Visconti of Milan

The Visconti of Milan are a noble Italian family. They rose to power in Milan during the Middle Ages where they ruled from 1277 to 1447, initially as Lords then as Dukes, and several collateral branches still exist. The effective founder of the Visconti Lordship of Milan was the Archbishop Ottone, who wrested control of the city from the rival Della Torre family in 1277.[1]

Depiction of the biscione swallowing a child, the coat of arms of the House of Visconti, on the Archbishop's palace in Piazza Duomo in Milan, Italy
Visconti
Vicecomes
Coat of arms of the Visconti of Milan
Etymologyvice: "deputy" - comes: "count"
Place of originMilan
Founded1075 (1075)
FounderAriprando Visconti
Final rulerFilippo Maria Visconti
TitlesLord of Milan (1277–1395)
Duke of Milan (1395–1447)
MottoVipereos mores non violabo
(Latin for "I will not violate the customs of the serpent")
Cadet branchesVisconti di Modrone

Origins

The earliest members of the Visconti lineage appeared in Milan in the second half of the 11th century. The first evidence is on October 5, 1075, when Ariprando Visconti and his son Ottone ("Ariprandus Vicecomes", "Otto Vicecomes filius Ariprandi") attended and signed together some legal documents in Milan.[2] Ariprando Visconti's family is believed to have pre-existed in Milan and obtained the title of viscount, which became hereditary throughout the male descent.[3][4]

In the years following 1075, Ottone Visconti is shown in the proximity of the Salian dynasty's sovereigns, Henry IV and his son Conrad. His death's circumstances confirm the relationship with the imperial family. In 1111 in Rome, Ottone was captured and executed after attempting to defend Henry V from an assault.[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2][7] In the first documents where they appear, Ottone and his offspring declared that they abided by the Lombard law and acted in connection with other Milanese families of the noble upper class (capitanei).[8] A relationship with the Litta, a Milanese vavasour family subordinate to the Visconti in the feudal hierarchy, is also documented.[9][10] These circumstances demonstrate their participation in the Milanese society in the years before 1075 and, ultimately, their Lombard origin.[11]

In 1134, Guido Visconti, son of Ottone, received from the abbot of Saint Gall the investiture of the court of Massino,[12] a strategic location on the hills above Lake Maggiore, near Arona. Here, another family member was present in the second half of the 12th century as the castellan (custos) of the local archiepiscopal fortress.[13] In 1142, King Conrad III confirmed the investiture in a diploma released to Guido in Ulm.[14] Another royal document, issued by Conrad III in 1142 as well, attests to the Visconti's entitlement to the fodrum in Albusciago and Besnate.[15] Based on a document issued in 1157, the Visconti were considered holders of the captaincy of Marliano (today Mariano Comense) since the time of archbishop Landulf;[16] however, the available documentation cannot infer such a conclusion.[17]

A second Ottone, son of Guido, is attested in the documentary sources between 1134 and 1192. The primary role of Ottone in the political life of the Milanese commune emerges in the period of the confrontation with Frederick Barbarossa: his name is the first to be cited, March 1, 1162, in the group of Milanese leaders who surrendered to the emperor after the capitulation of the city that took place in the previous weeks.[18][19] A member of the following generation, Ariprando, was bishop of Vercelli between 1208 and 1213 when he also played the role of Papal legate for Innocent III. An attempt to have him elected archbishop of Milan failed in 1212 amidst growing tensions between opposite factions inside the city. His death in 1213, was probably caused by poisoning.[20]

1 March 1162, Ottone Visconti is the first Milanese appearing in the list of authorities surrendering to the Barbarossa after the capitulation of the city (19th-century engraving)

The family dispersed into several branches, some of which obtained fiefs far off from Milan. Among them, the one that gave origin to the lords and dukes of Milan allegedly descended from Uberto, who died in the first half of the 13th century.[21] The other branches' members frequently added to their surname the name of the place where they chose to live and where a fortification was available for their residence. The first of such cases were the Visconti di Massino, the Visconti di Invorio, and the Visconti di Oleggio Castello.[22] In these localities, a castle (Massino), its remains (Invorio), or a later reconstruction of the initial building (Oleggio Castello) are still visible today.

Lords and Dukes of Milan

The Visconti ruled Milan until the early Renaissance, first as Lords, then, from 1395, with the mighty Gian Galeazzo, who endeavored to unify Northern Italy and Tuscany, as Dukes. Visconti rule in Milan ended with the death of Filippo Maria Visconti in 1447. He was succeeded by a short-lived republic and then by his son-in-law Francesco I Sforza, who established the reign of the House of Sforza.[23][24]

Rise to the lordship

When Frederick II died in 1250, the war engaged by the Lombard League and Milan against him ended. Inside the Milanese commune, united in its defense until then, conflicts between rival factions began. The Della Torre family progressively acquired power in Milan after 1240, when Pagano Della Torre assumed the leadership of the Credenza di Sant'Ambrogio, a political party with a popular base. This position allowed them to have a role in the tax collection of the commune (estimo), which was essential to finance the war against Frederick II while affecting the great landowners. In 1247 Pagano was succeeded by his nephew Martino Della Torre. The commune created for him the new role of Senior of the Credenza (Anziano della Credenza) to underline his authority. In this position, the Della Torre began to clash with the Milanese noble families organized in their political party, the Societas Capitaneorum et Valvassorum, having the Visconti among the most prominent figures. After unrest between the opposite parties, the so-called Sant'Ambrogio Peace was signed in 1258 among the parties, strengthening the position of La Credenza and La Motta (a second political party with popular tendencies).[25][26]

New events in favor of the Della Torre undermined the Sant'Ambrogio Peace. At the end of 1259, Oberto Pallavicino, a former partisan of Frederick II who got closer to the Guelph positions of the Della Torre, was appointed by the Milanese commune for five years as General Captain of the People. His victory in the Battle of Cassano on 16 September 1259 against Ezzelino da Romano, formerly his ally on the Ghibelline side in the war of Frederick II against Milan, enhanced his position in Milan. The nobles expelled from Milan during the clashes preceding the Sant'Ambrogio Peace placed their hopes on Ezzelino to regain their old power in the city.[27][28][29]

