Difference between revisions of "Cesare Borgia" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:cesareborgia.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Cesare Borgia. Portrait by [[Altobello Melone]]. [[Bergamo]], [[Accademia Carrara]].]]
 
[[Image:cesareborgia.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Cesare Borgia. Portrait by [[Altobello Melone]]. [[Bergamo]], [[Accademia Carrara]].]]
  
'''Cesare Borgia'''  ([[September 13]], [[1475]]? – [[March 11]], [[1507]]), [[Duke of Valentinois]], and [[Romagna]], Prince of [[Andria]] and [[Venafro]], Count of Dyois, [[Lord of Piombino]], [[Camerino]] and [[Urbino]], [[Gonfalonier]] and Captain-General of [[Roman Catholic church|Holy Church]], was a Spanish-Italian [[condottiero]], lord and cardinal. He was the son of [[Pope Alexander VI]], and [[Vannozza dei Cattanei]], sibling to [[Lucrezia Borgia]], Jofré Borgia Prince of Squillace and [[Giovanni Borgia]], duke of [[Gandia]], and half-brother to Don Pedro Luis de Borja and Girolama de Borja, children of unknown mothers.
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'''Cesare Borgia'''  (September 13, 1475? – March 11, 1507) was a Spanish-Italian [[condottiero]], lord, and cardinal. The son of [[Pope Alexander VI]] and [[Vannozza dei Cattanei]], he was the sibling of [[Lucrezia Borgia]], Jofré Borgia Prince of Squillace and [[Giovanni Borgia]], duke of [[Gandia]], and half-brother to Don Pedro Luis de Borja and Girolama de Borja, children of unknown mothers. His titles included [[Duke of Valentinois]] and [[Romagna]]; Prince of [[Andria]] and [[Venafro]]; Count of Dyois; [[Lord of Piombino]], [[Camerino]] and [[Urbino]]; [[Gonfalonier]]; and military Captain-General of [[Roman Catholic church|Holy Church]].
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
 
===Birth===
 
===Birth===
Like nearly all aspects of Cesare Borgia's life, the date of his birth is a subject of conflict. However, it is accepted that he was born in [[Rome]] between [[1474]] and [[1476]] to Cardinal Rodrigo de Lanzol y Borja, soon to become [[Pope Alexander VI]], and his mistress [[Vannozza dei Cattanei|Vannozza de' Cattanei]], of whom documents are sparse. The Borgia family originally came from Spain and rose in the mid 15th century, when Cesare's great uncle Alonso Borgia (1378-1458), bishop of Valencia, was elected [[Pope Callixtus III]] in 1455. <ref>Herfried Münkler and Marina Münkler, ''Lexikon der Renaissance'', Munich: Beck, 2000, 43ff.{{de icon}}</ref> Cesare's father, [[Pope Alexander VI]] was the first pope who openly recognized the children he had with his lover Vanozza de' Cattanei.  
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Like nearly all aspects of Cesare Borgia's life, the date of his birth is a subject of conflict. However, it is accepted that he was born in [[Rome]] between 1474 and 1476 to Cardinal Rodrigo de Lanzol y Borja, soon to become [[Pope Alexander VI]], and his mistress [[Vannozza dei Cattanei|Vannozza de' Cattanei]], of whom documents are sparse. The Borgia family originally came from Spain and rose in the mid 15th century, when Cesare's great uncle Alonso Borgia (1378-1458), bishop of Valencia, was elected [[Pope Callixtus III]] in 1455. <ref>Herfried Münkler and Marina Münkler, ''Lexikon der Renaissance'', Munich: Beck, 2000, 43ff.{{de icon}}</ref> Cesare's father, Pope Alexander VI was the first pope who openly recognized the children he had with his lover Vanozza de' Cattanei.  
  
 
[[Stefano Infessura]] writes that Cardinal Borgia falsely claimed Cesare to be the legitimate son of another man, the nominal husband of Vannozza de' Cattanei. More likely [[Pope Sixtus IV]] granted Cesare a release from the necessity of proving his birth in a [[papal bull]].
 
[[Stefano Infessura]] writes that Cardinal Borgia falsely claimed Cesare to be the legitimate son of another man, the nominal husband of Vannozza de' Cattanei. More likely [[Pope Sixtus IV]] granted Cesare a release from the necessity of proving his birth in a [[papal bull]].
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=== Early life ===
 
=== Early life ===
 
With brown eyes and orange hair, Cesare was acknowledged a beautiful child and grew to be a fleet-footed, tall, handsome man of unlimited ambition, much like his father.
 
