Godfathers of the Renaissance - A Study of the Medici Family

Italian – Mrs. Lisciandro

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Between 1300 and 1600 the Western world was transformed.
An extraordinary wave of artistic and cultural innovation shattered medieval society and brought European culture reluctantly into the modern era.
This was the Renaissance.
In art…
Artists discovered how to paint in three dimensions, bringing new life and realism to their subjects. Breaking away from the religious traditions of the medieval world, they created entirely new genres of art, rich in drama and emotion. Radical new techniques were invented, like painting with oils, and perspective. Artists such as Botticelli, Gozzoli, Michelangelo, Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello and Ghiberti transformed the way we saw our world.
In architecture and science…
Buildings were constructed that were bigger and better than ever before. Taking inspiration from the classical past, new rules were invented governing proportion and perspective. Magnificent temples to wealth were designed across Florence and the largest dome in the world was built by Filippo Brunelleschi, the brilliant engineer.
Men no longer accepted at face value the teachings of the Church. Now they wanted to study the natural world, to discover for themselves the secrets of the universe. Leonardo da Vinci pioneered the study of human anatomy and Galileo Galilei rocked the Catholic establishment by announcing that the Earth revolved around the Sun.
In politics…
Liberated from the exclusive grasp of the Catholic Church, education filtered down to the upwardly mobile middle classes. Ancient texts, unread for more than 1,000-years, were devoured and debated. With the invention of printing, ideas swept across Europe faster than ever before, and thinkers and writers shared their opinions with the general public. Vasari recorded the lives of artists and the contribution of the Medici, in a precursor of today's PR.
Machiavelli, the Godfather of Realpolitik, wrote the first modern manual for leadership, “The Prince”, visualizing a pragmatic world in which the end always justified the means.
Throughout Italy, republics and duchies blossomed under the glow of creative achievement. Around Europe, kings and princes turned their sights on the jewels of Italy and an era of total war was soon unleashed.
In religion…
In this new world of communication and debate, the corruption and decadence of the Catholic Church was almost intolerable. Martin Luther becomes the first heretic to publish his theories worldwide. This German monk shattered centuries of reverence and assumption, paved the way for a revolution in faith and forever divided the Christian world prompting the Counter-Reformation.
People still argue about what the Renaisssance meant, when it began and if it even existed. What is undeniable is that something extraordinary happened at the heart of the last millennium. It changed the face of western culture and left no doubt that the Medici were the patrons, the catalyst of genius.

La Famiglia Medici:

The Medici created a lucrative partnership with another medieval power, the Catholic Church. In what had to be one of the most ingenious enterprises of all time, the Medici bank collected 10% of your earnings for the Church. If you couldn't pay, you faced excommunication - a one-way ticket to hell.
The Pope himself had a massive overdraft, and the Medici bank became the most profitable business in Europe. By 1434, half the bank's revenue came from the Rome “branch”, which was in fact little more than a mobile bank that followed the Pope around the world.
Papal connections gave the Medici bank immense power, soon everyone wanted an account with the Pope's personal bank. On one occasion the nomination of a new bishop was “delayed”, until his father - a Cardinal - had repaid their debts to the Medici bank.
And the Medici kept ahead of their banking rivals because of the invention of limited liability. Giovanni di Bicci had set up a franchise system, where regional branch managers shared a stake in the business. Giovanni also banned loans to princes and kings, who were notoriously bad investments.
Consequentially, the Medici business remained in the black while its competitors lost fortunes.

In many societies there is nothing more humiliating than to receive a brutta figura - a loss of face in society.
The fear of public humiliation informs every choice, every argument, every decision - in 15th century Italy.
During the Medici's feud with the Albizzi in the 1430s, rumors were spread by a poet called Filelfo, a ‘friend’ of the Albizzi family. Filelfo claimed Cosimo was a traitor and a cheat. Filelfo's words were instrumental in turning the government against the leader of the Medici. When Cosimo returned to power, Filelfo was terrified, but unlike his friends he was allowed to escape with his life.
But one day, down a dark alley, a different kind of justice caught up with him. Filelfo was attacked by a group of men, armed with a blade. When they had finished with him, Filelfo had a fresh wound, stretching right across his face, from ear to ear - a loss of face indeed.
Che brutta figura! - humiliation as revenge.

The Medici were well-known for their personal as well as professional dalliances.
When Cosimo il Vecchio was a young man, he was given a slave girl. Despite his marriage he continued to live with her, away from his family. Their bastard son, Carlo, sought his fortune in Spain and became a wealthy man in Barcelona.
Lorenzo's brother, Giuliano de'Medici, famously impregnated his mistress before his brutal murder in 1478. Their child, Giulio de'Medici, was later crowned Pope Clement VII.
Clement took a black slave girl as a mistress. Their child, Allessandro, became the first black head of state when he was made Duke of Florence in 1530. But he met a sticky end - stabbed to death by his own cousin after an argument over a woman.
Pope Leo X had more exotic tastes. Famed for his extravagant lifestyle, he was entertained by young boys leaping naked from cakes. When the new Pope entered Florence in triumph, he had a young boy painted gold, from head to toe, who paraded through the streets. It was pure propaganda, implying the return of a golden age under the rule of the Medici. The boy died shortly afterwards, poisoned by the gold paint on his skin but the papal celebrations went on for days.