A decisive event in the confrontation between the Della Torre and the Visconti factions was the appointment of Ottone Visconti as archbishop of Milan in 1262. Pope Urban IV preferred Ottone to Raimondo, another candidate from the Della Torre family. Prevented from assuming his office and forced by the opposite faction to remain outside the city, Ottone settled in Arona, a town at the Milanese archdiocese's border. At the end of 1263, Della Torre forces, with the support of Oberto Pallavicino, dislodged him from Arona. Ottone sought refuge in central Italy near the pope.[30][28][31]

In 1264, Pallavicino left his office, leaving the Della Torre family members as the sole rulers of Milan. Under the guidance of Filippo Della Torre, brother of Martino and his successor after 1263, the Della Torre party took advantage of the favour of Charles of Anjou. Milan allied with him and other northern Italian cities (Guelph League) to fight the Hohenstaufen rule in southern Italy. Francesco Della Torre led the Milanese expedition, which ended in 1266 with the allied victory against Manfred of Sicily in the Battle of Benevento. Charles of Anjou became the new King of Sicily, having an indirect rule (exercised through the Della Torre) on Milan.[32][28][33]

In 1266, trying to take advantage of the favorable moment, the Della Torre advocated their cause against the Visconti in a consistory held by Pope Clement IV in Viterbo and attended by archbishop Ottone. Despite the presence of a delegate of Charles of Anjou, the pope's decision was in Ottone's favor. The pope then attempted to appease the two factions through an oath of allegiance demanded from the Milanese population. Part of it was the acceptance of Ottone as archbishop. However, new circumstances again changed the events in favor of Della Torre. At the end of 1266, the German princes decided to support Conradin, the last Hohenstaufen member, to recover the domains in southern Italy lost to the Anjou house after the defeat of Benevento. This move again reinstated Della Torre as leader of the Guelph League. Moreover, in 1268, Clement IV died, initiating a period of papal vacancy that left the dispositions in favor of Ottone without practical consequences.[34][35]

After the definitive end of the Hohenstaufen threat (Conradin was defeated and executed in Naples in 1268), the confrontation between the two Milanese factions increasingly assumed a military connotation. A leading figure on the Visconti side was Simone Orelli da Locarno, whose military ability became legendary during the wars against Fredrick II. Notwithstanding this, being in favor of the Visconti, he was arrested in 1263 and jailed in Milan. In 1276, he was freed in the context of a compromise between the two factions about Como, and after he promised not to act against Della Torre. He joined the Visconti army altogether, assuming the role of General Captain. The Visconti forces gained ground in the Lake Maggiore's area, but in the same year, Teobaldo Visconti, nephew of Ottone, was captured with other leading figures. Brought to Gallarate, they were executed by beheading. The Visconti eventually defeated the Della Torre army in the decisive Battle of Desio on 21 January 1277, opening the way for Ottone to enter Milan. Napoleone, son of Pagano, was arrested with other Della Torre family members. He died in jail a few months later. These events are generally considered to mark the foundation of the Visconti lordship of Milan.[34][36][37]

21 January 1277, after the victory obtained against the Della Torre in Desio, Archbishop Ottone Visconti enters Milan (14th-century fresco in the Rocca Borromeo di Angera)

Ottone initially granted power in Milan to Simone Orelli, appointing him Captain of the People. In 1287, he transferred this role to his grandnephew Matteo Visconti (the son of Teobaldo executed in 1276). One year later, Matteo obtained the title of Imperial vicar from the emperor Rudolf of Habsburg. Ottone died in 1295, leaving Matteo as the new Lord of Milan. In 1302, the Della Torre retook power, forcing Matteo to leave the city. In 1311, an intervention of Henry VII appeased the dispute between the two families and restored Matteo's lordship.[38][36][39] After him, seven members of his offspring, along four generations, ruled over Milan and a growing territory in northern and central Italy.

Matteo, Galeazzo, Azzone, Luchino and Giovanni (1311–1354)

The reconciliation agreement with the Della Torre, reached in December 1310 on the initiative of Henry VII, was attended by Matteo, his brother Uberto and their cousin Ludovico, also known as Lodrisio.[40] In the following years, Matteo acted alone as Lord of Milan. He ruled for about eleven years, providing to his family the legal basis for the hereditary lordship over Milan and extending the territory under the Milanese influence against the traditional opponents of the Visconti: the Della Torre and Anjou dynasties allied with the Papacy. After being accused of necromancy and heresy, he was convicted by the Church. Looking for a reconciliation, he transferred the power to his eldest son Galeazzo and left Milan for the Augustinian monastery of Crescenzago, where he died in 1322.[41][42]

After Matteo's death, Galeazzo associated his brothers Marco, Luchino, Stefano, and Giovanni (a cleric) in the inherited domains' controls. He died five years later, succeeded by his son Azzone, who ruled between 1329 and 1339. Stefano married Valentina Doria from Genoa and died in 1327 under unclear circumstances. He left three children: Matteo (Matteo II), Bernabò, and Galeazzo (Galeazzo II). Marco felt in disgrace and was killed by hitmen in 1329. The two brothers' deaths restricted the future successions to Luchino, Giovanni (since 1342 archbishop of Milan), and Stefano's three sons.[43][44]

During Azzone's rule, Lodrisio (the cousin of Matteo, who in 1310 attended the reconciliation with the Della Torre) raised against him, trying to revert the line of succession in favor of his own family. He obtained the support of the Della Scala family of Verona, but in 1339, in the Battle of Parabiago, he was defeated by an army led by Azzone and backed by his uncles Luchino and Giovanni. Azzone died in 1339 without heirs, and the power passed to his uncles Luchino and Giovanni.[45][46] During their rule, the three sons of Stefano were suspected of a conspiracy against Luchino. Threatened by him, they left Milan.[47][48]