With brown eyes and orange hair, Cesare was acknowledged a beautiful child and grew to be a fleet-footed, tall, handsome man of unlimited ambition, much like his father.
Cesare was initially groomed for a career in the [[Roman Catholic church|church]]. He was made Bishop of [[Pamplona]] at the age of 15. Following school in [[Perugia]] and [[Pisa]] where Cesare studied law, and his father's elevation to Pope, Cesare was made [[Catholic Cardinal|Cardinal]] at the age of 18. <ref>Herfried Münkler and Marina Münkler, ''Lexikon der Renaissance'', Munich: Beck, 2000, 43ff.{{de icon}}</ref> Alexander VI staked the hopes for the Borgia family on Cesare's brother Giovanni, who was made captain general of the military forces of the papacy. Giovanni was assassinated in 1497 in mysterious circumstances: several contemporaries suggested Cesare being his killer<ref>Spinosa, ''La saga dei Borgia''</ref>, as Giovanni's disappearing could finally open him the long-awaited military career; also jealousy towards Sancha of Aragon, wife of Cesare's other brother [[Jofré]], and mistress of both Cesare and Giovanni<ref>Rendina, ''I capitani di ventura''</ref>. Cesare's role in the act, however, has never been cleared.
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Cesare was initially groomed for a career in the [[Roman Catholic church|church]]. He was made Bishop of [[Pamplona]] at the age of 15. Following school in [[Perugia]] and [[Pisa]] where Cesare studied law, and his father's elevation to Pope, Cesare was made [[Catholic Cardinal|Cardinal]] at the age of 18. <ref>Herfried Münkler and Marina Münkler, ''Lexikon der Renaissance'', Munich: Beck, 2000, 43ff.{{de icon}}</ref> Alexander VI staked the hopes for the Borgia family on Cesare's brother Giovanni, who was made captain general of the military forces of the papacy. Giovanni was assassinated in 1497 in mysterious circumstances: several contemporaries suggested Cesare being his killer<ref>Spinosa, ''La saga dei Borgia''</ref>, as Giovanni's disappearing could finally open him the long-awaited military career; also jealousy towards Sancha of Aragon, wife of Cesare's other brother [[Jofré]], and mistress of both Cesare and Giovanni<ref>Rendina, ''I capitani di ventura''</ref>. Cesare's role in the act, however, has never been cleared.
  
On [[August 17]], [[1498]], Cesare became the first person in history to resign the cardinalate. On the same day the French [[king Louis XII]] named Cesare [[Duke of Valentinois]], which explains the nickname "Valentino".
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On August 17, 1498, Cesare became the first person in history to resign the cardinalate. On the same day the French [[king Louis XII]] named Cesare [[Duke of Valentinois]], which explains the nickname "Valentino."
  
 
=== Military career ===
 
=== Military career ===
Cesare's career was founded upon his father's ability to distribute patronage, and through his alliance with France (reinforced by his marriage with Charlotte d'Albret, sister of [[John III of Navarre]]) in the course of the [[Italian Wars]]. Louis XII invaded Italy in 1499: after [[Gian Giacomo Trivulzio]] had ousted its duke [[Ludovico Sforza]], Cesare accompanied the king in his entrance in [[Milan]].
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Cesare's career was founded upon his father's ability to distribute patronage, and through his alliance with France (reinforced by his marriage with Charlotte d'Albret, sister of [[John III of Navarre]]) in the course of the [[Italian Wars]]. Louis XII invaded Italy in 1499: after [[Gian Giacomo Trivulzio]] had ousted its duke [[Ludovico Sforza]], Cesare accompanied the king in his entrance in [[Milan]].
  
At this point Alexander decide to profit of the favourable situation to carve out for Cesare a state of his own in northern Italy, and declared deposed all his vicars in [[Romagna]] and [[Marche]]. Though in theory subject directly to the pope, these rulers had been practically independent or dependent on other states for generations.
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At this point Alexander decide to profit of the favourable situation to carve out for Cesare a state of his own in northern Italy, and declared deposed all his vicars in [[Romagna]] and [[Marche]]. Though in theory subject directly to the pope, these rulers had been practically independent or dependent on other states for generations.  
  
 
Cesare was appointed commander of the papal armies with a number of Italian mercenaries, supported by 300 cavalry and 4,000 Swiss infantry sent by the King of France. His first victim was [[Caterina Sforza]] (mother of the Medici condottiero [[Giovanni dalle Bande Nere]]), ruler of [[Imola]] and [[Forlì]]. Deprived of his French troops after the conquest of those two cities, Borgia returned anyway to Rome to celebrate a triumph and to received the title of Papal ''[[Gonfaloniere]]'' from his father. In 1500 the creation of twelve new cardinals granted Alexander enough money for Cesare to hire the condottieri [[Vitellozzo Vitelli]], [[Gian Paolo Baglioni]], [[Giulio Orsini|Giulio]] and [[Paolo Orsini]] and [[Oliverotto da Fermo]], who resumed his campaign in Romagna.
 
