"Quand Mort me assault et que je ne puis mourir
Et se courir on ne me veult, mais me faire rudesse
Et de liesse me voir bannir. Que dois je plus guèrir?"
Or this—
"Je porte en prison pour ma device que je m'arme de patience par force
de peine que l'on me fait pouster" (porter) ...
Again, in large letters among the fragment of red and blue paint, we
read—
"Celui qui ne craint fortune n'est pas bien saige."
Even more pathetic, when we recall the joyous days at Milan and
Vigevano, where Lodovico listened to readings from Dante in Beatrice's
rooms, is the following version of Francesca da Rimini's famous lines:—
"Il n'y au monde plus grande destresse,
Du bon tempts soi souvenir en la tristesse."
At length death brought the desired release. Marino Sanuto briefly
records the fact in the following words: "On the 17th day of May, 1508,
at Loches, Signor Lodovico Sforza, formerly Duke of Milan, who was there
in prison, died as a good Christian with the rites of the Catholic
Church." All we know besides is that his faithful servant, Pier
Francesco, was with him to the end, and closed his eyes in the last
sleep. To this day the place of his burial remains unknown. A local
tradition says that he was interred in the church of Loches at the
entrance of the choir, but a manuscript account of the Sieur Dubuisson's
travels in 1642, preserved in the Mazarin Library, states that Ludovic
Sforza sleeps in the Chapel of the Holy Sepulchre on the eastern side of
the church. On his death-bed, it is said, he desired to be buried in the
church of the Dominican friars at Tarascon, but we never hear if his
wishes were carried out, and no trace of his burial is to be found in
this place. On the whole we are inclined to think the most trustworthy
authority on the subject is the Dominican historian of S. Maria delle
Grazie, Padre Gattico. In the history of the convent which he wrote a
hundred and fifty years after the Moro's death, he tells us that the
friars of his convent supplied the duke with means for his unfortunate
attempt to escape, and that this having failed, after his death they
removed his body to Milan, and buried him by the side of his wife,
Duchess Beatrice. This may very well have been effected during the reign
of Lodovico's son Maximilian, who was restored to his father's throne in
1512, and would explain the uncertainty which has always existed at
Loches as to the Moro's grave, and the absence of any inscription to
mark his burial-place.
For Lodovico's sake, let us hope, the good Dominican's story is true. It
is good to think that, after all the distress of those long years of
exile and captivity, the unfortunate prince should have been brought
back to rest in his own sunny Milanese, under Bramante's cupola, in the
tomb where he had wished to lie, at Beatrice's side. There, during the
next three centuries, masses were duly said for the repose of Duke
Lodovico's soul and that of his wife, on the four anniversaries sacred
to their memory, "in gratitude," writes Padre Pino, "for all the
benefactions that we have received from this duke and duchess." And to
this day, on the Feast of All Souls, the stone floor immediately in
front of the high altar, where Beatrice's monument once stood, is
solemnly censed, year by year, in memory of the illustrious dead who
sleep there, in Lodovico's own words, "until the day of resurrection."
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXXII
The Milanese exiles at Innsbrück—Galeazzo di Sanseverino becomes Grand
Ecuyer of France—Is slain at Pavia—Maximilian Sforza made Duke of
Milan in 1512—Forced to abdicate by Francis I. in 1515—Reign of
Francesco Sforza—Wars of France and Germany—Siege of Milan by the
Imperialists—Duke Francesco restored by Charles V.—His marriage and
death in 1535—Removal of Lodovico and Beatrice's effigies to the
Certosa.
1500-1564
After the catastrophe of Novara and the final ruin of the Moro's cause,
his loyal kinsfolk and followers were reduced to melancholy straits. A
document among the Italian papers in the Bibliothèque Nationale gives a
long list of the Milanese exiles who, in the year 1503, were living in
exile, and whose lands and fortunes had been granted to French nobles or
Italians who had embraced Louis XII.'s party. Among them we recognize
many familiar names, Crivellis, Bergaminis, Marlianis, and Viscontis,
who had served Duke Lodovico loyally and now shared in his disgrace.
Many of these took refuge at Ferrara and Mantua; others went to Rome or
lived in retirement on Venetian territory, while as many as two hundred
and fifty were living at one time at Innsbrück. A few of these were
pardoned in course of years, and obtained leave to return to their
Lombard homes, but by far the greater number died in exile.