After Luchino died in 1349, archbishop Giovanni remained alone in power and recalled his three nephews in Milan. Under his rule, the territorial expansion continued (to Genoa and Bologna) thanks to his diplomacy. Part of his initiatives were the marriages of his nephews to members of the nearby noble dynasties of northern Italy: in 1340, Matteo II to Egidiola Gonzaga; in 1350, Bernabò to Regina Della Scala and Galeazzo II to Bianca of Savoy.[49][50] In 1353, Petrarch accepted an invitation from Giovanni and moved to Milan, where he lived until 1361. He took part in Visconti's diplomatic initiatives and provided first-hand accounts of his life in Milan and Visconti's family events in his letters.[51][52]

Petrarch lived in Milan from 1353 to 1361, providing first-hand accounts from the Visconti court in his letters (portrait by Altichiero da Verona)

Joint lordship of Matteo II, Bernabò, and Galeazzo II (1354–1385)

On 5 October 1354, archbishop Giovanni died. A few days after, Petrarch held a commemorative oration in his honor.[53] In the same month, the three sons of Stefano agreed to share the power, dividing the Visconti domains according to geographic criteria. Matteo II died the following year, and Bernabò and Galeazzo II divided his territory between them. The two brothers settled their courts separately: Bernabò in Milan, Galeazzo II in Pavia.[54][55] Through the marriages of their sons and daughters, Bernabò and Galeazzo II extended the Visconti relationships to several other European noble dynasties.

In 1360, Gian Galeazzo, son of Galeazzo II, married Isabelle of Valois, daughter of King John II of France.[56] The marriage was the result of negotiation, also participated by Petrarch with a journey to Paris,[57] leading the Visconti to contribute 600,000 francs to the ransom paid by France to England to obtain the freedom of the King in an episode of the Hundred Years' War.[58][59] Violante, daughter of Galeazzo II, married in 1368 Lionel of Antwerp Duke of Clarence, the third son of King Edward III of England. After her husband's death, only a few months after the marriage, in 1377, Violante married Secondotto, Marquess of Montferrat. Remained again widow, in 1381, she married her cousin Lodovico, one of the sons of Bernabò.[60][61][62]

Bernabò and his wife, Regina Della Scala, had 15 children. Nine daughters (Taddea, Viridis, Valentina, Agnese, Antonia, Maddalena, Anglesia, Elisabetta, Lucia) married scions of other European dynasties, connecting the Visconti to the houses of Wittelsbach (Taddea, Maddalena, Elisabetta), Habsburg (Viridis), Poitiers-Lusignan (Valentina, Anglesia), Württemberg (Antonia), Gonzaga (Agnese), Holland (Lucia). Their sons Marco and Carlo married Elisabeth of Bavaria and Beatrice of Armagnac, respectively. Caterina, another daughter of Bernabò, married in 1380 her cousin Gian Galeazzo, widow of Isabelle of Valois, who died in 1373 in Pavia while giving birth to her fourth child.[63][64]

When Galeazzo II died in 1378, his son Gian Galeazzo was the only heir of his half of the Visconti territories. Bernabò, being 28 years older than his nephew, tended to assume a leading role towards him. The two Visconti had different personalities and ruling styles: instinctive, bad-tempered, and establisher of a terror regime Bernabò; circumspect and relatively mild to his subjects Gian Galeazzo. In the following years, the relationship between the two Visconti progressively deteriorated.[65][66]

A few months after the death of his wife and counselor, Bernabò was deposed by his nephew in a coup, probably prepared for years and kept secret. On 5 May 1385, accompanied by his generals (Jacopo dal Verme, Antonio Porro and Guglielmo Bevilacqua) and with a heavy armed escort, Gian Galeazzo moved from Pavia for an apparent pilgrimage journey to Santa Maria del Monte di Velate near Varese. The following day, passing by Milan, he arranged to meet Bernabò for what was expected to be a familiar greeting. Bernabò, unprotected, was intercepted and arrested. The coup also led to the arrest of two sons of Bernabò, who were accompanying him. The people in the domains of Bernabò, firstly the Milanese, promptly submitted to Gian Galeazzo, an attitude widely attributed to their desire to abandon the ruthless regime under which they had been living. Incarcerated in his own castle at Trezzo sull'Adda, Bernabò died a few months later after being given a poisoned meal.[67][68][69]

6 May 1385, Bernabò Visconti is arrested by the men of his nephew Gian Galeazzo Visconti (19th-century engraving)

Gian Galeazzo, sole ruler and Duke of Milan (1385–1402)

The death of Bernabò left Gian Galeazzo as the sole ruler of the Visconti territories. The two sons of Bernabò arrested with him (Ludovico and Rodolfo) spent the rest of their lives in jail. The two still free (Carlo and Mastino) lived far from Milan and never posed a threat to Gian Galeazzo. Only the Della Scala in Verona, their mother's family, continued to support them. After reaching some agreement with their cousin, they ended their lives in exile, in Bavaria and Venice. The three unmarried daughters of Bernabò (Anglesia, Elisabetta, Lucia) moved to Pavia. They lived there under the care of their sister Caterina, the second wife of Gian Galeazzo, until their wedding.[70][71][72]

For his court, Gian Galeazzo preferred Pavia to Milan. There, he continued to develop the castle's renowned library and support the local university.[73][74] His daughter Valentina revived the relationship with the French royal family, interrupted by his first wife Isabelle's death. She married in 1389 Louis I, Duke of Orléans, brother of Charles VI, King of France. The three sons of Gian Galeazzo and Isabelle died before reaching adulthood.[75][76][77]

Gian Galeazzo and Caterina had two sons: Giovanni Maria in 1388 and Filippo Maria in 1392. In 1395, for 100,000 florins, Gian Galeazzo obtained the Duke of Milan's title from the King Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia. During his rule, the Visconti territories reached their broadest extension in northern and central Italy. Among the previous domains, only Genoa, ruled by archbishop Giovanni, remained excluded. After a short disease, the plague or gout, Gian Galeazzo died on 3 September 1402.[78][79][80]