Cesare was appointed commander of the papal armies with a number of Italian mercenaries, supported by 300 cavalry and 4,000 Swiss infantry sent by the King of France. His first victim was [[Caterina Sforza]] (mother of the Medici condottiero [[Giovanni dalle Bande Nere]]), ruler of [[Imola]] and [[Forlì]]. Deprived of his French troops after the conquest of those two cities, Borgia returned anyway to Rome to celebrate a triumph and to received the title of Papal ''[[Gonfaloniere]]'' from his father. In 1500 the creation of twelve new cardinals granted Alexander enough money for Cesare to hire the condottieri [[Vitellozzo Vitelli]], [[Gian Paolo Baglioni]], [[Giulio Orsini|Giulio]] and [[Paolo Orsini]] and [[Oliverotto da Fermo]], who resumed his campaign in Romagna.
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[[Giovanni Sforza]], first husband of Cesare's daughter Lucrezia, was soon ousted from [[Pesaro]]; [[Pandolfo IV Malatesta|Pandolfo Malatesta]] lost [[Rimini]]; [[Faenza]] surrendered, his youg lord [[Astorre III Manfredi]] being later drowned in the Tiber river by  Cesare's order. In May 1501 the latter was created duke of Romagna. Hired by Florence, Cesare subsequently added the lordship of [[Piombino]] to his new lands.
 
[[Giovanni Sforza]], first husband of Cesare's daughter Lucrezia, was soon ousted from [[Pesaro]]; [[Pandolfo IV Malatesta|Pandolfo Malatesta]] lost [[Rimini]]; [[Faenza]] surrendered, his youg lord [[Astorre III Manfredi]] being later drowned in the Tiber river by  Cesare's order. In May 1501 the latter was created duke of Romagna. Hired by Florence, Cesare subsequently added the lordship of [[Piombino]] to his new lands.
  
While his condottieri took over the siege of Piombino (which eneded in 1502), Cesare commanded the French troops in the sieges of Naples and [[Capua]], defended by [[Prospero Colonna|Prospero]] and [[Fabrizio Colonna]]. On [[june 24]] [[1501]] his troops stormed the latter, causing the fall of the Aragonese power in southern Italy.
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While his condottieri took over the siege of Piombino (which eneded in 1502), Cesare commanded the French troops in the sieges of Naples and [[Capua]], defended by [[Prospero Colonna|Prospero]] and [[Fabrizio Colonna]]. On [[june 24]] 1501 his troops stormed the latter, causing the fall of the Aragonese power in southern Italy.
  
 
In June 1502 he set out for the Marche, where he was able to capture [[Urbino]] and [[Camerino]] by treason. The next step would be [[Bologna]], but his condottieri, fearing Cesare's cruelty, set up a plot against him. [[Guidobaldo da Montefeltro]] and [[Giovanni Maria da Varano]] returned in Urbino and Camerino and [[Fossombrone]] revolted. Cesare called for a reconciliation, but treacherously imprisoned his condottieri in [[Senigallia]], a feat described as a "Wonderful deceiving" by [[Paolo Giovio]]<ref>Rendina, p. 250.</ref>, and had them executed.
 
In June 1502 he set out for the Marche, where he was able to capture [[Urbino]] and [[Camerino]] by treason. The next step would be [[Bologna]], but his condottieri, fearing Cesare's cruelty, set up a plot against him. [[Guidobaldo da Montefeltro]] and [[Giovanni Maria da Varano]] returned in Urbino and Camerino and [[Fossombrone]] revolted. Cesare called for a reconciliation, but treacherously imprisoned his condottieri in [[Senigallia]], a feat described as a "Wonderful deceiving" by [[Paolo Giovio]]<ref>Rendina, p. 250.</ref>, and had them executed.
  
 
===Last years===
 
===Last years===
Though an immensely capable general and statesman, Cesare could do nothing without continued papal patronage. The news of his father's death (1503) arrived when Cesare, though gravely ill, was planning the conquest of [[Tuscany]]. While he was convalescent in [[Castel Sant'Angelo]], his troops controlled the conclave. The new pope, [[Pius III]], supported him, but his reign was short: the accession of Cesare's deadly enemy [[Julius II]] caused his sudden ruin.
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Though an immensely capable general and statesman, Cesare could do nothing without continued papal patronage. The news of his father's death (1503) arrived when Cesare, though gravely ill, was planning the conquest of [[Tuscany]]. While he was convalescent in [[Castel Sant'Angelo]], his troops controlled the conclave. The new pope, [[Pius III]], supported him, but his reign was short: the accession of Cesare's deadly enemy [[Julius II]] caused his sudden ruin.
  
While moving to Romagna to quench a revolt, he was seized and imprisoned by [[Gian Paolo Baglioni]] near Perugia. All his lands were acquired by the Papal States. Exiled to [[Spain]], in [[1504]], he escaped from a Spanish prison two years later and joined his brother-in-law, King [[John III of Navarre]]. In his service, Cesare died at the [[siege]] of [[Viana, Spain|Viana]] in [[1507]], at the age of thirty-one.
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While moving to Romagna to quench a revolt, he was seized and imprisoned by [[Gian Paolo Baglioni]] near Perugia. All his lands were acquired by the Papal States. Exiled to [[Spain]], in 1504, he escaped from a Spanish prison two years later and joined his brother-in-law, King [[John III of Navarre]]. In his service, Cesare died at the [[siege]] of [[Viana, Spain|Viana]] in 1507, at the age of thirty-one.
  
