonna; takes refuge in Florence under Cosimo;
              appoints Cardinal Giovanni Vitelleschi as Governor of Papal States:
                        ruthless condottiere, suppresses Roman nobility in Latium (Lazio)
              presides over Council of Ferrara/Florence 1438-9; Eastern (Greek)
              Emperor John Palaeologus & Orthodox Patriarch seek aid against Turks

NICHOLAS V 1447-55 first Pope after Schism to hold power unopposed;
                        refortification of Castel Sant'Angelo: strengthens fort's defenses
                            building extended bastions, towers; also papal apartment on top
                        1st humanist Pope: studied Greek in Florence; manuscript collector;
                           Cosimo consults with him on organization of library of San Marco
                        begins Vatican Library: hires scribes to copy all known Latin and
                             Greek book manuscripts, available to humanist scholars                   

                        building program for city of Rome inspired by Flavio Biondi

Florentine Humanists in Rome: Leonardo Bruni Aretino: Papal secretary 1406-1427

            Poggio Bracciolini (1380-1459) studies Latin as part of Salutati's circle
              1403 papal secretary; goes to Constance for council, manuscripts
              1430-40 writes De varietate fortunae (On the vagaries of fortune)
                                    Maxim: "Quanto fuit Roma ruina ipsa docet." 
                                                 ("The ruins themselves show how great Rome was." )
              Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1780's:
                         last chapter: Poggio & Eugenius IV on ruins of Capitoline
              1452 back to Florence as Chancellor (same office as Salutati, Bruni)

            Flavio Biondi: employed as humanist scholar at papal court 1433-1463

                         1444-46 Roma Instaurata (Rome Restored) dedicated to Eugenius IV
                                       urges Pope to rebuild city of Rome; ancient literary texts

                                       used to reconstruct ancient Roman archeology & topography

 

Callixtus III (1455-1459)  first Borgia Pope (Valencia, Spain)
                     makes two nephews Cardinals including Rodrigo Borgia (Alexander VI)

Pius II (1458-1464) Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini (Siena, Pienza) 
           humanist and conciliarist at Council of Basel
           Memoirs of a Renaissance Pope (account of his own election, trading votes in the “privy”)
           1460 Execrabilis: condemns conciliar theory as heretical: “Forget Aeneas, follow Pius.”
          
effort to launch a Crusade (dies in Ancona 1464)
           Pinturrichio paintings in Siena Duomo Piccolomini Library          


Sixtus
IV (1471-1480) Francesco della Rovere (uncle of Julius II, below)
      builds Sistine Chapel in Vatican Palace; nepotism (promotes relatives)
      1478 role in Pazzi Conspiracy against Lorenzo and Giuliano dei Medici
      Vatican fresco 1477 (transferred to canvas):
      Melozzo da Forli, Sixtus IV installing Platina as Vatican librarian with four nephews:  from left --
           Giovanni della Rovere, made Signore of Senigallia (in red)
                  married to daughter of Federico di Montefeltro Duke of Urbino
           Girolamo Riario, made Count of Imola and Forli, assassinated 1488 (married to Catherina Sforza)
           Giulano della Rovere Cardinal di San Pietro in Vincula (later Julius II below)
           Raffaele Riario, Cardinal of San Giorgio and favorite of Sixtus IV


Innocent
VIII (1480-1492) Giovanni Battista Cibo (Venetian)  financial corruption, indulgence sales;
      first Pope to publicly recognize children while Pope (recognizes only two out of 8 or more)
      marries his illegitimate son to daughter of Lorenzo de’ Medici; appoints Giovanni as Cardinal age 13
      1484  Papal bull on persecution of witches in Germany (Summis desiderantes affectibus)
      1489 return of the spear of Longinus from Holy Land through a deal with the Turkish Sultan

 

 Alexander VI Rodrigo Borgia (1492-1503) Spaniard, from Valencia
             mistress before elected Pope:  
Vannozza dei Cattanei (inn keeper in Campo dei Fiori)
                  3 or 4 children: sons:  Juan, murdered in Rome, perhaps with collaboration of brother
                                                      Cesare Borgia (Duke Valentino) head of papal armies
                                                         = Machiavelli's hero: man of action, hope to unify Italy

                   daughter Lucrezia Borgia married in ceremony in Vatican to Este Duke of Ferrara
             after elected, mistress Jiulia Farnese, officially married to an Orsini
            Johannes Burchardus, Diary from court of Alexander VI: recounts Borgia family life

 

Julius II della Rovere (1503-1513)  fortress at Ostia
     "warrior Pope," personally directs Papal troops in battle: marches on Perugia
      conquest of Bologna; expands boundaries of Papal States; siege of Mirandola
            Erasmus' pacifistic treatise: (from Julius Exclusus Heaven)
    patron of Michelangeol (Julius’ tomb, Sistine ceiling), plans to rebuild St. Peters basicila

 

Leo X Medici (1513-1521) Giovanni, son of Lorenzo de’ Medici, made Cardinal at age 13
      election demonstrates restored Medici power;alliance of Popes & Florence strengthened

      patron of Raphael, 1517 Conspiracy of Cardinals to assassinate the Pope

 

Hadrian VI (1522-23)
      Dutch Pope; last non-ltalian pope until 20th C. Polish Pope, John Paul II

 

Clement VII Medici (1523-34) illegitimate son of Giuliano de’ Medici (assassinated 1478)
            prisoner during Sack of Rome (1527)

            by the German troops of Emperor Charles V Hapsburg

 

Paul III (1534-1549) Alessandro Farnese, old Roman family, builds Palazzo Farnese (off Campo dei Fiori)
              brother of Alexander VI’s mistress, Giulia Farnese, made Cardinal by Alexander VI
             finally calls Council of Trent (1543-63) which represents beginning of Counter Reformation