Giovanni Maria and Filippo Maria (1402–1447)

The unexpected death of Gian Galeazzo put the Visconti court in serious difficulty. The news of his end was initially kept secret, and the funeral was delayed until 20 October 1402. The two sons, being only 12 and 10 years old, remained under the care of their mother, Caterina, who acted as Regent according to Gian Galeazzo's last will. A Council of Regency supporting Caterina was set up but contrasts soon emerged inside it. Moreover, some members of Visconti collateral branches and two of Bernabò's illegitimate sons opposed Caterina's regency, using circumstances to gain power. In 1404 Giovanni Maria became the new Duke of Milan. Ruling under the influence of his mother's opposers, he induced her to leave Milan for Monza. There, on 17 October 1404, she died in unclear circumstances.[81][82][83]

During the rule of Giovanni Maria, the political crisis deteriorated. Facino Cane, one of Gian Galeazzo's generals, obtained the title of Count of Biandrate and gained considerable authority in the Visconti territories. Other local forces emerged, leading to the fragmentation of territorial unity. Nearby powers conquered peripheral regions. This situation ended in 1412 when Facino Cane died, and a conspiracy against Giovanni Maria led to his assassination. In the same year, his brother Filippo Maria married the widow of Facino Cane, the 42-year-old Beatrice of Tenda, taking advantage of a testamentary disposition in favor of any Visconti that would have married her. The marriage ended with the accusation of adultery against Beatrice, her incarceration, and the sentence to death carried out in the Binasco castle in 1418.[84][85]

In 1428 Filippo Maria married Mary of Savoy, but they had no sons. In 1425 his mistress Agnese Del Maino gave birth to an illegitimate daughter, Bianca Maria. Considered by his father his only heir, she grew up with her mother in the Abbiategrasso and Cusago castles.[86][87] In 1432 Bianca Maria was betrothed to Francesco Sforza, a condottiero of Filippo Maria. In 1441 she married him, granting him the succession to the Duchy of Milan. A sign of their marriage is visible today in the twin churches of Santa Maria Incoronata in Milan.[88][89]

The twin façades of Santa Maria Incoronata in Milan reveals the addition of a second church, erected by Bianca Maria Visconti as a sign of the indissolubility of her marriage to Francesco Sforza, builder of the original church

The heirs of Bianca Maria and Valentina, dukes of Milan (1450–1535)

After the death of Filippo Maria in 1447 and the short-lived Ambrosian Republic in 1447–1450, Francesco Sforza became the new Duke of Milan. Bianca Maria and her husband initiated a new dynasty that ruled Milan discontinuously until 1535.[90]

When Louis XII of France entered Milan in 1499 after the First Italian War, he leveraged a clause of the marriage contract of his grandmother Valentina, the daughter of Gian Galeazzo, to assume the title of Duke of Milan. After his death and the short rule of Maximilian Sforza (1512–1515), Francis I, heir of Valentina as well, inherited the Duchy. After an Imperial-Spanish army defeated France in the Battle of Pavia in 1525, a Sforza, Francesco II, assumed rule in Milan again. His death and a new war led the Duchy of Milan into the hands of Philip II of Spain, ending the line of succession initiated by Ottone and Matteo Visconti.[91][92]

Family tree

Uberto Visconti
[1][23][24][21]
*? †1248
Azzone[lower-alpha 3]
*? †?
Andreotto
*? †?
Ottone[lower-alpha 4]
*1207 †1295
Obizzo[lower-alpha 5]
*? †?
Teobaldo
*1230 †1276
Matteo I[lower-alpha 6]
*1250 †1322
Uberto
*1280? †1315
Galeazzo[lower-alpha 7]
*1277 †1328
Marco
*? †1329
Luchino[lower-alpha 8]
*1287 †1349
Stefano
*1288 †1327
Giovanni[lower-alpha 9]
*1290 †1354
Azzone[lower-alpha 10]
*1302 †1339
Luchino
*? †1399
Matteo II[lower-alpha 11]
*1319 †1355
Galeazzo II[lower-alpha 12]
*1320? †1378
Bernabò[lower-alpha 13]
*1323 †1385
Gian Galeazzo[lower-alpha 14]
*1351 †1402
Louis I, Duke of Orléans
*1372 †1407
Valentina[lower-alpha 15]
*1371 †1408
Giovanni Maria[lower-alpha 16]
*1388 †1412
Filippo Maria[lower-alpha 17]
*1392 †1447
House of Valois-Orléans[lower-alpha 18]Bianca Maria[lower-alpha 19]
*1425 †1468
Francesco Sforza
*1401 †1466
House of Sforza[lower-alpha 20]

Political developments and territorial hegemony of Milan

Under the rule of the Visconti, the government of the city of Milan underwent profound transformations while its territorial hegemony greatly extended, to suffer a crisis after the death of Gian Galeazzo.

The lordship of Ottone and Matteo brought to an end the confrontation between noble and popular parties, which had assumed growing violent forms in Milan during the 13th century. The new power of the Visconti initially relied on the combined roles of Archbishop (Ottone) and Captain of the People, along with the authority deriving from the title of Imperial Vicar (Matteo). After Matteo, the rule in the city assumed hereditary nature inside his family, making any formal recognition by the communal institutions unnecessary. The first Visconti claimed an absolute power (plenitudo potestatis) comparable to the one preserved to pope and emperor,[94][95] culminating with Bernabò, who openly considered their authorities irrelevant in his dominions.[96] The political change in Milan was part of the general decline of the Commune and the subsequent rise of the Signoria that affected northern and central Italy during 13th and 14th centuries.[97]