 
==Evaluation==
 
==Evaluation==
  
Cesare Borgia was greatly admired by [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], who met the Duke on a diplomatic mission in his function as Secretary of the Florentine Chancellery. Machiavelli was at Borgia's court from [[October 7]], [[1502]] through [[January 18]], [[1503]]. During this time he wrote regular dispatches to his superiors in Florence, many of which have survived and are published in Machiavelli's Collected Works. Machiavelli used many of Borgia's exploits and tactics as examples in ''[[The Prince]]'' and advised politicians to imitate Borgia. Two episodes were particularly impressive to Machiavelli: the method by which Borgia pacified the Romagna, which Machiavelli describes in chapter XVII of ''[[The Prince]]'', and Borgia's assassination of his captains on New Year's Eve of 1503 in Senigallia. <ref>Niccolò Machiavelli, "A Description of the Method Used by Duke Valentino in Killing Vitellozzo Vitelli, Oliverotto da Fermo, and Others",''The Chief Works and Others'', trans. Allan Gilbert, Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1989, 3 vols., 163–169</ref>  
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Cesare Borgia was greatly admired by [[Niccolò Machiavelli]], who met the Duke on a diplomatic mission in his function as Secretary of the Florentine Chancellery. Machiavelli was at Borgia's court from October 7, 1502 through January 18, 1503. During this time he wrote regular dispatches to his superiors in Florence, many of which have survived and are published in Machiavelli's Collected Works. Machiavelli used many of Borgia's exploits and tactics as examples in ''[[The Prince]]'' and advised politicians to imitate Borgia. Two episodes were particularly impressive to Machiavelli: the method by which Borgia pacified the Romagna, which Machiavelli describes in chapter XVII of ''The Prince'', and Borgia's assassination of his captains on New Year's Eve of 1503 in Senigallia. <ref>Niccolò Machiavelli, "A Description of the Method Used by Duke Valentino in Killing Vitellozzo Vitelli, Oliverotto da Fermo, and Others",''The Chief Works and Others'', trans. Allan Gilbert, Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1989, 3 vols., 163–169</ref>  
  
 
Machiavelli's praise for Borgia is subject to controversy. Some scholars see in Machiavelli's Borgia the precursor of state crimes in the 20th Century.<ref>Ernst Cassirer, ''The Myth of the State'', New Haven: Yale University Press, 1946</ref>. Others, including Macaulay and Lord Acton have historicized Machiavelli's Borgia, explaining the admiration for such violence as an effect of the general criminality and corruption of the time.<ref>Harvey C. Mansfield, ''Machiavelli's Virtue'', Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.</ref>  
 
Machiavelli's praise for Borgia is subject to controversy. Some scholars see in Machiavelli's Borgia the precursor of state crimes in the 20th Century.<ref>Ernst Cassirer, ''The Myth of the State'', New Haven: Yale University Press, 1946</ref>. Others, including Macaulay and Lord Acton have historicized Machiavelli's Borgia, explaining the admiration for such violence as an effect of the general criminality and corruption of the time.<ref>Harvey C. Mansfield, ''Machiavelli's Virtue'', Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.</ref>  
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In Volume One of ''Celebrated Crimes'', [[Alexandre Dumas, père|Alexandre Dumas, ''père'']] states that some pictures of Jesus Christ produced around Borgia's lifetime were based on Cesare Borgia, and that this in turn has influenced images of Jesus produced since that time.
 
In Volume One of ''Celebrated Crimes'', [[Alexandre Dumas, père|Alexandre Dumas, ''père'']] states that some pictures of Jesus Christ produced around Borgia's lifetime were based on Cesare Borgia, and that this in turn has influenced images of Jesus produced since that time.
  
Cesare Borgia briefly employed [[Leonardo da Vinci]] as military architect and engineer at one point. Leonardo had worked at the Milanese court of [[Ludovico Sforza]] for many years, until [[Charles VIII of France]] drove Sforza out of Italy.
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Cesare Borgia briefly employed [[Leonardo da Vinci]] as military architect and engineer at one point. Leonardo had worked at the Milanese court of [[Ludovico Sforza]] for many years, until [[Charles VIII of France]] drove Sforza out of Italy.
  
 
He wanted to take over Mantua while [[Isabelle d'Este]] was ruling.
 
He wanted to take over Mantua while [[Isabelle d'Este]] was ruling.
  