Chief among those courtiers and captains of the Moro who found refuge at
Maximilian's court were the Sanseverino brothers. Two of these, Fracassa
and Antonio Maria, were soon reconciled with King Louis by the powerful
influence of their brothers, the Count of Caiazzo and Cardinal
Sanseverino. For Galeazzo, the son-in-law and prime favourite of the
Moro, a strange future was in store. After his brilliant years at the
court of Milan, he, too, tasted how salt the bread of exile is, and how
bitter it is to depend on the charity of others. In 1503, he was still
living at Innsbrück, where Sanuto describes him as always dressed in
black and looking very sorrowful, and held of little account by the
German courtiers, although Maximilian always treated him kindly. He
accompanied the Emperor to the Diet at Augsburg, and took an active part
in his various efforts to obtain Lodovico's deliverance. But a year
later, when all hope of obtaining Lodovico's release was at an end, a
fresh attempt seems to have been made by the Sanseverino family to
reconcile Galeazzo with King Louis. He came to Milan and saw the
Cardinal d'Amboise, who embraced his cause warmly, and a petition for
the restoration of Galeazzo's houses and estates, as well as the fortune
of 240,000 ducats which he had inherited from his wife Bianca, was
addressed to the King. The result was that he soon received a summons to
the French court, where he quickly won the royal favour, and on the
death of Pierre d'Urfé a year later, was appointed Grand Ecuyer de
France. From that time Galeazzo became one of Louis XII.'s chief
favourites, and seldom left the king's side. In 1507 he attended Louis
XII. when he entered Milan for the second time, and was a conspicuous
figure in the grand tournament that was held on the Piazza of the
Castello. Once more he came back to the scene of his old triumphs, under
these changed circumstances, and played a leading part in the wars that
distracted the Milanese. Under Francis I., Galeazzo rose still higher in
the royal favour, and won a signal victory over his old rival Trivulzio.
The Grand Ecuyer boldly asserted his right to Castel Novo, which Louis
XII. had granted to Trivulzio after the conquest of Milan, and, at the
age of seventy, the old soldier came to Paris to plead his cause against
Messer Galeazzo. But the suit was given against him, and he was thrown
into prison for contempt of the king's majesty, and died at Chartres in
1518, bitterly rueing the day when he had entered the service of a
foreign prince and led the French against Milan. Galeazzo triumphed once
more, and kept up his reputation as a gallant soldier and brilliant
courtier, until, in 1525, he was slain in the battle of Pavia, under
the walls of the Castello, where, thirty-five years before, he had been
wedded to Bianca Sforza.
Meanwhile Beatrice's sons grew up at Innsbrück, under the care of their
cousin, the Empress Bianca. It was a melancholy life for these young
princes, born in the purple and reared in all the luxury and culture of
Milan. And when their cousin Bianca died in 1510, they lost their best
friend. But a sudden and unexpected turn of the tide brought them once
more to the front. That warlike pontiff, Julius II., who, as Cardinal
della Rovere, had been one of the chief instruments in bringing the
French into Italy, entered into a league with Maximilian to expel them
and reinstate the son of the hated Moro on the throne of Milan. They
succeeded so well that, in 1512, four years after Lodovico's death at
Loches, young Maximilian Sforza entered Milan in triumph, amidst the
enthusiastic applause of the people. Once more he rode up to the gates
of the Castello where he was born, and took up his abode there as
reigning duke. But his rule over Lombardy was short. A handsome, gentle
youth, without either his father's talents or his mother's high spirit,
Maximilian was destined to become a passive tool in the hands of
stronger and more powerful men. His weakness and incapacity soon became
apparent, and when, three years later, the new French king, Francis I.,
invaded the Milanese, and defeated the Italian army at Marignano, the
young duke signed an act of abdication, and consented to spend the rest
of his life in France. There he lived in honourable captivity, content
with a pension allowed him by King Francis and with the promise of a
cardinal's hat held out to him by the Pope, until he died, in May, 1530,
and was buried in the Duomo of Milan. His brother Francesco was a far
more spirited and courageous prince, who might have proved an admirable
ruler in less troublous times, but was doomed to experience the
strangest vicissitudes of fortune. After the second conquest of Milan by
the French, he retired to Tyrol, until, in 1521, Pope Leo X. combined
with Charles V. to oppose Francis I., and restore the Sforzas. Their
aims were crowned with success, and by the end of the year Francesco
Sforza was proclaimed Duke of Milan, only to be driven from his throne
again three years later. After the defeat of Pavia, the young duke, who
had won the love of all his subjects, was again restored; but having
entered into a league with the Pope and Venice to expel the
Imperialists, incurred the displeasure of Charles V., and was besieged
in the Castello by the Connétable de Bourbon, who at length forced him
to surrender. A prolonged struggle followed, in which Francesco Sforza
was often worsted, and at one time forced to retire to Como. In the end,
however, he was restored to the throne by Charles V., whose favour he
succeeded in recovering, when, in 1530, that monarch visited Italy to
receive the imperial crown. At length this long-distracted realm enjoyed
an interval of peace, and a brighter day seemed about to dawn for the
unhappy Milanese.
The young duke was very popular with the people, who rejoiced in having
a prince of their own once more, and who, in Guicciardini's words,
looked to see a return of that felicity which they had enjoyed during
his father's reign. When, in 1534, he married Charles V.'s niece,
Christina of Denmark, the splendour of the wedding fêtes, the balls
and tournaments that took place in the Castello, recalled the glories of
Lodovico's reign and the marriage of the Empress Bianca. The charms of
the youthful bride revived the memory of the duke's mother, Beatrice
d'Este, and a richly illuminated book of prayers, prepared in honour of
this occasion, and adorned with miniatures and Sforza devices, bore
witness to Francesco's artistic tastes, and showed his desire to tread
in his father's steps. But these bright prospects were soon clouded. The
young duke became seriously ill, owing to a dangerous wound which he had
received from an assassin, Bonifazio Visconti, twelve years before, and,
after lingering through the summer months, he died on All Souls' Day,
1535, to the consternation of the whole Milanese, On the 19th of
November the last of the Sforzas was buried with royal pomp in the Duomo
of Milan, and his childless widow, the youthful Duchess Christina,
retired to the city of Tortona, which had been given her as her marriage
portion. Her portrait, painted by the hand of Holbein, is familiar to us
all as well as "the few words she wisely spoke," when, in reply to Henry
VIII.'s offer of marriage, she said "that unfortunately she had only one
head, but that if she had two, one should be at his Majesty's service."
