Lucrezio Gravisi

Lucrezio Gravisi
Born 1558
Died 30 December 1613
Nationality Venetian
Occupation Mercenary

Lucrezio Gravisi (1558 - 30 December 1613) was a Venetian freelance soldier from Capodistra in Istria, now Koper in Slovenia.

He was knighted by the King of Poland. For some time he commanded the castle of Brescia. He was assassinated in Dalmatia while traveling to the east.[1]

Lucrezio Gravisi was a member of the family of the Marquis of Pietrapelosa, based in Capodistria but named after their estate of Pietrapelosa in the interior of Istria.[2]

Biography

He was born in Capodistra in 1558. By the age of 16 he had sailed on the galley of his relative Pietro Gravisi in the war against the Turks. He traveled in Spain and Portugal, and then to the court of the Polish King Sigismund III Vasa.[3]

In 1588 Sigismund made him a knight for his services in Prussia and Muscovy.[4] In 1606 he was Sigismund's representative in a mission to the papal court in Rome.[3]

Lucrezio Gravisi became a soldier of fortune, helping fight the Turks at Buda. For a year he guarded the castle of Brescia for the Venetian Republic. Returning to Venice, he was dispatched to Candia (Crete) with two companies of soldiers to stop the raids of pirates.[3]

However, while in harbor in Mandre, a port on the island of Pago in Dalmatia, pirates in six boats attacked his galley at night while the crew was sleeping. All the occupants were killed including Gravisi and their bodies thrown into the sea.[5]

His wife Paola Strassoldo, his brother and his cousin were also killed in this incident.[3]

References

Citations
Sources
Further reading
  • Gianfilippo Squinziani (1887). Lucrezio Gravisi istriano da Capodistria (1558-1613). (in Italian). Capodistria: Priora. 
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