 
=== Marriage and children ===
 
=== Marriage and children ===
On [[May 10]], [[1499]], Cesare married Charlotte d'Albret ([[1480]] - [[March 11]], [[1514]]). She was a sister of [[John III of Navarre]]. They were parents to a daughter,*Louise Borgia, ([[1500]] - [[1553]]) who first married first Louis II de La Tremouille, Governor of Burgundy, and secondly Philippe de Bourbon, Seigneur de [[Bourbon-Busset|Busset]].  
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On May 10, 1499, Cesare married Charlotte d'Albret (1480 - March 11, 1514). She was a sister of [[John III of Navarre]]. They were parents to a daughter,*Louise Borgia, (1500 - 1553) who first married first Louis II de La Tremouille, Governor of Burgundy, and secondly Philippe de Bourbon, Seigneur de [[Bourbon-Busset|Busset]].  
  
 
Cesare was also father to at least eleven illegitimate children: [[Girolamo Borgia]], who married [[Isabella Contessa di Carpi]].
 
Cesare was also father to at least eleven illegitimate children: [[Girolamo Borgia]], who married [[Isabella Contessa di Carpi]].
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{{Trivia|date=June 2007}}
 
{{Trivia|date=June 2007}}
 
=== Movies ===
 
=== Movies ===
*''[[Lucrezia Borgia (1926 movie)|Lucrezia Borgia]]'' ([[Richard Oswald]], [[1926]]), a [[silent movie]] starring [[Liane Haid]] and [[Conrad Veidt]]
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*''[[Lucrezia Borgia (1926 movie)|Lucrezia Borgia]]'' ([[Richard Oswald]], 1926), a [[silent movie]] starring [[Liane Haid]] and [[Conrad Veidt]]
*''[[Lucrèce Borgia]]'' ([[Abel Gance]], [[1935]]), a French film starring Edwige Feuillère as Lucrezia and Gabriel Gabrio as Cesare.
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*''[[Lucrèce Borgia]]'' ([[Abel Gance]], 1935), a French film starring Edwige Feuillère as Lucrezia and Gabriel Gabrio as Cesare.
 
*''The Black Duke'' (1961), starring [[Cameron Mitchell (actor)|Cameron Mitchell]] and [[Gloria Milland]]
 
*''The Black Duke'' (1961), starring [[Cameron Mitchell (actor)|Cameron Mitchell]] and [[Gloria Milland]]
 
*''Bride of Vengeance'' (1948), starring [[Macdonald Carey]] and [[Paulette Goddard]]
 
*''Bride of Vengeance'' (1948), starring [[Macdonald Carey]] and [[Paulette Goddard]]
 
*''Prince of Foxes'' (1949), starring [[Orson Welles]] and [[Tyrone Power]] (from the best-selling book by [[Samuel Shellabarger]]) at [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0041767/ IMDB ].
 
*''Prince of Foxes'' (1949), starring [[Orson Welles]] and [[Tyrone Power]] (from the best-selling book by [[Samuel Shellabarger]]) at [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0041767/ IMDB ].
 
*''[[Los Borgia]]'' (2006), Spanish-Italian film, featuring [[Sergio Peris-Mencheta]] as Cesare.
 
*''[[Los Borgia]]'' (2006), Spanish-Italian film, featuring [[Sergio Peris-Mencheta]] as Cesare.
*''Poisons, or the World History of Poisoning'' (2001), a Russian film directed by [[Karen Shakhnazarov]], where Cesare Borgia is one of the characters — [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0261435/ IMDB ].
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*''Poisons, or the World History of Poisoning'' (2001), a Russian film directed by [[Karen Shakhnazarov]], where Cesare Borgia is one of the characters—[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0261435/ IMDB ].
  
 
=== Fiction ===
 
=== Fiction ===
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*''[[City of God, A Novel of the Borgias]]'' by [[Cecelia Holland]]
 
*''[[City of God, A Novel of the Borgias]]'' by [[Cecelia Holland]]
 
*''[[Then and Now]]'' by [[W. Somerset Maugham]]
 
*''[[Then and Now]]'' by [[W. Somerset Maugham]]
*''[[The Antichrist (book)|The Antichrist]]'' (1895) by [[F. Nietzsche]] Af. #61
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*''[[The Antichrist (book)|The Antichrist]]'' (1895) by [[F. Nietzsche]] Af. #61
 
*''[[The Dwarf]]'' (1944) by [[Pär Lagerkvist]] features an unscrupulous prince likely modelled on Borgia
 
*''[[The Dwarf]]'' (1944) by [[Pär Lagerkvist]] features an unscrupulous prince likely modelled on Borgia
 
* [[Milo Manara]], an Italian comic book creator, drew a comic book divided in three parts depicting the story of the Borgia family. The texts were written by [[Alejandro Jodorowsky]].
 