The annexation of the properties of the Milanese church, which included fortifications like the Angera and Arona castles guarding Lake Maggiore's navigation, was the first step Matteo Visconti took to consolidate his power in the territory of the Milanese diocese. That takeover originated a conflict with the Papacy that lasted the following decades.[98][99] The expansion of the Visconti rule outside the Milanese diocese took advantage of the traditional importance of Milan in northern Italy, reinforced by the leading role played in the Lombard League during the wars against the Hohenstaufen emperors.[100] After the destructions inflicted by Frederick Barbarossa in 1162, in a few years the Milanese reconstructed their city and defeated the emperor at Legnano in 1176, forcing him to the Peace of Constance, which granted autonomy also to the cities allied to Milan. The war was resumed against Frederick II and his successors, eventually leading to the end of the Hohenstaufen dynasty.[101][102] Based on this favorable position, after the death of Henry VII in 1313, Matteo and his son Galeazzo managed to become lords of other cities in northern Italy: Bergamo, Tortona, Alessandria, Vercelli, and Piacenza. Regimes favoring the Visconti settled in Como, Novara, and Pavia. During this first expansion phase, the Visconti continued to face the opposition of the Guelph League: the Papacy, the Anjou house (sovereigns in southern Italy), and the Della Torre family.[103][104]

The Visconti dominions around the middle of the 14th century

After a crisis suffered during the years of Galeazzo I, the expansion continued under the lordship of Azzone with the military support of his uncle Luchino. In 1334 Cremona surrendered to Azzone. In 1337 Luchino entered Brescia, allowing Azzone to become Lord of the city. In 1339 Azzone and Luchino defeated in the battle of Parabiago an army formed by their cousin Lodrisio Visconti and the Della Scala family, lords of Verona. In 1341, Luchino obtained a reconciliation with the Church. In 1346 Luchino took Parma, and in 1347 he extended the western border of the Visconti dominions along a stretch of land until Mondovì and Cuneo, at the foot of the Western Alps.[105][106][107]

After the death of Luchino, archbishop Giovanni further extended the territories under Milanese control. In 1350 he obtained Bologna from the Pepoli family, and in 1353 he accepted the lordship of Genoa. Through the marriages of his nephews (Matteo II, Bernabò, and Galeazzo II), he linked the Visconti dynastically to the families ruling the territories to the west and east of the Visconti dominions: the Gonzaga, the Della Scala, and the Savoy. The acquisition of Bologna, a city belonging to the territory of the Papal States, reopened the conflict with the pope. In 1352, negotiation with the papal envoy, the abbot Guillaume de Grimoard (later Pope Urban V), led to an agreement that allowed Giovanni to continue to rule Bologna as the papal vicar.[50][108][109][110]

Archbishop Giovanni's death in 1354 and the power transfer to Bernabò and Galeazzo II were followed by a reaction in Genoa and Bologna. In 1356 Genoa regained its independence. In Bologna, the rebellion of Giovanni Visconti di Oleggio, a former protégée of Archbishop Giovanni and his lieutenant in the city, opened the way to the intervention of Cardinal Albornoz, who in 1360 brought back the city within the Papal States. Bernabò, the ruler of the eastern portion of the Visconti dominions, repeatedly tried to recover Bologna. This, among other disputes with the Church, cost him a sentence of excommunication by Pope Innocent VI. After his defeat in the Battle of San Ruffillo in 1361, Bernabò finally came to terms with the loss of Bologna.[111][112] Bernabò and Galeazzo II engaged in bitter clashes also with the imperial authority. After the marquess of Monferrato was appointed imperial vicar in Pavia by Charles IV, the relationship between the emperor and the Visconti deteriorated. In November 1356, in the Battle of Casorate, Visconti forces under the command of Lodrisio Visconti (now reconciled with his cousins) defeated an imperial army and captured its commander, Marquard of Randeck. In 1359, Pavia surrendered to Galeazzo II.[113][114] His decision to erect a vast castle in Pavia for his family and court was a sign of his ambition to extend Visconti's dominions to the area of the ancient Lombard Kingdom.

The Visconti Castle of Pavia which hosted the court of Galeazzo II and Gian Galeazzo

In the 1370s, Bernabò and Galeazzo II emerged without severe consequences from manifold simultaneous attacks. The two brothers were deprived by the emperor of their vicariate and condemned by Pope Gregory XI as heretics. They subsequently suffered military incursions from the eastern border (by the count of Savoy) and from Bologna (by Papal-Florentine forces), which ended without significant impacts. Peace with the pope and reconciliation with the count of Savoy followed while Florence turned against the pope in a new war.[55][115] The extension of their matrimonial policies also marked Bernabò and Galeazzo II's years. The marriages of their daughters and sons connected the Visconti to the elite of the European aristocracy: the French and English royal houses and several German princely families.[116]

The Visconti dominions (in dark green) in 1402, at Gian Galeazzo's death

The ineffectiveness of the policies of both Empire and Papacy against the Visconti and the absence of internal conflicts that followed the arrest of Bernabò in 1385 encouraged Gian Galeazzo's expansion policy. Military and diplomatic initiatives were continuously taken and personally conducted by Gian Galeazzo from his castle in Pavia. A military campaign between 1386 and 1388 ended with the conquest of the Della Scala and Da Carrara territories of Verona and Padua.[117] Between 1390 and 1398, the attacks of Gian Galeazzo encountered the opposition of the local powers of northern and central Italy; wars against Florence and Mantua were ineffective and even led to the loss of Padua.[118] In 1399, without the use of force, Gian Galeazzo took possession of Pisa and Siena, followed by Perugia in 1400.[119] In July 1402, after the victory in the Battle of Casalecchio against a Bolognese-Florentine army, he assumed the rule of Bologna.[120] His sudden death in September 1402 prevented his long-foreseen attack on Florence.[121][122]