A week or two later, Lodovico Sforza's only remaining son, Gianpaolo,
the child of Lucrezia Crivelli, who had fought gallantly against French
and Imperialists in defence of his brother's rights, died on his way to
Naples. With him the last claimant to the throne of the Sforzas passed
away. The duchy of Milan reverted to the Imperial crown, and this fair
and prosperous realm sank into a mere province of Charles V.'s vast
empire.
Thirty years after the last Sforza duke had been laid in his grave, the
noble monument which the Moro had raised to his wife's memory in S.
Maria delle Grazie was broken up. The friars who had known Lodovico and
revered his memory were dead and gone, and the Prior then in office,
seized with iconoclastic zeal, ordered the monument to be removed from
the choir, in accordance with a canon of the Council of Trent. The tomb
was taken to pieces, and Cristoforo Solari's beautiful effigies of the
duke and duchess were offered for sale. Fortunately, the news of this
act of vandalism reached the ears of the Carthusians at Pavia, and
remembering how much they owed to the Moro's generosity, they sent word
to a Milanese citizen, Oldrado Lampugnano, to purchase the two marble
statues for the Certosa. Oldrado, whose father had been exiled after the
Moro's fall, and who was himself a loyal partisan of the house of
Sforza, bought Solari's effigies for the small sum of thirty-eight
ducats, and removed them to the Certosa, "that shrine which had been so
often visited by the said duke and duchess in their lifetime, and for
which they had ever shown the greatest love and honour."
There we see them to-day—Lodovico with the hooked nose and bushy
eyebrows, in all the pride of his ducal robes, and Beatrice at his side,
in the charm and purity of her youthful slumber, surrounded by other
memorials of Sforzas and Viscontis, wrought with the same exquisite art
and enriched with the same wealth of ornament. After all, these marble
forms could hardly find a better home than the great Lombard sanctuary
which was so closely linked with the brightest days of Beatrice's wedded
life, and which to the last remained the object of Lodovico Sforza's
care and love.
INDEX
- A
- Agnese di Maino, 16
- Albergati, 151
- Aldo Manuzio, 30, 126, 131, 153, 261
- Alessandro Manuzio, 131
- Alexander VI. (Pope), 156 f., 165, 178, 221, 223, 249, 255 f., 295, 337 f., 364
- Alfonso of Calabria, 17, 28, 43, 46, 112, 118 f., 177 f., 184, 221, 223, 225 f., 232, 236, 249, 253, 255, 257
- Alfonso d'Este, 5, 8, 48, 51, 58, 100, 149, 159, 165, 174, 180, 186, 190 f., 198, 200, 206, 222, 253, 259, 323, 351
- Alfonso Gonzaga, 71
- Alvise Marliani, 127, 324
- Almodoro, 362
- d'Amboise (Cardinal), 349, 371
- Ambrogio Borgognone, 104
- Ambrogio da Corte, 167, 206
- Ambrogio Ferrari, 66, 144, 345
- Ambrogio de Predis, 209, 218, 303
- Ambrogio da Rosate, 61, 120, 127, 145, 168, 224, 236, 272, 324
- André de la Vigne, 234
- Andrea Cagnola, 240
- Andrea Cossa, 35, 276
- Andrea Mantegna, 50 f., 153, 328
- Andrea Salai, 139
- Angelo Poliziano, 129, 131, 147
- Angelo Talenti, 179, 272, 293
- Angelo Testagrossa, 152
- Anna Sforza, 8, 43, 48, 70, 78, 169 f., 180 f., 186, 190 f., 198, 200, 253, 259, 323
- Anna Solieri, 279
- Anne de Beaujeu, 113
- Anne of Bourbon, 235
- Anne of Brittany, 113 f., 160, 290
- Annibale Bentivoglio, 36, 71 ff.
- Antoine de Bussy, 361
- Anton Maria de Collis, 259
- Antonio Calco, 120
- Antonio Cammelli (Pistoia), 140, 144 f., 148, 150, 296
- Antonio Costabili, 308, 327
- Antonio da Landriano, 240, 338, 343
- Antonio da Monza, 63, 332, 348
- Antonio del Balzo, 156
- Antonio di Campo Fregoso, 142, 150
- Antonio Grifo, 142
- Antonio Grimani, 292
- Antonio Grumello, 361, 363
- Antonio Loredano, 113
- Antonio Maria Pallavicini, 342, 347
- Antonio Maria Sanseverino, 151, 232, 272, 279, 342-347, 354, 375
- Antonio of Salerno, 112
- Antonio Stanga, 223, 226
- Antonio Tassino, 22, 24 f.