* [[Milo Manara]], an Italian comic book creator, drew a comic book divided in three parts depicting the story of the Borgia family. The texts were written by [[Alejandro Jodorowsky]].
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{{s-start}}
 
{{s-start}}
 
{{s-bef|rows=2|before=[[Ottaviano Riario]]}}
 
{{s-bef|rows=2|before=[[Ottaviano Riario]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Forlì]]|years=[[1499]]&ndash;[[1503]]}}
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{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Forlì]]|years=1499&ndash;1503}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Antonio II Ordelaffi]]}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Antonio II Ordelaffi]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Imola]]|years=[[1499]]&ndash;[[1503]]}}
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{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Imola]]|years=1499&ndash;1503}}
 
{{s-non|reason=To the [[Papal States]]}}
 
{{s-non|reason=To the [[Papal States]]}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Pandolfo IV Malatesta]]}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Pandolfo IV Malatesta]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Rimini]]|years=[[1500]]&ndash;[[1503]]}}
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{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Rimini]]|years=1500&ndash;1503}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Pandolfo IV Malatesta]]}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Pandolfo IV Malatesta]]}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Astorre III Manfredi]]}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Astorre III Manfredi]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Faenza]]|years=[[1501]]&ndash;[[1503]]}}
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{{s-ttl|title=Lord of [[Faenza]]|years=1501&ndash;1503}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Astorre IV Manfredi]]}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Astorre IV Manfredi]]}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Guidobaldo da Montefeltro|Guidobaldo I da Montefeltro]]}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Guidobaldo da Montefeltro|Guidobaldo I da Montefeltro]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[Dukes of Urbino|Duke of Urbino]]|years=[[1502]]&ndash;[[1503]]}}
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{{s-ttl|title=[[Dukes of Urbino|Duke of Urbino]]|years=1502&ndash;1503}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Francesco Maria I della Rovere]]}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Francesco Maria I della Rovere]]}}
 
{{end}}
 
{{end}}
  
[[Category:1475 births|Borgia, Cesare]]
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[[Category:1507 deaths|Borgia, Cesare]]
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[[Category:People from Rome (city)|Borgia, Cesare]]
 
[[Category:People from Rome (city)|Borgia, Cesare]]
 
[[Category:Borgia]]
 
[[Category:Borgia]]
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[[Category:Cardinal-nephews]]
 
[[Category:Cardinal-nephews]]
  
[[ar:سيزار بورجيا]]
 
 
[[br:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[br:Cesare Borgia]]
[[ca:Cèsar Borja]]
 
[[da:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[de:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[et:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[es:César Borgia]]
 
[[eo:Cezaro Borgia]]
 
[[fr:César Borgia]]
 
[[ko:체사레 보르지아]]
 
[[hr:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[io:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[it:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[he:צ'זארה בורג'ה]]
 
[[la:Caesar Borgia]]
 
[[hu:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[nl:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[ja:チェーザレ・ボルジア]]
 
[[no:César de Borja]]
 
[[pl:Cezar Borgia]]
 
[[pt:César Bórgia]]
 
[[ru:Борджиа, Чезаре]]
 
[[sr:Ћезаре Борџија]]
 
[[fi:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[sv:Cesare Borgia]]
 
[[zh:凱薩·波吉耳]]
 
 
 
 
{{credit|141601027}}
 
{{credit|141601027}}

Revision as of 04:16, 28 August 2008

Cesare Borgia. Portrait by Altobello Melone. Bergamo, Accademia Carrara.

Cesare Borgia (September 13, 1475? – March 11, 1507) was a Spanish-Italian condottiero, lord, and cardinal. The son of Pope Alexander VI and Vannozza dei Cattanei, he was the sibling of Lucrezia Borgia, Jofré Borgia Prince of Squillace and Giovanni Borgia, duke of Gandia, and half-brother to Don Pedro Luis de Borja and Girolama de Borja, children of unknown mothers. His titles included Duke of Valentinois and Romagna; Prince of Andria and Venafro; Count of Dyois; Lord of Piombino, Camerino and Urbino; Gonfalonier; and military Captain-General of Holy Church.

Biography

Birth

Like nearly all aspects of Cesare Borgia's life, the date of his birth is a subject of conflict. However, it is accepted that he was born in Rome between 1474 and 1476 to Cardinal Rodrigo de Lanzol y Borja, soon to become Pope Alexander VI, and his mistress Vannozza de' Cattanei, of whom documents are sparse. The Borgia family originally came from Spain and rose in the mid 15th century, when Cesare's great uncle Alonso Borgia (1378-1458), bishop of Valencia, was elected Pope Callixtus III in 1455. [1] Cesare's father, Pope Alexander VI was the first pope who openly recognized the children he had with his lover Vanozza de' Cattanei.

Stefano Infessura writes that Cardinal Borgia falsely claimed Cesare to be the legitimate son of another man, the nominal husband of Vannozza de' Cattanei. More likely Pope Sixtus IV granted Cesare a release from the necessity of proving his birth in a papal bull.

Early life

With brown eyes and orange hair, Cesare was acknowledged a beautiful child and grew to be a fleet-footed, tall, handsome man of unlimited ambition, much like his father. Cesare was initially groomed for a career in the church. He was made Bishop of Pamplona at the age of 15. Following school in Perugia and Pisa where Cesare studied law, and his father's elevation to Pope, Cesare was made Cardinal at the age of 18. [2] Alexander VI staked the hopes for the Borgia family on Cesare's brother Giovanni, who was made captain general of the military forces of the papacy. Giovanni was assassinated in 1497 in mysterious circumstances: several contemporaries suggested Cesare being his killer[3], as Giovanni's disappearing could finally open him the long-awaited military career; also jealousy towards Sancha of Aragon, wife of Cesare's other brother Jofré, and mistress of both Cesare and Giovanni[4]. Cesare's role in the act, however, has never been cleared.