Gian Galeazzo accompanied the territorial expansion with reforms of the administration (creation of the Consiglio Segreto and the Consiglio di Giustizia), revenues (Maestri Delle Entrate) and criminal justice (Capitano di Giustizia). His promotion to the rank of Duke transformed Milan's territory (between Ticino and the Adda rivers) into a duchy.[123] The deep crisis that resulted after the death of Gian Galeazzo is attributed to the lack of time required to secure power in the rapidly growing dominions.[99] The territorial unity of the Visconti state was heavily affected, and the Council of Regency, created to overcome the young age of Gian Galeazzo's sons, could not stem the dividing forces that resurfaced, causing the collapse of the system of government built by him.[124][125] Filippo Maria restored the basis of the Visconti state, and the marriage of his daughter Bianca Maria to Francesco Sforza paved the way to a renewed strong government.[126] In the course of the 15th century, however, the territory under Milanese control narrowed to the Duchy of Milan and later never regained the extension reached under the Visconti rule.[127] In the 16th century, the absolute power established by the Visconti ended with Francesco II, the last Sforza duke.[128]

Cadet branches

Family branches have been continually arising since the appearance in Milan of the surname Visconti in the year 1075.[129]

During the first generations, the firstborn among brothers is supposed to have received the role of the most distinguished member of the house. The family of Archbishop Ottone and his grandnephew Matteo, first lords of Milan in the second half of the 13th century, are accordingly considered the descendants of the first Ariprando Visconti along an agnatic primogeniture line over about two centuries.[130] The younger brothers gave origin to cadet branches that continued to live in Milan, participating in the political life of the Milanese Commune.[131]

Vergante branches (since the 12th century)

In 1134, Guido Visconti (one of the members of the primogeniture line) obtained from the abbot of Saint Gall the castle of Massino located in the Vergante region on the hills overlooking Lake Maggiore.[132]

The firstborn of Guido Visconti, Ottone, is attested in Milan in the second half of the 12th century with prominent roles in the public life of the Milanese commune. His other descendants initiated to live in the Vergante, originating the cadet branches of the Visconti di Massino, the Visconti di Invorio, and the Visconti di Oleggio Castello.[133] To the Visconti di Massino belonged Uberto Pico, who happened to be confused with Uberto Visconti, the brother of Matteo Lord of Milan.[134] Member of the Visconti di Oleggio Castello was Giovanni, Lord of Bologna (1355–1360) and Fermo. He had been wrongly considered an illegitimate son of Archbishop Giovanni Visconti.[135]

Descendants of Pietro (since the 13th century)

From Ottone, son of Guido Visconti, descended the family of Archbishop Ottone and his nephew Tebaldo, executed in 1276 by the opposite faction supporting the Della Torre family.[136] After the death of Tebaldo, a division of the family inheritance occurred in 1288 between his sons (Matteo and Uberto) and Pietro (another nephew of Archbishop Ottone). The object of the division was the lands and castles between Lake Maggiore and Gallarate (a long-established area of Visconti possessions), the family compound in the center of Milan, and other properties. To Pietro went the territories near Gallarate, fortified with castles scattered on the local hills, to Matteo and Uberto the remaining parts.[137]

Among the descendants of Pietro, other divisions followed: first between his sons, Lodrisio and Gaspare, and a generation later among his grandchildren. The members of their offspring added the names of the inherited lands to their surnames. From the sons of Lodrisio (Ambrogio, Estorolo) originated the Visconti di Crenna and the Visconti di Besnate; from the sons of Gaspare (Azzo, Antonio, and Giovanni), the Visconti di Jerago, the Visconti di Orago, and the Visconti di Fontaneto. These branches became extinct in the following centuries, and their castles and lands passed to other families.[138]

Descendants of Uberto, brother of Matteo (since the 14th century)

A generation after separating the lands assigned to Pietro, another hereditary division followed between Matteo and Uberto, sons of Tebaldo. Matteo became Lord of Milan, while Uberto (c. 1280–1315) received the castles of Cislago and Somma Lombardo with the lands subject to them and originated other cadet branches.[139] Vercellino, the firstborn of Uberto, was Podestà of Vercelli (1317) and Novara (1318-1320).

From Vercellino, in the 15th century, descended Giambattista Visconti.[140] In 1473, after his death, the castle of Somma Lombardo was divided between his sons, Francesco and Guido.[141] The offspring of Francesco and Guido became known by the surname of Visconti di Somma. Several branches originated from them: among the descendants of Francesco, the Visconti di San Vito and the Visconti della Motta;[140] from Guido, the Visconti di Modrone and the Visconti di Cislago.[142]

Visconti di San Vito

A descendant of Francesco Visconti di Somma in the 17th century was Francesco Maria. In 1629, he received the title of Marquess of San Vito from the King of Spain. From him originated the Visconti di San Vito branch.[140]

Between the 19th and 20th centuries, the Visconti di San Vito reunited the property of the castle of Somma Lombardo, fragmented after the division of 1473. The Visconti di San Vito became extinct in 1998. Their last member left the tenure of Somma Lombardo to a foundation bearing their name, which later opened the castle to the public.[143]

Visconti di Modrone

Coat of arms of Visconti di Modrone

From the descendants of Guido Visconti di Somma came the lateral branch of the Visconti di Modrone (marquesses of Vimodrone since 1694, later Dukes of Vimodrone since 1813).[142] To this family belonged the film directors Luchino Visconti di Modrone and Eriprando Visconti di Modrone. Luchino was one of the most prominent directors of Italian neorealist cinema.

Other members

Portrayal in Pop Culture

In Thomas Harris's 1999 novel Hannibal, the serial killer Hannibal Lecter is a member of the Visconti family, descended from them through his mother Simonetta. The Visconti family crest is used as the cover of the book.