- Antonio Tebaldeo, 35, 144
- Antonio Trivulzio (Bishop of Como), 186, 202 f., 293, 344, 347
- Antonio Visconti, 261
- Ariosto, 36, 87, 149, 159, 207
- Art and learning at Ferrara, 31-39;
- at Milan, 128 ff.;
- at Pavia, 126 ff.
- Ascanio Sforza, 16, 24, 41, 56, 73, 152, 156, 163, 165, 171, 222 f., 228, 253, 255, 262, 338, 343 f., 360, 364, 371
- Atalante Migliorotti, 151 ff.
- Azzo Visconti, 333
- B
- Baldassare Castiglione, 351
- Baldassare Pusterla, 240, 250
- Baldassare Taccone, 150, 210
- Barone, 76, 232, 251, 298
- Bartolommeo Calco, 114, 125 f., 131
- Bartolommeo Scotti (Count), 58
- Battista Fregoso, 316
- Battista Guarino, 28 f., 36
- Battista Sfondrati, 317
- Battista Visconti, 344
- Beatrice of Aragon, 4
- Beatrice de' Contrari, 58
- Beatrice di Correggio, 169, 323
- Beatrice d'Este (the elder), 4, 22
- Beatrice d'Este: birth, 4;
- early life, at Naples, 6 f.;
- betrothal to Lodovico Sforza, 8;
- portraits, 33;
- education, 36 ff.;
- wedding journey, 57 ff.;
- marriage, 65 f.;
- at Pavia, 67 ff.;
- early wedded life, 76 ff.;
- friendship with Galeazzo Sanseverino, 81 ff.;
- jealousy of Cecilia Gallerani, 89;
- at Vigevano, 92;
- at Villa Nova, 96;
- horsemanship, 97;
- relations with Isabella of Aragon, 99;
- escapades at Milan, 100 ff.;
- illness, 110;
- at Genoa, 111;
- at Vigevano, 122;
- patron of learning and poetry, 141 ff.;
- of drama and music, 151 ff.;
- first son born, 166 ff.;
- wardrobe, 170 f.;
- visit to Ferrara, 180 ff.;
- diplomatic visit to Venice, chap. xvi. f.;
- return to Milan, 205;
- birth of second son, 258 f.;
- courage in danger, 271;
- meets Maximilian at Bormio, 288 ff.;
- at Vigevano, 291 f.;
- sadness of her last days, 302-306;
- death, 306;
- funeral, 310 f.;
- Maximilian's eulogy, 313 f.;
- tomb, 316;
- Cenacolo, 317 f., 350
- Belgiojoso, 180, 184, 196, 205, 222, 225
- Bellincioni, 46 f., 53, 76, 86 f., 90, 100, 137, 139, 144 £., 147 f.
- Bello of Ferrara, 87
- Belriguardo, 183, 188, 205
- Benedetto Capilupi, 231, 264, 327
- Benedetto da Cingoli, 143
- Benedetto Ispano, 128
- Benedetto Trevisano, 255, 367
- Bergonzio, 299, 366
- Bernardino Caimo, 140
- Bernardino Corio, 19, 22, 25, 94, 99, 125, 129 f., 177 f., 230, 241, 342 f.
- Bernardino da Feltre, 123
- Bernardino da Rossi, 66
- Bernardino del Corte, 272, 299, 319, 344 f., 347 f.
- Bernardino d'Urbino, 283
- Bernardo Contarini, 271
- Bernardo Prosperi, 170
- Bianca d'Este, 4, 65, 183
- Bianca, d. of Caterina Sforza, 330
- Bianca, d. of Lodovico, 45, 57, 169, 209, 233, 235, 292, 302 f., 376
- Bianca Maria Sforza, 43, 46, 70, 106, 115, 121, 136, 160 f., 169 f., 179, 184, 208-220, 222, 242, 252 f., 303, 339, 346, 371, 377
- Bianca of Milan, m. of Lodovico, 14 ff.
- Bibbiena, 147
- Blois (Treaty of), 338
- Boccaccio, 143
- Bona of Savoy, Duchess of Milan, 8, 18-25, 70, 160, 170, 208, 216, 232, 237, 251 f.
- Bona, d. of Giangaleazzo Sforza, 167, 353
- Bonifazio da Cremona, 63
- Bonifazio Visconti, 378
- Borella, 245, 250
- Borromeo, 342, 344, 354
- Borso di Correggio (the elder), 5
- Borso di Correggio (the younger), 206, 315
- Borso d'Este, 3, 29, 38
- Bramante of Urbino, 42, 76, 83, 92, 104, 122, 124, 132 ff., 139 f., 145-148, 229, 260, 291, 296, 299, 300, 316, 331, 350 f.
- Brera Altar-piece, 285 f.