On August 17, 1498, Cesare became the first person in history to resign the cardinalate. On the same day the French king Louis XII named Cesare Duke of Valentinois, which explains the nickname "Valentino."

Military career

Cesare's career was founded upon his father's ability to distribute patronage, and through his alliance with France (reinforced by his marriage with Charlotte d'Albret, sister of John III of Navarre) in the course of the Italian Wars. Louis XII invaded Italy in 1499: after Gian Giacomo Trivulzio had ousted its duke Ludovico Sforza, Cesare accompanied the king in his entrance in Milan.

At this point Alexander decide to profit of the favourable situation to carve out for Cesare a state of his own in northern Italy, and declared deposed all his vicars in Romagna and Marche. Though in theory subject directly to the pope, these rulers had been practically independent or dependent on other states for generations.

Cesare was appointed commander of the papal armies with a number of Italian mercenaries, supported by 300 cavalry and 4,000 Swiss infantry sent by the King of France. His first victim was Caterina Sforza (mother of the Medici condottiero Giovanni dalle Bande Nere), ruler of Imola and Forlì. Deprived of his French troops after the conquest of those two cities, Borgia returned anyway to Rome to celebrate a triumph and to received the title of Papal Gonfaloniere from his father. In 1500 the creation of twelve new cardinals granted Alexander enough money for Cesare to hire the condottieri Vitellozzo Vitelli, Gian Paolo Baglioni, Giulio and Paolo Orsini and Oliverotto da Fermo, who resumed his campaign in Romagna.

Giovanni Sforza, first husband of Cesare's daughter Lucrezia, was soon ousted from Pesaro; Pandolfo Malatesta lost Rimini; Faenza surrendered, his youg lord Astorre III Manfredi being later drowned in the Tiber river by Cesare's order. In May 1501 the latter was created duke of Romagna. Hired by Florence, Cesare subsequently added the lordship of Piombino to his new lands.

While his condottieri took over the siege of Piombino (which eneded in 1502), Cesare commanded the French troops in the sieges of Naples and Capua, defended by Prospero and Fabrizio Colonna. On june 24 1501 his troops stormed the latter, causing the fall of the Aragonese power in southern Italy.

In June 1502 he set out for the Marche, where he was able to capture Urbino and Camerino by treason. The next step would be Bologna, but his condottieri, fearing Cesare's cruelty, set up a plot against him. Guidobaldo da Montefeltro and Giovanni Maria da Varano returned in Urbino and Camerino and Fossombrone revolted. Cesare called for a reconciliation, but treacherously imprisoned his condottieri in Senigallia, a feat described as a "Wonderful deceiving" by Paolo Giovio[5], and had them executed.

Last years

Though an immensely capable general and statesman, Cesare could do nothing without continued papal patronage. The news of his father's death (1503) arrived when Cesare, though gravely ill, was planning the conquest of Tuscany. While he was convalescent in Castel Sant'Angelo, his troops controlled the conclave. The new pope, Pius III, supported him, but his reign was short: the accession of Cesare's deadly enemy Julius II caused his sudden ruin.

While moving to Romagna to quench a revolt, he was seized and imprisoned by Gian Paolo Baglioni near Perugia. All his lands were acquired by the Papal States. Exiled to Spain, in 1504, he escaped from a Spanish prison two years later and joined his brother-in-law, King John III of Navarre. In his service, Cesare died at the siege of Viana in 1507, at the age of thirty-one.

Evaluation

Cesare Borgia was greatly admired by Niccolò Machiavelli, who met the Duke on a diplomatic mission in his function as Secretary of the Florentine Chancellery. Machiavelli was at Borgia's court from October 7, 1502 through January 18, 1503. During this time he wrote regular dispatches to his superiors in Florence, many of which have survived and are published in Machiavelli's Collected Works. Machiavelli used many of Borgia's exploits and tactics as examples in The Prince and advised politicians to imitate Borgia. Two episodes were particularly impressive to Machiavelli: the method by which Borgia pacified the Romagna, which Machiavelli describes in chapter XVII of The Prince, and Borgia's assassination of his captains on New Year's Eve of 1503 in Senigallia. [6]

Machiavelli's praise for Borgia is subject to controversy. Some scholars see in Machiavelli's Borgia the precursor of state crimes in the 20th Century.[7]. Others, including Macaulay and Lord Acton have historicized Machiavelli's Borgia, explaining the admiration for such violence as an effect of the general criminality and corruption of the time.[8]

In Volume One of Celebrated Crimes, Alexandre Dumas, père states that some pictures of Jesus Christ produced around Borgia's lifetime were based on Cesare Borgia, and that this in turn has influenced images of Jesus produced since that time.