Notes

  1. "Otto autem Mediolanensis vicecomes cum multis pugnatoribus eiusdem regis in ipsa strage coruit in mortem, amarissimam hominibus diligentibus civitatem Mediolanensium et ecclesiam."[5]
  2. "Hoc ubi Otto comes Mediolanensis perspexit, pro imperatore se ad mortem obiciens, equum suum contradidit; nec mora, a Romanis captus, et in Urbem inductus, minutatim concisus est, eiusque carnes in platea canibus devorandae relictae."[6]
  3. Bishop of Ventimiglia (1251 - 1262).
  4. Archbishop of Milan (1262), lord of Milan (1277-78) and (1282-85).
  5. Console di giustizia in Milan (1236)).
  6. Capitano del popolo of Milan (1287–1298), lord of Milan (1287–1302, 1311–1322).[93]
  7. Lord of Milan (1322–1327).[93]
  8. Lord of Milan (1339–1349).[93]
  9. Archbishop of Milan (1339), lord of Milan (1339–1354),[93] lord of Bologna and Genoa (1331–1354).
  10. Lord of Milan (1329–1339).[93]
  11. Lord of Milan (1354–1355).[93]
  12. Lord of Milan (1354–1378).[93]
  13. Lord of Milan (1354–1385).[93]
  14. Lord of Milan (1378–1395) and Duke of Milan (1395–1402).[93]
  15. By the first wife, Isabelle of Valois; grandmother of Louis XII of France, who conquered Milan as her heir.
  16. By the second wife, Caterina Visconti; duke of Milan (1402–1412).[93]
  17. By the second wife, Caterina Visconti; duke of Milan (1412–1447).[93]
  18. Dukes of Milan: Louis XII (1499–1500, 1500–1512), Francis I (1515–1521).[93]
  19. Illegitimate, by Agnese del Maino; in 1441 married to Francesco I Sforza, later duke of Milan.
  20. Dukes of Milan: Francesco I (1450–1466), Galeazzo Maria (1466–1476), Giangaleazzo (1466–1476), Ludovico il Moro (1494–1499, 1500), Massimiliano (1512–1515), Francesco II (1521–1535).[93]

References

Citations

  1. Tolfo, Maria Grazia; Colussi, Paolo (February 7, 2006). "Storia di Milano: I Visconti" [History of Milan: The Visconti]. Storia di Milano (in Italian). Milano. Retrieved September 16, 2010.
  2. Vittani & Manaresi (1969), docc. 557–560.
  3. Biscaro (1911), pp. 20–24.
  4. Filippini (2014), pp. 33–42.
  5. Bethmann & Jaffé (1868), p. 31, rr. 33-35.
  6. Wattenbach (1846), p. 780, rr. 37–40.
  7. Filippini (2014), pp. 44–45, 83.
  8. Filippini (2014), pp. 85–90.
  9. Keller (1979), p. 207.
  10. Filippini (2014), pp. 90–98.
  11. Keller (1979), pp. 206–207, 364–365.
  12. Hausmann (1969), doc. 21.
  13. Filippini (2014), p. 61.
  14. Filippini (2014), pp. 58–65.
  15. Hausmann (1969), doc. 20.
  16. Biscaro (1911), p. 28.
  17. Filippini (2014), pp. 73–74.
  18. Filippini (2014), pp. 100–101.
  19. Morena & Morena (1994), p. 152.
  20. Filippini (2014), pp. 105–113.
  21. Visconti (1967), p. 275.
  22. Filippini (2014), pp. 62–63.
  23. Hale (1981), pp. 338–341, 352.
  24. Williams (1998), pp. 33–35.
  25. Cognasso (2014), pp. 33–45.
  26. Menant (2005), p. 67.
  27. Cognasso (2014), pp. 45–51.
  28. Menant (2005), pp. 111–112.
  29. Jones (1997), p. 520.
  30. Cognasso (2014), pp. 52–57.
  31. Jones (1997), p. 551.
  32. Cognasso (2014), pp. 58–62.
  33. Jones (1997), pp. 345–347.
  34. Cognasso (2014), pp. 64–67.
  35. Menant (2005), pp. 96–97.
  36. Menant (2005), pp. 117–118.
  37. Jones (1997), pp. 551, 619.
  38. Muir (1924), pp. 10–13.
  39. Jones (1997), p. 619.
  40. Cognasso (2014), pp. 109–114
  41. Muir (1924), pp. 14–24
  42. Cognasso (2014), pp. 125–131, 142–146, 152
  43. Muir (1924), pp. 25–35
  44. Cognasso (2014), pp. 152–154, 163–164, 173–174
  45. Muir (1924), pp. 34, 36.
  46. Cognasso (2014), pp. 189–191.
  47. Muir (1924), pp. 37–38
  48. Cognasso (2014), pp. 189–190, 191–192, 207–210
  49. Cognasso (2014), pp. 208, 210–213
  50. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 6–7.
  51. Muir (1924), pp. 39–40
  52. Wilkins (1958)
  53. Wilkins (1958), pp. 75–76.
  54. Cognasso (2014), pp. 208, 235–236, 240.
  55. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 8–9.
  56. Muir (1924), pp. 61–62.
  57. Wilkins (1958), pp. 219–225.
  58. Cognasso (2014), pp. 208, 255–256.
  59. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), p. 10.
  60. Cognasso (2014), pp. 256, 263.
  61. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 12–13.
  62. Muir (1924), pp. 63–65, 83.
  63. Cognasso (2014), pp. 292–293, 283–284, 333–334.
  64. Muir (1924), pp. 82–83.
  65. Cognasso (2014), pp. 284–285.
  66. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 13–14.
  67. Cognasso (2014), pp. 289–302.
  68. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 31–34.
  69. Muir (1924), pp. 85–87.
  70. Cognasso (2014), pp. 333–334, 338.
  71. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 144, 171.
  72. Muir (1924), pp. 91–92, 204.
  73. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 41–42.
  74. Muir (1924), pp. 233–234.
  75. Cognasso (2014), pp. 325–326, 368–371.
  76. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 63–68, 79–80, 105.
  77. Muir (1924), pp. 94–95.
  78. Cognasso (2014), pp. 319–323, 379–380.
  79. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 173–175, 297–298.
  80. Muir (1924), pp. 101–119.
  81. Cognasso (2014), pp. 379–395.
  82. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 298–301.
  83. Muir (1924), pp. 119–120, 125–130.
  84. Cognasso (2014), pp. 415–416.
  85. Muir (1924), pp. 136, 139–140.
  86. Cognasso (2014), pp. 452–453, 457.
  87. Muir (1924), pp. 135, 147.
  88. Cognasso (2014), pp. 457, 484–486.
  89. Muir (1924), pp. 163–164.
  90. Cognasso (2014), pp. 528–540, 541–547.
  91. Black (2009), pp. 182–184.
  92. Gamberini (2014), pp. 36–37.
  93. Black (2009), p. xiii.
  94. Black (2009), pp. 38–56.
  95. Gamberini (2014), pp. 21–23.
  96. Black (2009), pp. 52–53.
  97. Jones (1997), pp. 152–650.
  98. Cognasso (2014), p. 132.
  99. Gamberini (2014), p. 24.
  100. Gamberini (2014), pp. 19–20.
  101. Jones (1997), pp. 335–358.
  102. Menant (2005), pp. 17–22, 47–52.
  103. Cognasso (2014), pp. 132–168.
  104. Gamberini (2014), pp. 28–29.
  105. Cognasso (2014), pp. 191–205.
  106. Black (2009), pp. 38–42.
  107. Gamberini (2014), p. 39.
  108. Black (2009), pp. 42–43.
  109. Cognasso (2014), pp. 207–234.
  110. Gamberini (2014), p. 30.
  111. Cognasso (2014), pp. 239–240, 248–253.
  112. Black (2009), pp. 51–52.
  113. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 7–8.
  114. Cognasso (2014), pp. 241–244.
  115. Black (2009), pp. 52–54.
  116. Gamberini (2014), pp. 30–31.
  117. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 69–83.
  118. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 121–136, 206–223.
  119. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 239–258.
  120. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 272–280.
  121. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 281–301, 305.
  122. Gamberini (2014), p. 31.
  123. Black (2009), pp. 68–72.
  124. Bueno de Mesquita (1941), pp. 301–304.
  125. Black (2009), pp. 72–73.
  126. Black (2009), pp. 73–93.
  127. Gamberini (2014), pp. 34–37.
  128. Black (2009), pp. 182–198.
  129. Litta Biumi (1819–1884).
  130. Filippini (2014), pp. 83–85, 187.
  131. Filippini (2014), pp. 98–104, 187.
  132. Filippini (2014), pp. 58–61.
  133. Filippini (2014), pp. 61–65, 98–101.
  134. Filippini (2014), p. 17.
  135. Muir (1924), pp. 49–51.
  136. Cognasso (2014), p. 71.
  137. Litta Biumi (1819–1884), tavola X.
  138. Litta Biumi (1819–1884), tavola X–XI.
  139. Litta Biumi (1819–1884), tavola XIV.
  140. Litta Biumi (1819–1884), tavola XVI.
  141. Grisoni & Bertacchi (2014), p. 56.
  142. Litta Biumi (1819–1884), tavola XVII.
  143. Grisoni & Bertacchi (2014), pp. 62–63.

