Principality of Piombino

The Lordship of Piombino (Signoria di Piombino), and after 1594 the Principality of Piombino (Principato di Piombino), was a small state on the Italian peninsula centred on the town of Piombino and including part of the island of Elba. A vassal of the Kingdom of Naples associated to the State of the Presidios and a territory of the Holy Roman Empire formed from the remnants of the Republic of Pisa, it existed from 1399 to 1805, when it was merged into the Principality of Lucca and Piombino. In 1815 it was absorbed into the Grand Duchy of Tuscany.

Principality of Piombino
Principato di Piombino
1398–1805
Coat of arms of Piombino
Coat of arms
StatusPrincipality
CapitalPiombino
Official languagesLatin, Italian
Religion
Catholicism
GovernmentMonarchy
 1398–1405
Gherardo Appiani
(first lord)
 1777–1801
Antonio II Boncompagni Ludovisi
(last prince)
Historical eraMiddle Ages
 Established
1398
 Raised to principality
1594
 Prince deposed by
    French troops

1799 and 1803
28 March 1801
 Annexed by French-
    controlled Lucca

June 23, 1805
 Granted to Tuscany
1815
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Republic of Pisa
Principality of Lucca and Piombino
Boncompagni’s flag

History

Founding and early history of the Lordship of Piombino (1399-1445)

On February 19, 1399 Gherardo Appiani ceded Pisa and the majority of its territories, which his family had owned since 1392, to the Visconti of Milan for 200,000 florins, reserving the commune of Piombino for himself and his successors; moreover he also took possession of Populonia, Suvereto, Scarlino, Buriano, Abbey of San Pancrazio al Fango and the islands of Pianosa, Montecristo, and Elba; forming a newly established state, the Lordship of Piombino.[1]

Gherardo had his residence built in Piombino in the small square (now Piazza Bovio) and on his death, in 1405, he left the state to his son Iacopo II. The latter, born in 1400, for the first years was under the tutelage of his mother, Donna Paola Colonna. During the years of regency and afterwards, the politics of the Appiani family were oriented first towards an alliance (obtaining protection with a deed of pardon) with the Republic of Florence, then that of Siena, and finally again with Florence.[1]

Orsini rule and Appiani restoration (1445 - 1501)

When Paola Colonna Appiano died in 1445, the Appiani heir to the lordship Emanuele, son of Gherardo, was forcibly disinherited by his brother-in-law Rinaldo Orsini.

In 1447, Orsini erected a ravelin to better defend Piombino, in anticipation of Emanuele Appiani attempting to re-take the lordship. Allying with Alfonso V, King of Aragon and Naples, Emanuele besieged Piombino in 1448, also obtaining Sienese and Florentine help. After four months of useless attempts the siege was abandoned and Rinaldo Orsini ruled the lordship until his death from the plague in 1450.[2]

After Rinaldo Orsini's wife Caterina Appiani died in 1451, the Council of Elders of Piombino proclaimed the disinherited Emanuele Appiani as lord.

Emanuele was succeeded as Lord of Piombino by Iacopo III, who became a patron of Andrea Guardi, a Florentine architect and sculptor. Between 1465 and 1470 many works were carried out which changed the appearance of the city.[2]

Warfare and contested rule (1501-1594)

Residence of the lords from 1399 to 1465,

Iacopo III was succeeded by his son Iacopo IV who, between 1501 and 1503, lost the lordship to the work of Cesare Borgia, who occupied Piombino. In 1502, Cesare's father Pope Alexander VI visited the city and the territory staying for some days.[3]

With the death of Pope Alexander VI, Cesare Borgia was deprived of the conquered power, and Piombino returned to Iacopo IV: the latter, advised by the Florentines, hosted Niccolò Machiavelli as an adviser, who invited Leonardo da Vinci to study the city defenses.

Iacopo IV was succeeded by Iacopo V, who welcomed famous artists into his court, such as Il Sodoma and Rosso Fiorentino. On his death he was succeeded by Iacopo VI, under the tutelage of his mother Elena Salviati.

