House of Sforza
House of Sforza | |
---|---|
Country | Italy |
Parent house | House of Visconti (through Bianca Maria Visconti) |
Titles |
|
Founded | 1447 |
Founder | Muzio Attendolo |
Final ruler |
Milan: Francesco II (1535) Pesaro: Galeazzo (1519) |
Deposition |
Milan: 1500: Italian Wars Pesaro: 1519: Death of Galeazzo Two Sicilies: 1624 |
Cadet branches |
Illegitimate
|
Sforza (pronounced [ˈsfɔrtsa]) was a ruling family of Renaissance Italy, based in Milan. They acquired the Duchy of Milan from the previously ruling Visconti family in the mid-15th century, and lost it to the Spanish Habsburgs about a century later.
History
Rising from rural nobility, the Sforzas became condottieri and used this military position to become rulers in Milan. The family governed by force, ruse, and power politics, similar to the Medici in Florence. Under their rule the city-state flourished and expanded.
Muzio Attendolo (1369–1424), called Sforza (from sforzare, to exert or force), founded the dynasty. A condottiero from Romagna, he served the Angevin kings of Naples and became the most successful dynast of the condottieri.
His son Francesco I Sforza ruled Milan, having acquired the title of Duke of Milan (1450-1466) after the extinction of the Visconti family in 1447.
The family also held the seigniory of Pesaro, starting from Muzio Attendolo's second son, Alessandro (1409–1473). The Sforza held Pesaro until 1519, with the death of Galeazzo.
Muzio's third son, Bosio (1411–1476), founded the branch of Santa Fiora, who held the title of count of Cotignola; the Sforza ruled the small county of Santa Fiora in southern Tuscany until 1624. Members of this family also held important ecclesiastical and political position in the Papal States, and moved to Rome in 1674, taking the name Sforza Cesarini.
The Sforza became allied with the Borgia family through the arranged marriage (1493-1497) between Lucrezia Borgia and Giovanni (the illegitimate son of Costanzo I of Pesaro).[1] This alliance failed as the Borgia annulled the marriage once the Sforza's were no longer needed.
In 1499, in the course of the Italian Wars, the army of Louis XII of France took Milan from Ludovico Sforza (known as Ludovico il Moro, famous for taking Leonardo da Vinci into his service).
After Imperial German troops drove out the French, Maximilian Sforza, son of Ludovico, became Duke of Milan (1512-1515) until the French returned under Francis I of France and imprisoned him.
Sforza rulers of Duchy of Milan
- Francesco I 1450–1466
- Galeazzo Maria 1466–1476
- Gian Galeazzo 1476–1494
- Ludovico 1494–1499
- Ludovico (restored) 1500
- Massimiliano 1512–1515
- Francesco II 1521–1535
Sforza rulers of Pesaro and Gradara
Sforza family tree
- Muzio Sforza with mistress Lucia da Torsano had 7 illegitimate sons
- son Francesco I Sforza married Bianca Maria Visconti
- son Galeazzo Maria Sforza mistress Lucrezia Landriani
- daughter Bianca Maria (1472–1510), second wife of Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I
- son Gian Galeazzo(1469–1494), married Isabella of Naples
- son Francesco (II), nominally duke under the regency of Ludovico Maria
- daughter Bona (1494–1557), second wife of King Sigismund I of Poland[2]
- daughter Ippolita Maria Sforza (1493–1501)
- illegitimate daughter Caterina Sforza married Giovanni de' Medici il Popolano
- son Ludovico il Moro (the Moor) (1451–1508)
- son Ercole Massimiliano
- son Francesco II (III) Maria
- illegitimate daughter Bianca Sforza {1483-1496} married to Galeazzo Sanseverino
- illegitimate son Giovanni Paolo I (1497–1535), marquess of Caravaggio
- son Ascanio (1444–1505), Cardinal
- daughter Ippolita Maria (1446–1484), married king of Alfonso II d'Aragon of Naples
- son Galeazzo Maria Sforza mistress Lucrezia Landriani
- son Alessandro, first lord of Pesaro
- son Costanzo I
- son Galeazzo, last Sforza ruler of Pesaro
- son Giovanni (1466–1510), first husband of Lucrezia Borgia
- Bosio (count of Cotignola, lord of Castell'Arquato)
- son Francesco I Sforza married Bianca Maria Visconti
Notable members
In popular culture
- One of the cursed artifacts from Friday the 13th: The Series was the "Sforza Glove", attributed to the original family's possession.
- Thomas Harris's character Hannibal Lecter is a descendant of the House of Sforza.
- In the anime, manga and book series Trinity Blood, one of the Cardinals and Duchess of Milan is named Caterina Sforza.
- Caterina Sforza appears as a non-playable character in the video game Assassin's Creed 2 and its sequel, Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood.
- The Sforza figure prominently in the Showtime series on the Borgia family.
- The house is mentioned in a song about the Borgia Family in the British edutainment TV show Horrible Histories.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to House of Sforza. |
References
- ↑ "La Signoria degli Sforza". Gradara.com. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
- ↑ http://www.britannica.com/biography/Sigismund-I-king-of-Poland