- Briconnet, 280, 283
- Brognolo, 261
- Buttinone di Treviglio, 66
- C
- Cagnola, 92, 132, 288
- Caiazzo. See Gianfrancesco Sanseverino
- Calvi, 242
- Camilla Sforza, 169, 343
- Caradosso, 132, 134, 137, 139, 182, 262, 320, 348
- Carpaccio, 103
- Castello of Ferrara, 1
- Caterina Cornaro, 204
- Caterina Sforza, 20, 23, 41, 253, 330, 341, 365
- Cecco Simonetta, 20-24
- Cecilia Gallerani, 52 ff., 89 ff., 150, 263, 292, 321
- Cecilia Simonetta, 145
- Celso Maffei, 354
- Certosa, 74, 102-106, 237
- Cæsar Borgia, 222, 338, 341, 348 ff., 361
- Charles V. (Emperor), 332, 377 f.
- Charles VIII. of France, 112 ff., 160, 164 f., 180, 184 f., 196 f., 209, 221, 223, 232-238, 248, 254 ff., 258, 264, 268, 273 ff., 277, 279 f., 282 ff., 287, 294, 325
- Charlotte d'Albret, 338
- Chevalier Bayard, 360
- Chiara Gonzaga, 251, 305, 314, 329 f.
- Christina of Denmark, 378
- Conrad Stürzl, 270
- Conrade Vimerca, 289
- Constantino Privolo, 200
- Cordier, 76, 152, 186, 190, 196
- Cosimo Tura, 2, 33
- Cristoforo Rocchi, 61
- Cristoforo Romano, 56, 76, 106 ff., 111, 139, 152, 323
- Cristoforo Solari (Il Gobbo), 317 ff., 351, 379
- Cusani, 324
- D
- Dante, 146
- Delaborde, 196, 247
- Della Torre (Count), 169
- Demetrius Calcondila, 128
- De Trano, 337
- Dioda (or Diodato), 76, 81
- Dionigi Confanerio, 239
- Doge Agostino Barbarigo, 174, 186 ff., 195 ff., 267
- Dolcebuono, 132 ff., 140
- Domenico de Grillandaio, 300
- Donate de' Preti, 241, 244, 250
- Dorotea Gonzaga, 18
- E
- Elizabeth Gonzaga (Duchess of Urbino), 50, 57, 144, 147, 151, 187, 227
- Elizabeth Sforza, 262
- Emilia Pia, 108, 147, 151
- Erasmo Brasca, 64, 114, 179, 205, 217 ff., 225, 229, 242, 254, 327, 338, 343
- Ercole d'Este, 2 f., 5 f., 9 f., 22, 28 ff., 38, 89, 155, 158, 164, 182 f., 206, 222, 232, 282, 284 f., 308, 312, 323, 337, 348-351, 360, 364 f.
- Ercole (Maximilian) Sforza, 166, 171, 226, 264 f., 292 f., 335, 353, 373
- Ermes Sforza, 43, 74, 182, 217 f., 245, 253, 310, 346, 364, 371, 377
- Ermolao Barbaro, 93, 124
- Este (House of), 2
- Eustachio, 25, 43
- F
- Fausto Andrelino, 370
- Federico, Marquis of Mantua, 9
- Federigo of Naples, 232
- Federigo Sanseverino (Cardinal), 44, 151, 255, 343, 375
- Federigo of Urbino, 4
- Ferrante d'Este, 6, 51, 249, 323, 351
- Ferrante of Naples, 3, 6, 9 f., 21, 24, 27, 45, 112 ff., 118, 121, 165, 176, 184, 221 f.
- Ferrante of Naples II., 228, 255, 257, 264, 266, 269, 277, 282, 294, 328
- Ferrante Sforza, 7
- Ferrara, 31 f.
- Ferrari, 128
- Ficino, 147
- Fieschi, 335
- Filelfo, 16, 129 ff.
- Filippino di Frati Filippo, 300, 340
- Filippo Beroaldo, 129
- Filippo Sforza, 21
- Florentio, 152
- Fracassa. See Sanseverino (Gaspare)
- Francesco Bello, 35
- Francesco Bernardo Visconti, 215, 266 f., 342, 344, 347
- Francesco Capello, 190
- Francesco da Casate, 55
- Francesco Foscari, 288, 291 f., 305
- Francesco Francia, 34
- Francesco Mantegna, 329
- Francesco Martini, 60, 134
- Francesco Pallavicino, 215, 262, 342
- Francesco Sforza, 5, 8, 14, 114, 156, 186, 217
- Francesco Sforza (son of Giangaleazzo), 48, 237 f., 240, 251, 299, 328, 353
- Francesco Sforza (son of Lodovico), 259, 293, 321, 335, 377 f.
- Francesca da Rimini, 373
- Franchino Gaffuri, 128, 131, 134, 152
- Francis I., 376 f.