And Catherine de'Medici, Queen of France, made sure she was informed of the intrigues at court by expressly employing a group of pretty young women to engage in pillow talk with gullible male courtiers.

The Medici weren't the only famous family of the Italian Renaisssance.
Their fame stemmed as much from their longevity as from their achievements. Their rivals burned just as bright - they just didn't last as long.
Albizzi
The Albizzi were one of the oldest families in Florence and led the republican government for two generations. By 1427, they were the most powerful family in the city, and far richer than the Medici. They had been the patrons of genius and cultural icons, but the family was more interested in waging war than sustaining commercial viability. By 1430, their military policy had cost the Florentine taxpayer a fortune and much of their support. Pragmatic pacifists marshaled around Cosimo de'Medici.
Maso degli Albizzi, patriachof his family, had two sons, Luca and Rinaldo. From a young age, Luca was friends with Cosimo de'Medici. They shared a passion for classical learning and good conversation. During the 1420s, Luca declared his public allegiance to the Medici family, even marrying Cosimo's cousin. For his hot-headed brother Rinaldo, this was a humiliation too far. The bitter family rivalry had just got personal.
Rinaldo's impatience got the better of him. Eager to flush Cosimo out of Florence, he allowed the head of the Medici family to stay alive, gathering support whilst in exile. And Rinaldo's rash decision to besiege the Palazzo Vecchio when he didn't get his way allowed Cosimo to return triumphant. The Albizzi were banished, never to return to power in Florence.
Pazzi
Like the Albizzi, the Pazzi were an older, nobler lineage than the Medici. They could trace their ancestry back to Pazzino de'Pazzi, the first knight to scale the wall of Jerusalem during the First Crusade. The Pazzi were also wealthy bankers, and enjoyed good commercial terms with their Medici rivals. They even sealed these friendly relations through inter-marriage.
But Lorenzo de'Medici, wary of Pazzi ambition, kept his rivals out of government office during the 1470s. When a greedy nephew of Pope Sixtus IV approached the younger Pazzi with a plan to seize Medici land, they found the chance for power in Florence irresistible. The ambitious sons of Jacopo de'Pazzi led an audacious plot against the Medici.
The plot failed. Executed at the hands of furious Florentines, the name of Pazzi was erased from the city, their homes looted and destroyed. One conspirator was hunted down in the streets of Constantinople, and handed over by the Ottoman Emperor. Even he knew that Lorenzo de'Medici was not to be messed with.
Perhaps by coincidence, the Italian noun for a hot-headed fool is pazzo - and some have suggested that the Italian-American slang, patsy, meaning a scapegoat or stooge, is derived from the unfortunate Pazzi assassins.
Borgia
Their name has become a byword for murder and incest, making the Borgia the most notorious family in Renaissance Italy. They were not friends of the Medici.
Rodrigo Borgia, the corrupt Pope Alexander VI, had at least two illegitimate children. His sociopath son, Cesare, was born just a year after Giovanni de'Medici, in 1476. Cesare was made a cardinal in 1493 and his presence in Rome under the rule of his father made the city off-limits to the Medici cousins.
Cesare marched through Rome with weapons barely hidden under his silk robes, taking pot-shots at prisoners and murdering close relations. Rumored to have committed incest with his beautiful sister, Lucrezia, he stabbed her lover to death at the feet of the Pope, and strangled her second husband, who was only 18-years-old. After his father's death, Cesare was exiled to Spain, where he died in 1507. Lucrezia went on to patronize some of the greatest talents of the High Renaissance, including the poet Ariosto, and the artist Titian.