Primary sources

Secondary sources

  • Biscaro, Gerolamo (1911). I maggiori dei Visconti signori di Milano [The greatest of the Visconti lords of Milan] (in Italian). Milano: Tip. editrice L.F. Cogliati. hdl:2027/coo.31924030929925. OCLC 866859003.
  • Black, Jane (2009). Absolutism in Renaissance Milan. Plenitude of power under the Visconti and the Sforza 1329–1535. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199565290.
  • Bueno de Mesquita, Daniel Meredith (1941). Giangaleazzo Visconti, Duke of Milan (1351-1402): a study in the political career of an Italian despot. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521234559. OCLC 837985673.
  • Cognasso, Francesco (2014). I Visconti. Storia di una famiglia [The Visconti. History of a family] (in Italian) (2 ed.). Odaya. ISBN 9788862883061.
  • Filippini, Ambrogio (2014). I Visconti di Milano nei secoli XI e XII. Indagini tra le fonti [The Visconti of Milan in the 11th and 12th centuries. Researching the sources] (in Italian). Tangram Edizioni Scientifiche. ISBN 9788864580968.
  • Grisoni, Michela M.; Bertacchi, Cristina (2014). "Three castles in one: Castello Visconti di San Vito, Somma Lombardo (Varese)". In Villoresi, Valerio (ed.). Lombard villas and stately homes. Turin: AdArte. pp. 56–71. ISBN 9788889082546.
  • Hale, John Rigby (1981). A concise encyclopaedia of the Italian Renaissance. Thames & Hudson. OCLC 636355191.
  • Gamberini, Andrea (2014). "Milan and Lombardy in the era of the Visconti and the Sforza". In Gamberini, Andrea (ed.). A companion to late medieval and early modern Milan. The distinctive features of an Italian state. Leiden, Boston: Brill. pp. 19–45. ISBN 9789004284128.
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  • Keller, Hagen (1979). Adelsherrschaft und städtische Gesellschaft in Oberitalien, 9. bis 12. Jahrhundert [Nobility and urban society in northern Italy, 9th to 12th centuries] (in German). Vol. 52. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer Verlag. ISBN 9783484800885. OCLC 612442612.
  • Litta Biumi, Pompeo (1819–1884). Visconti di Milano. Famiglie celebri italiane (in Italian). Milano: Luciano Basadonna Editore. OCLC 777242652. Retrieved 2020-04-15.
  • Menant, François (2005). L'Italie des communes (1100–1350) [Italy of the communes] (in French). Édition Belin. ISBN 9782701140445.
  • Muir, Dorothy Erskine (1924). A history of Milan under the Visconti. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd.
  • Visconti, Alessandro (1967). Storia di Milano. A cura della Famiglia Meneghina e sotto gli auspici del Comune di Milano [History of Milan. Edited by Famiglia Meneghina and under the auspices of the Commune of Milan] (in Italian). Milano: Ceschina. OCLC 2872335.
  • Wilkins, Ernest Hatch (1958). Petrarch's eight years in Milan. Cambridge, MA, US: Mediaeval Academy of America. hdl:2027/heb.31117. OCLC 926390871.
  • Williams, George L. (1998). Papal genealogy: The families and descendants of the popes. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 9780786403158. OCLC 301275208. Retrieved September 16, 2010.
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