Giovanni dalle Bande Nere
Lodovico de Medici | |
---|---|
Portrait of Giovanni by Gian Paolo Pace. | |
Spouse(s) | Maria Salviati |
Issue | |
Noble family | Medici |
Father | Giovanni de' Medici il Popolano |
Mother | Caterina Sforza |
Born |
Forlì | 5 April 1498
Died |
30 November 1526 28) (DOW) Mantua, Duchy of Mantua | (aged
Lodovico de Medici also known as Giovanni dalle Bande Nere (5 April 1498 – 30 November 1526) was an Italian condottiero.
Biography
Giovanni was born in the Northern Italian town of Forlì to Giovanni de' Medici (also known as il Popolano) and Caterina Sforza, one of the most famous women of the Italian Renaissance.
From an early age, he demonstrated great interest and ability in physical activity, especially the martial arts of the age: horse riding, sword-fighting, etc. He committed his first murder at the age of 12, and was twice banished from the city of Florence for his unruly behavior, including involvement in the rape of a sixteen-year-old boy, Giovanni being about thirteen at the time.[1] He had a son, Cosimo (1519–1574), who went on to become the Grand Duke of Tuscany.
Giovanni became a condottiero, or mercenary military captain, in the employ of Pope Leo X (Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici) and on March 5, 1516 led the war against Francesco Maria I della Rovere, Duke of Urbino. He thenceforth formed a company of his own, mounted on light horses and specializing in fast but devastating skirmishing tactics and ambushes. In 1520 he defeated several rebel barons in the Marche. The following year Leo X allied with Emperor Charles V against King Francis I of France to regain Milan, Parma and Piacenza; Giovanni was called in under the command of Prospero Colonna, defeating the French at Vaprio d'Adda in November.
As a symbol of mourning for the death of Pope Leo X (December 1, 1521), Giovanni added black stripes to his insignia, whence comes his nickname, Giovanni dalle Bande Nere (or Giovanni of the Black Bands). In August 1523 he was hired by the Imperial army, and in January 1524 he defeated the French and the Swiss at Caprino Bergamasco. In the same year another Medici, Giulio di Giuliano, became Pope, and took the name of Clement VII. The new Pope paid all of Giovanni's debt, but in exchange ordered him to switch to the French side of the ongoing conflict. He did not take part in the battle of Pavia, but was soon severely wounded in a skirmish and later had to move to Venice to recuperate from his wounds.
In 1526 the War of the League of Cognac broke out. The League's captain general, Francesco Maria I della Rovere, abandoned Milan in the face of the overwhelming superiority of the Imperial army led by Georg von Frundsberg. Giovanni was able to defeat the Landsknechts rearguard at the confluence of the Mincio with the Po River.
Death
On the evening of November 25 he was hit by a shot from a falconet in a battle near Governolo.[2] According to a contemporary account[3] by Luigi Guicciardini, the ball shattered his right leg above the knee[2] and he had to be carried to San Nicolò Po, near Bagnolo San Vito, where no doctor could be found. He was taken to Aloisio Gonzaga's palace, marquis of Castel Goffredo, in Mantua, where the surgeon Abramo, who had cared for him two years earlier, amputated his leg. To perform the operation Abramo asked for 10 men to hold down the stricken condottiero.
Pietro Aretino, eyewitness to the event, recalled in a letter to Francesco Albizi:
'Not even twenty' Giovanni said smiling 'could hold me', and he took a candle in his hand, so that he could make light onto himself, I ran away, and shutting my ears I heard only two voices, and then calling, and when I reached him he told me: 'I am healed', and turning all around he greatly rejoiced.
Despite the surgery Giovanni de' Medici died five days later, supposedly of septicemia, on 30 November 1526.
Giovanni's body was exhumed in 2012 along with that of his wife to preserve the remains, which were damaged in the 1966 flood of the Arno river, and to ascertain the cause of his death.[2] Preliminary investigation revealed that his leg was amputated below the knee. No damage was found to the thigh, where the shot supposedly hit. The tibia and fibula, the bones of the lower leg, were found sawed off from the amputation. There was no damage to the femur.[4] It is now thought that de' Medici may have died of gangrene.[5]
Legacy
Giovanni's premature death metaphorically signaled the end of the age of the condottieri, as their mode of fighting (which emphasized armored knights on horseback) was rendered practically obsolete by the introduction of the mobile field cannon. He is therefore known as the last of the great Italian condottieri. His lasting reputation has been kept alive in part thanks to Pietro Aretino, the Renaissance author, satirist, playwright and "scourge of the princes", who was Giovanni's close friend and accompanied him on some of his exploits.
Ancestors
Giovanni dalle Bande Nere (Lodovico de' Medici) |
Mother: Caterina Sforza Countess of Forlì |
Father: Giovanni il Popolano |
Paternal Grandfather: Pierfrancesco the Elder |
Paternal Great-grandfather: Lorenzo the Elder () Medici Popolani line |
Paternal Great-great-grandfather: Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici Founder of the Medici |
Descendants
Lodovico de' Medici Giovanni dalle Bande Nere |
Son: Cosimo I de' Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany |
Grandson: Francesco I de' Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany |
Great-granddaughter: Marie de' Medici Queen of France |
Great-Great-granddaughter: Henrietta Maria of France Queen of England |
Later references
- A cruiser of the Regia Marina was named after Giovanni delle Bande Nere in 1930.
- Ermanno Olmi's 2001 film The Profession of Arms, faithfully follows Giovanni dalle Bande Nere in his last week of life, as he engages in battle with the Imperial forces amidst the cold, damp fields of the Lombard countryside.
See also
References
- ↑ Rocke, Michael, Forbidden Friendships: Homosexuality and Male Culture in Renaissance Florence. New York, Oxford University Press, 1996, p. 229
- 1 2 3 "Riesumato Giovanni dalle Bande Nere" (in Italian). Pisa: Università di Pisa. 27 November 2012. Retrieved 2 December 2012.
- ↑ Luigi Guicciardini, Il Sacco di Roma (Paris, 1664). In this edition the author's name is given simply as 'Guicciardini'; hence the attribution to Francesco Guicciardini in previous versions of this article. Luigi (1478–1551), a distinguished Florentine magistrate and political philosopher, was Francesco's brother.
- ↑ Pappas, Stephanie (21 November 2012). "Tomb of Renaissance Warrior Reveals Mystery Amputation". livescience.com. Retrieved 2 December 2012.
- ↑ "Famed Warrior Medici Died From Gangrene". News Discovery.