In 1548, Iacopo VI was deposed as Lord of Piombino, which was incorporated into the territories of the House of Medici. In 1557 Cosimo I de' Medici, future Grand Duke of Tuscany, gave up Piombino, in exchange for Siena and Portoferraio and Iacopo VI Appiani was restored to the lordship.[4]

Iacopo VI was succeeded by his natural son Alessandro Appiani. Alessandro, a dissolute man, attracted the disapproval of the most influential families of the island, who conspired against him and successfully assassinated him in an ambush in via Malpertugio in 1590. After the death of Alessandro, Spanish military commander Felix d'Aragona was invited to govern Piombino in the name of Alessandro's heir Iacopo VII Appiani.[4]

Elevation to Principality and fall of the Appiani (1594-1634)

In 1594, the Lordship of Piombino was raised to the status of principality by Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II with Iacopo VII becoming the first Prince of Piombino.

The succession to the principality was disputed between relatives of the childless Iacopo VII after his death in 1603, with the sister of Iacopo VII, Isabella Appiani, eventually prevailing. In 1628, Isabella was deposed by a revolt fueled by both Spain and the Medici and Piombino was directly occupied by the Spanish.[5]

Later history

Boncompagni's coat of arms

In 1634, despite the protests of the Appiani cadet line, Piombino was assigned to Prince Niccolò Ludovisi, son-in-law of Isabella Appiani: these and his heirs, politically linked to Philip IV of Spain, paid little attention to the principality which, from 1646 to 1650, was even occupied by the French by order of Cardinal Mazarin.

In 1708, due to the extinction of the Ludovisi family, the government of Piombino was assumed by the Boncompagni family: it was the period of the Boncompagni-Ludovisi, who neglected the state, leaving it to be conquered, in the years of the wars of succession, by the French, Spaniards and Neapolitans. The princes, who were also Dukes of Sora and Arce and Grandee of Spain, resided in Rome or in Isola del Liri and rarely visited the principality. After the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, the situation calmed down and the princes, given their remoteness, left the local magistrates, primarily the Council of the Elders, to administer the state in their name.[6]

From 1799 the French invasions resumed (which formed a short republic), but the English and the Neapolitans kept the island of Elba. After the Battle of Marengo and the defeat of the Kingdom of Naples, the Napoleonic troops annexed Piombino to France. At the behest of Napoleon I, on June 23, 1805, the Principality of Lucca and Piombino was created, assigned to his sister Elisa Bonaparte and her husband Felice Pasquale Baciocchi.[7]

The princely title was restored in 1815 for Boncompagni family, but without a sovereign State. In 1928-1935 Prince Francesco Boncompagni Ludovisi was Governor of Rome.

List of rulers

Coat of arms of the Appiani family, the founders and longest rulers of the Principality.
Variant of the Appiano coat of arms used by Iacopo III his successors as descendants of Alfonso I of Naples[8]

References

  1. Cappelletti, Licurgo (1897). Storia della Città di Piombino (in Italian). Forni Editore. p. 35.
  2. Carrara, Mauro. Signori e Principi di Piombino (in Italian). Bandecchi & Vivaldi.
  3. Il potere e la memoria. Piombino Stato e città nell'età moderna (in Italian). EDIFIR. p. 18. ISBN 8879700243.
  4. Carrara, Mauro (1996). Signori e Principi di Piombino (in Italian). Bandecchi & Vivaldi. pp. 22–23.
  5. Cappelletti, Licurgo. Storia della Città di Piombino. Forni Editore. p. 82.
  6. "BONCOMPAGNI e BONCOMPAGNI-LUDOVISI in "Enciclopedia Italiana"". www.treccani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  7. "Piombino ed Elba, principato di in "Dizionario di Storia"". www.treccani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  8. Carrara, Mauro. Araldica Piombinese (Tre) (in Italian).
  • Abulafia, David (2010). "The Mouse and the Elephant: Relations between the Kings of Naples and the Lordship of Piombino in the Fifteenth Century". In Paton, Bernadette; Law, John Easton (eds.). Communes and Despots in Medieval and Renaissance Italy. Ashgate. pp. 145–60.
  • Berte-Langereau, Jack (1955). "L'Espagne et le royaume d'Etrurie". Hispania. 15 (60): 353–460.
  • Romero García, Eladi (1986). "El señorío de Piombino: Un ejemplo de influencia institucional hispánica en la Italia del siglo XVI". Hispania. 46 (164): 503–18.
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