In medieval Italy, life was cheap.
The most infamous Renaissance murder was the assault on Giuliano and Lorenzo de'Medici. Giuliano was murdered in Florence Cathedral, in front of an audience of 10,000, on Easter Sunday. The Pazzi family believed a public assassination would proclaim their undisputed power over Florence, and strike fear into the friends of the Medici. Giuliano's assassins stabbed with such frenzy that one wounded himself in the leg by mistake. But the man assigned to kill Lorenzo hesitated a fraction too long and Lorenzo escaped with a minor neck wound.
Lorenzo survived and the Pazzi were doomed. Strung up by the people of Florence, they were flung from the windows of the Palazzo Vecchio and left to swing in the hot Tuscan sun. Stripped and beaten, their naked bodies the ultimate brutte figure, the dying Archbishop of Florence famously sank his teeth into the thigh of Francesco de'Pazzi, his co-conspirator. Another's decomposing corpse was ripped from its grave and dragged through the streets of Florence, even propped against the doors of the PazziPalace - the fetid head used as a door knocker.
Savonarola's execution in 1498 was as spectacular as the Bonfires of the Vanities. Tortured and bound in chains, he was burned at the stake until his legs and arms began to drop off. Those body parts still clinging to the chains were knocked off by a stone-throwing mob, who cheered as the executioner swept all remaining flesh into the fire.
In 1516, a group of discontented cardinals conspired to commit the ultimate crime - the assassination of the Pope. It was common knowledge that Leo X suffered from a hideous anal fistula, which had to be treated every few days. The cardinals conspired to poison his bandages - killing him from the bottom up.
But the conspiracy was discovered and the obese Pope was furious. A Muslim hangman was dispatched to kill off one Cardinal in his cell; others were dragged by horses through the streets of Rome, their flesh gouged by red-hot pincers.
Poor Isabella de'Medici, daughter of Cosimo I, met a very messy end. Trapped in a loveless marriage to Paolo Giordano Orsini, who humiliated her with his mistress, Vittoria, Isabella made the mistake of taking a lover. When her violent husband found out, he garroted her at the dinner table - whilst pretending to kiss her - and promptly married his mistress.

The city of Florence, capital of Tuscany, nestles in the Arno valley some 50 miles from the Mediterranean. Founded by the Romans, by the year 1400 the city was a vibrant trading centre and headquarters of an international banking network.
Florentine families principally made their fortunes from wool and silk. But the chief guilds of the city also represented every other conceivable business - from lawyers and goldsmiths, to spice merchants, poets and craftsmen. The guilds formed the basis for popular government, the Signoria. Florence was one of the few republics in the world run by the people, for the people.
At this time, the population exceeded 50,000 - only London and Constantinople were larger. In a city run by powerful families, rivalries were inevitable.
For administrative purposes, Florence was split into four quarters - Santo Spirito, Santa Croce, San Giovanni, and Santa Maria Novella. But to residents of these neighborhoods, the name was more than just a zip code. Families like the Medici became powerful in their district and their networks and influence pitted neighbor against neighbor. The Medici ran the district of San Giovanni. Their deadly rivals, the Pazzi, controlled downtown Santa Croce.
Those civic rivalries survive to this day and spill over in the traditional feast of St. John, held every year in Florence on June 21. The city grinds to a halt as costumed teams from each quarter parade through the streets and gather in Piazza Santa Croce, for a traditional calcio tournament.

Florence in 1400 was extremely unusual. With no king, prince or duke, the city was an independent republic, run by the people, for the people
It was not a perfect democracy but it worked and was responsible for creating a group of strong families, dynasties who would end up fighting for control of this thriving city.
The city's four quarters nominated two Priori to sit on the council, or Signoria. They were joined by elected members of the city guilds, which were divided into major and minor:

  • Major guilds: Lawyers, Cloth merchants; Wool merchants; Silk Merchants; Bankers; Furriers; Doctors, apothecaries and Spice merchants
  • Minor guilds: Butchers; Bakers; Amorers; Vintners; Tanners; Masons; Carpenters; Innkeepers; Cooks; Locksmiths; Leather workers

Every few months, a new head of state, or Gonfaloniere, was elected from the eight priori (made up of two from the quarters, and six from the guilds) who together formed the Signoria. Theoretically, Florence's leader could be anyone, from a lawyer to a butcher.
Practically, the position was usually filled by a senior member of a major family. In 1402, Giovanni de'Medici was elected Prior for the wool merchants guild, and in 1421, he was elected Gonfaloniere. It was a sign that the Medici had truly arrived.
Laws were formed by a two-house legislature; the upper house, the consiglione del commune, elected from the quarters, and the lower house, the consiglio del popolo, elected from the guilds. In times of crisis, a Parlamento was called, consisting of all male citizens over the age of 14. They would be asked to approve the creation of a balia, an emergency committee.
In 1382, the Republic was rocked by the revolt of the Ciompi, the ordinary cloth workers of Florence. Demanding their own representation, they ran riot, led by Salvestro de'Medici, a cousin of Giovanni. Although the revolt was brutally crushed, the Medici earned a reputation for workers' support, which they found hard to shake off. Their new reputation only fuelled the suspicion and envy of their rivals.
Clearly, the Florentine system of government was not perfect democracy. More than 75% of the population had no say over who governed their city. The Florentine system did encourage an oligarchy of rival families to attain positions of power, proving critical to the development of an enterprising, peace-loving city, and fueling the competition which lay behind much of the Renaisssance.
By 1537, the Republic had all but disappeared. Successive leaders had streamlined the system of government, while continual war weakened the city's finances and undermined its political independence. By the time Cosimo I was “elected” Duke of Florence ( a sign in itself that the days of Republic were over) the writing was on the wall.
Cosimo's first act was to abolish the Signoria, turning the city of Florence and its territories into a fully fledged kingdom, ruled by a royal Medici dynasty.