- Frederic III. (Emperor), 179, 208
- Frederic of Naples, 294, 353
- G
- Gaguin, 94
- Galeazzo Pallavicino, 213, 262, 342
- Galeazzo di Sanseverino, 44 f., 51, 55, 58, 67, 71, 73, 76, 79 ff., 85 ff., 92, 100, 110, 124, 136, 138, 145-148, 158 f., 162, 164, 171, 180, 182, 206 f., 210, 216, 222, 224 f., 228, 237, 248 f., 255 f., 264, 269, 271 f., 278 f., 281, 285-288, 292, 298, 303 f., 310, 315, 322 ff., 326, 330, 338, 342, 344 ff., 348, 351, 354, 356-363, 365, 370, 376
- Galeotto del Carretto, 93, 150
- Galeotto della Mirandola, 4, 65, 183, 272, 292, 327, 341
- Gaspare Bugati, 132
- Gaspare Melchior, Bishop of Brixen, 209, 211, 215, 254, 270
- Gaspare di Pusterla, 170
- Gaspare Sanseverino (Fracassa), 28, 44, 71, 85, 123, 182, 228, 232, 279, 287, 291, 296, 322, 327, 330, 342, 347, 349, 354, 361, 363, 375
- Gaspare Visconti, 103, 138, 142 f., 145-148, 151, 190, 217, 264, 324
- Gattico, 318, 322 f.
- Gentile Bellini, 103, 198
- Ghibellines, 21, 23
- Giacomo Trotti, 52, 62, 64 f., 76, 88 f., 91, 110, 157, 166, 241
- Gian Francesco da Vimercato, 357
- Gian Francesco Gonza of Bozzolo, 156
- Gianfrancesco Sanseverino (Count of Caiazzo), 74, 119, 148, 178, 182, 232, 238, 249, 269, 272 ff., 278, 292 f., 315, 330, 342 f., 347, 349, 354, 375
- Gian Galeazzo Sforza, Duke of Milan, 7, 20, 23, 41 ff., 46 f., 69, 71, 73, 80, 115, 118 f., 124, 167, 176 f., 209, 221, 230, 237 ff., 246 f., 285
- Gian Giacomo Gillino, 202, 356
- Gian Giacomo Trivulzio, 45, 352
- Giannino, 137
- Gianpaolo Sforza, 321, 379
- Giasone del Maino, 127 f., 217, 270, 272
- Gilbert Bertrand, 370
- Gilbert of Montpensier, 251, 264, 277, 294
- Giorgio Merula, 64, 127-130, 137, 139
- Giovanni Adorno, 162, 272, 328, 335, 347
- Giovanni Antonio Amadeo, 104, 133 f., 140, 325
- Giovanni Bellini, 53, 153, 187, 263
- Giovanni Bentivoglio, 67
- Giovanni Dondi, 63
- Giovanni Francesco Gonzaga, Marquis of Mantua, 9, 33, 50, 56, 66 f., 72, 109, 111, 152, 174, 182, 187 f., 191, 195, 206, 226 f., 265, 270, 272 ff., 281, 283, 285, 298, 307, 322 f., 326 f., 329, 338, 342, 348-351, 358 ff.
- Giovanni Gonzaga, 69, 98, 259, 360
- Giovanni de Medici, 330
- Giovanni Pietro Suardo, 245
- Giovanni Sforza of Pesaro, 165, 184, 338
- Giovanni Simonetta, 24
- Giovanni Stanga (Marquis), 106 f., 145, 148, 162, 217, 288, 291, 293, 315, 317 ff., 327, 338, 363
- Giovanni da Tortona, 316
- Girolamo da Figino, 200
- Girolamo Landriano, 355
- Girolamo Riario, 20, 23
- Girolamo Savonarola, 29, 61, 157, 184, 274
- Girolamo Stanga, 72
- Girolamo Tuttavilla, 100, 120, 148, 162, 179, 186, 189 f., 206, 228
- Giuliano della Rovere (Cardinal), 157, 165, 225, 255, 316, 349, 371
- Godefroy, 237
- Godfrey Borgia, 221, 225
- Gualtero, 325
- Guicciardini, 12, 99, 176, 225 f., 240, 249, 259 f., 278, 295, 378
- Guido Arcimboldo, 301, 323
- Guidotto Prestinari, 144 f.
- Guiniforte Solari, 133
- H
- Henry VII. of England, 114, 290, 297, 355
- I
- Il Perugino, 104, 300, 340
- Innocent VII. (Pope), 30, 43, 62, 73, 113, 156
- Ippolita Sforza, 7, 17
- Ippolita Sforza (the younger), 230
- Ippolito d'Este (Cardinal), 51, 222
- Isabella of Aragon, 46, 69, 80, 99 ff., 118 f., 124, 160, 167, 169 f., 176 f., 230, 237 f., 250 ff., 265, 269, 328, 353
- Isabella d'Este, 4, 30, 33, 36 ff., 40, 50, 52, 53 f., 64, 68 f., 74 f., 78 f., 81, 84 ff., 96 ff., 101, 106 ff., 109, 123, 131, 145, 149 ff., 152, 155 ff., 162, 167, 171 f., 174 f., 187 f., 198, 205, 206 ff., 211, 226, 232, 244, 250 f., 258 ff., 263 f., 272 f., 275 f., 278, 283 f., 298, 304, 308, 312, 321 ff., 326 ff., 344, 353, 356
- Isabella Sforza, 7, 17
- J
- Jacopo Andrea, 360, 364
- Jacopo Antiquario, 115, 125 f.