Cesare Borgia briefly employed Leonardo da Vinci as military architect and engineer at one point. Leonardo had worked at the Milanese court of Ludovico Sforza for many years, until Charles VIII of France drove Sforza out of Italy.

He wanted to take over Mantua while Isabelle d'Este was ruling.

Marriage and children

On May 10, 1499, Cesare married Charlotte d'Albret (1480 - March 11, 1514). She was a sister of John III of Navarre. They were parents to a daughter,*Louise Borgia, (1500 - 1553) who first married first Louis II de La Tremouille, Governor of Burgundy, and secondly Philippe de Bourbon, Seigneur de Busset.

Cesare was also father to at least eleven illegitimate children: Girolamo Borgia, who married Isabella Contessa di Carpi.

Popular culture

Movies

  • Lucrezia Borgia (Richard Oswald, 1926), a silent movie starring Liane Haid and Conrad Veidt
  • Lucrèce Borgia (Abel Gance, 1935), a French film starring Edwige Feuillère as Lucrezia and Gabriel Gabrio as Cesare.
  • The Black Duke (1961), starring Cameron Mitchell and Gloria Milland
  • Bride of Vengeance (1948), starring Macdonald Carey and Paulette Goddard
  • Prince of Foxes (1949), starring Orson Welles and Tyrone Power (from the best-selling book by Samuel Shellabarger) at IMDB .
  • Los Borgia (2006), Spanish-Italian film, featuring Sergio Peris-Mencheta as Cesare.
  • Poisons, or the World History of Poisoning (2001), a Russian film directed by Karen Shakhnazarov, where Cesare Borgia is one of the characters—IMDB .

Fiction

  • The Family by Mario Puzo
  • The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, père mentions many conspiracy theories based around Borgia.
  • Madonna of the Seven Hills by Jean Plaidy AKA Victoria Holt the first half of Lucrezia Borgia's life, Cesare being a large part of that life.
  • Light on Lucrezia by Jean Plaidy AKA Victoria Holt the second half of Lucrezia Borgia's life, Cesare being a large part of that life.
  • Cantarella by You Higuri is a manga attributing supernatural causes to historic events, starring Cesare.
  • Mirror Mirror by Gregory Maguire
  • Prince of Foxes by Samuel Shellabarger
  • The Banner of the Bull by Rafael Sabatini (Fiction)
  • The Borgia Bride by Jeanne Kalogridis
  • Kakan no Madonna by Chiho Saito (manga)
  • The Borgias by Alexandre Dumas, père
  • The Borgia Testament by Nigel Balchin
  • Lusts of The Borgias by Marcus Van Heller
  • City of God, A Novel of the Borgias by Cecelia Holland
  • Then and Now by W. Somerset Maugham
  • The Antichrist (1895) by F. Nietzsche Af. #61
  • The Dwarf (1944) by Pär Lagerkvist features an unscrupulous prince likely modelled on Borgia
  • Milo Manara, an Italian comic book creator, drew a comic book divided in three parts depicting the story of the Borgia family. The texts were written by Alejandro Jodorowsky.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Cloulas, Ivan. The Borgias. 
  • Machiavelli, Niccolò. The Prince. 
  • Johnson, Marion. The Borgias. 
  • Sabatini, Rafael. The Life of Cesare Borgia. 
  • Spinosa, Antonio (1999). La saga dei Borgia. Mondadori. 

Notes

  1. Herfried Münkler and Marina Münkler, Lexikon der Renaissance, Munich: Beck, 2000, 43ff.(German)
  2. Herfried Münkler and Marina Münkler, Lexikon der Renaissance, Munich: Beck, 2000, 43ff.(German)
  3. Spinosa, La saga dei Borgia
  4. Rendina, I capitani di ventura
  5. Rendina, p. 250.
  6. Niccolò Machiavelli, "A Description of the Method Used by Duke Valentino in Killing Vitellozzo Vitelli, Oliverotto da Fermo, and Others",The Chief Works and Others, trans. Allan Gilbert, Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1989, 3 vols., 163–169
  7. Ernst Cassirer, The Myth of the State, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1946
  8. Harvey C. Mansfield, Machiavelli's Virtue, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.

External links


Preceded by:
Ottaviano Riario
Lord of Forlì
1499–1503
Succeeded by: Antonio II Ordelaffi
Lord of Imola
1499–1503
To the Papal States
Preceded by:
Pandolfo IV Malatesta
Lord of Rimini
1500–1503
Succeeded by: Pandolfo IV Malatesta
Preceded by:
Astorre III Manfredi
Lord of Faenza
1501–1503
Succeeded by: Astorre IV Manfredi
Preceded by:
Guidobaldo I da Montefeltro
Duke of Urbino
1502–1503
Succeeded by: Francesco Maria I della Rovere

br:Cesare Borgia

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