- Jacopo d'Atri, 7, 108, 279, 283
- Jacopo Bellini, 2, 32
- Jacopo da Ferrara 138 f., 355
- Jacopo di San Secondo, 152
- James IV. (of Scotland), 121
- Jean d'Auton, 355, 359, 369, 371, 377
- Jean Bontemps, 209
- Jean Jacques Trivulzio, 282, 294, 315 f., 326, 329, 338, 341-349, 353, 355, 360-364, 367
- Jean Marot, 370
- Joan of Aragon, 6
- Jorba, 173
- Juan Borgia, 223, 225
- Julius II. (Pope), 283
- L
- Lancinus Curtius, 128, 139, 149, 210, 230, 348
- Lascaris, 7, 17, 19
- La Trémouille, 232, 260 f., 363 f.
- Leo X. (Pope), 377
- Leonardo da Vinci, 42, 47, 53, 61, 66, 72, 76, 91, 107, 133-140, 144, 153 f., 210, 229, 260 f., 296, 299, 302, 306, 318 f., 324 f., 331, 339 f., 347, 350 f., 353, 365 f.
- Leonello d'Este, 3, 29, 32
- Leonora of Aragon (Duchess d'Este), 3, 6, 28, 30, 34, 38, 50, 64, 73, 107, 166, 168 f., 172, 177, 181, 186, 190 f., 195, 198, 206 f.
- Leonora da Correggio, 217
- Leonora Gonzaga, 226, 230, 329
- Lodovico Bergamini, 52, 90, 292
- Lodovico de Medici, 330
- Lodovico Sforza (Il Moro), 4, 8;
- his character, 10 ff.;
- birth, 14;
- explanation of surname, 15;
- early years, 15 f.;
- leads crusade, 17;
- at Cremona, 17;
- in France, 20;
- exile at Pisa, 21;
- becomes Duke of Bari, 22;
- invasion of Lombardy, 22;
- returns to Milan as co-regent, 23;
- betrothal, 24;
- sole regent, 25;
- war with Genoese and Venetians, 27 f.;
- delays his marriage, 41;
- development of Milan, 42;
- marriage contract, 49;
- again delays his marriage, 51;
- relations with Cecilia Gallerani, 52;
- marriage, 65 f.;
- renounces Cecilia Gallerani, 89;
- public works in Vigevano and the Lomellina, 92 ff.;
- interest in the Certosa, 102-106;
- friendship and correspondence with Isabella D'Este, 108 ff., 163 f.;
- entertains French ambassadors, 115 ff.;
- concludes treaty with Charles VIII., 116;
- embassy to France, 119;
- reforms and extends Universities of Pavia and Milan, 126 ff.;
- endows research, 129 ff.;
- his library, 130;
- encourages art, 131 ff.;
- attitude towards Renaissance, 139 f.;
- ambition, 176 f.;
- alliance with Venice and Papacy, 178;
- visits Ferrara, 180 ff.;
- vacillating policy, 221 f.;
- joins Charles VII. against Naples, 224 f.;
- relations with the Gonzagas of Mantua, 227;
- proclaimed duke at Milan, 240 f.;
- seeks investiture from Maximilian, 241 ff.;
- refutes calumnies, 254;
- proclamation of New League against France, 267;
- invested Duke of Milan, 270;
- retires before Louis of Orleans, 271;
- war with France, 272 ff.;
- peace, 281;
- assists Pisa, 287;
- league with Maximilian and others, 290;
- his arrogance, 295;
- grief at death of Beatrice, 307 ff., 315;
- visit to Mantua, 326 f.;
- his wills, 332-336;
- flight before the French, and loss of Milan, 343-351;
- return to Milan, 356 ff.;
- besieged in Novara, 361;
- betrayed by Swiss, 362;
- captivity at Encise and Lys St. Georges, 367-370;
- at Loches, 371 ff.;
- death, 373;
- place of burial, 373 f.;
- Lorenzo Gusnasco, 37, 76, 152
- Lorenzo de' Medici, 7, 17, 19, 21, 42, 118, 143, 147, 151, 164
- Lorenzo da Pavia, 129, 153, 261 ff., 348, 365
- Louis XI., 20
- Louis XII., 265, 326, 332, 337 f., 341, 348, 360, 363, 371, 376. See also Orlealns, Duke of.
- Luca Fancelli, 133 f.
- Luca Pacioli, 128, 304, 324
- Lucia Marliani, 18
- Lucrezia Borgia, 149, 165, 184, 338
- Lucrezia Crivelli, 302, 321, 379
- Lucrezia d'Este, 33, 36
- Luzio, 173
- M
- Machiavelli, 19, 330
- Maffeo Pirovano, 241, 252 ff., 324
- Maffeo di Treviglio, 136
- Magenta, 247
- Malipiero, 271, 284, 287, 295, 331
- Mantegna, 274
- Marc Antonio Michieli, 303
- Marco Morosini, 292
- Margareta Solari, 233
- Margherita Gonzaga, 298
- Margherita Pia, 85, 151, 322
- Marino Sanuto, 238, 248, 267, 291, 293 ff., 297, 315 f., 326, 331, 337, 346, 370, 376
- Mariolo, 163, 170
- Mary of Burgundy, 113
- Mascagni, 147
- Matteo Boiardo, 36, 38, 52, 68, 86 f.
- Matteo Brandello, 138, 299, 318
- Matthias Corvinus, 43, 64, 115, 136, 154
- Maximilian, 113, 137, 164 f., 179 f., 184 ff., 197, 208, 218 f., 222, 225, 241, 252 ff., 256, 269, 272, 284, 288, 295, 301, 304 f., 313 ff., 334, 338 f., 341 f., 346, 355, 371, 377
- Melzi (Count of), 346
- Michele Savonarola, 29
- Michelo Angelo, 108
- Milan, 260
- Milan, University of, 128
- Molmenti, 188
- Montferrat, Marquis of, 67, 116, 236
- Montorfano, 319
- Muralti, 65, 302
- N
- Narcisso, 152
- Nexemperger, 133
- Niccolo della Bussola, 355, 364
- Niccolo da Correggio, 5 f., 28, 35, 65, 73, 76, 80, 107, 116, 142 f., 145 f., 149-152, 182, 208 f., 217, 259, 264, 303, 306, 313, 323, 327, 349, 351, 353
- Niccolo d'Este II., 30, 193
- Niccolo d'Este III., 3, 29
- Niccolo d'Este (s. of Leonello d'Este), 5 f.
- Niccolo de Negri, 188, 190, 293
- O
- Oldrado Lampugnano, 379
- Orleans, Duke of, 112, 225, 231 f., 256, 266, 268 f., 271, 279, 281 f., 286, 294 f., 326. See also Louis XII.
- Orsini, 223
- Ortensio Lando, 52
- Ottaviano Sforza, 42
- P
- Pamfilo Sasso, 150
- Pandolfini, 25, 48, 118
- Paolo Bilia, 250
- Paolo Giovio, 11, 247, 273, 371
- Pavia, 66 ff.
- Pavia, University of, 126 ff.
- Pedro Maria, 152
- Perrault de Gurk, 318
- Perron de Baschi, 221
- Perugino. See Il P.
- Petrarch, 143, 146
- Philippe de Commines, 48, 187, 233, 236 f., 245, 248 f., 261 f., 269, 274, 279, 285
- Pier Francesco, 373
- Piero de Medici, 164, 184, 223, 231, 236, 241, 248, 256, 262
- Pierre d'Urfé, 376
- Pietro Alamanni, 135, 231, 241
- Pietro Bembo, 108, 113, 195, 197
- Pietro Landriano, 179
- Pietro Lazzarone, 150
- Pietro of Perugia. See Il Perugino
- Pico della Mirandola, 30, 61
- Pino, 318
- Pistoia. See Antonio Cam. P.
- Pius II., 16
- Poggio, 87
- Polissena d'Este, 77, 79, 232
- Pontano, 7
- Prato, 362
- Prosperi, 181 f.
- Pulci, 87
- R
- Raphael, 144, 152
- Roberto di Sanseverino, 21 ff., 27 f., 43, 137
- Roderigo Borgia. See Alexander VI.
- Rodolfo Gonzaga, 65, 273
- Romanini, 195
- Rovegnatino, 316
- S
- Sabba da Castiglione, 35, 45, 108, 142 ff., 147, 149, 152 f., 354
- Salomon (physician), 370 f.
- Salomone Ebreo, 130
- Sancia of Naples, 221, 225
- Sandro Botticelli, 300
- Sannazzaro, 7
- Sanseverino, House of, 43 f. See also Antonio Maria S., Federigo S., Galeazzo S., Gaspare S., Gianfrancesco S., Roberto S.
- Scaligero, 52
- Schifanoia frescoes, 32, 38
- Sebastian Badoer, 255
- Senlis (Treaty of), 180, 196, 224
- Serafino Aquilano, 142 ff.
- Sforza, Duke of Bari, 20 ff.
- Sigismund of Austria, 218
- Sigismund d'Este (Cardinal), 58
- Sigismund of Poland, 353
- Sixtus IV., 3, 20, 24, 27, 157
- Sperandio, 3, 31, 274
- Spinola family, 335
- Stuart d'Aubigny, 114, 121, 232, 238
- T
- Taddeo Contarini, 155, 303
- Taddeo Vimercati, 179, 187
- Tanzio, 139, 144
- Tasso, 87
- Teodora, 168 ff., 181
- Teseo d'Albonesi, 128, 153
- Theodore Guainiero, 247
- Tiraboschi, 141
- Tito Strozzi, 35
- Tommaso Grassi, 131
- Tommaso Piatti, 131
- Treso di Monza, 66
- Trissino, 37
- Tristan Calco, 70, 129 f., 210
- Tristan Sforza, 5, 22
- Turman, 362
- U
- Ursino, 190
- V
- Valentina Visconti, 231
- Vasari, 135, 319
- Venetian fêtes, 193 ff.
- Venetians attack Ferrara, 26 f.
- Vercelli (Peace of), 281
- Verrocchio, 301
- Vincenzo Baldelli, 316
- Vincenzo Calmeta, 138, 142 f., 145 f., 151
- Vincenzo Foppa, 63
- Vittore Pisanello, 2, 32
- Vittoria Colonna, 52, 263
- Z
- Zenale di Treviglio, 66, 285