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Gian Galeazzo Visconti

Gian Galeazzo Visconti (16 October 1351 – 3 September 1402), was the first duke of Milan (1395)[a] and ruled the late-medieval city just before the dawn of the Renaissance. He also ruled Lombardy jointly with his uncle Bernabò.[1] He was the founding patron of the Certosa di Pavia, completing the Visconti Castle at Pavia begun by his father and furthering work on the Duomo of Milan. He captured a large territory of Northern Italy and the Po valley. He threatened war with France in relation to the transfer of Genoa to French control as well as issues with his beloved daughter Valentina. When he died of fever in the Castello of Melegnano, his children fought with each other and fragmented the territories that he had ruled.

Gian Galeazzo Visconti
Duke of Milan
Reign5 September 1395 – 3 September 1402
Coronation5 September 1395, Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio
SuccessorGian Maria Visconti
Lord of Milan
Reign6 May 1385 – 5 September 1395
PredecessorBernabò Visconti
Lord of Pavia
Reign4 August 1378 – 5 September 1395
PredecessorGaleazzo II Visconti
Lord of Pisa
Reign13 February 1399 – 3 September 1402
PredecessorGherardo Appiani
SuccessorGabriele Maria Visconti
Born16 October 1351
Pavia, Italy
Died3 September 1402(1402-09-03) (aged 50)
Melegnano, Duchy of Milan, Italy
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1360; died 1372)
(m. 1380; died 1402)
Issue
HouseVisconti
FatherGaleazzo II Visconti
MotherBianca of Savoy

Biography edit

During his patronage of the Visconti Castle, he contributed to the growth of the collection of scientific treatises and richly illuminated manuscripts in the Visconti Library.[2]

Gian Galeazzo was the son of Galeazzo II Visconti and Bianca of Savoy.[3] His father possessed the signoria of the city of Pavia. In 1385 Gian Galeazzo gained control of Milan by overthrowing his uncle Bernabò through treacherous means by faking a religious conversion and ambushing him during a religious procession in Milan.[4] He imprisoned his uncle who soon died, supposedly poisoned on his orders.[5]

Galeazzo's role as a statesman also took other forms. Soon after seizing Milan, he took Verona, Vicenza, and Padua, establishing himself as Signore of each, and soon controlled almost the entire valley of the Po,[6] including Piacenza where in 1393 he gave the feudal power to Confalonieri family on the lands they already had in the valleys around Piacenza.[citation needed] He lost Padua in 1390 when it reverted to Francesco Novello da Carrara.[7] He received the title of Duke of Milan from Wenceslaus, King of the Romans in 1395 for 100,000 florins.[8]

Gian Galeazzo spent 300,000 golden florins[citation needed] in attempting to turn from their courses the rivers Mincio from Mantua and the Brenta from Padua, in order to render those cities helpless before the force of his arms.[9]

Notable are his library, housed in the grandest princely dwelling in Italy, the Castello in Pavia, and his rich collection of manuscripts, many of them the fruits of his conquests. In 1400, Gian Galeazzo appointed a host of clerks and departments entrusted with improving public health. For the new system of administration and bookkeeping this established, he is credited with creating the first modern bureaucracy, with the assistance of his Chancellor Francesco Barbavara.[10]

Conflict with France edit

Galeazzo was a devoted father to his daughter Valentina. He reacted to gossip about Valentina at the French Court by threatening to declare war on France.[11] The wife of King Charles VI of France was Isabeau of Bavaria, the granddaughter of Bernabò Visconti, and, thus, a bitter rival of Valentina and her father Gian Galeazzo.[12]

Furious at French political manoeuvring that had removed Genoa from his influence, Gian Galeazzo had been attempting to stop the transfer of Genoese sovereignty to France and Enguerrand VII was dispatched to warn him that France would consider further interference a hostile act. The quarrel was more than political. Valentina Visconti, the wife of the Duke of Orleans and Gian Galeazzo's beloved daughter, had been exiled from Paris due to the machinations of Queen Isabeau the same month as the departure of the crusade.[citation needed]

In 1396, after the disaster of Nicopolis, Galeazzo was strongly suspected of having informed the Ottomans of the Crusaders' plans and of the size and strength of their army as vengeance for his daughter being accused of being behind the illness of King Charles VI of France, and for France's increasing control over the city of Genoa that he had attempted to hamper, for which he had been rebuked by Enguerrand VII before the battle.[citation needed]

Uniting Italy and death edit

Gian Galeazzo had dreams of uniting all of northern Italy into one kingdom, a revived Lombard empire.[13] Obstacles included Bologna and especially Florence. In 1402, Gian Galeazzo launched assaults upon these cities. The warfare was extremely costly on both sides, but it was universally believed the Milanese would emerge victorious. The Florentine leaders, especially the chancellor Coluccio Salutati worked successfully to rally the people of Florence, but the Florentines were being taxed hard by famine, disease, and poverty. Galeazzo won another victory over the Bolognese at the Battle of Casalecchio on 26–27 June 1402.[14]

Galeazzo's dreams were to come to nought, however, as he succumbed to a fever at the Castello of Melegnano on 10 August 1402. He died on 3 September. His empire fragmented as infighting among his successors wrecked Milan, partly through the division of his lands among both legitimate and illegitimate children.[b]

Marriage and issue edit

His first marriage was to Isabelle of Valois,[15] who brought him the title of comte de Vertus in Champagne, rendered in Italian as Conte di Virtù, the title by which he was known in his early career. They had:

  • Gian Galeazzo (b. Pavia, 4 March 1366 – d. bef. 1376).
  • Azzone (b. Pavia, 1368 – d. Pavia, 4 October 1381).
  • Valentina (b. Pavia, 1371 – d. Château de Blois, Loir-et-Cher, 14 December 1408), married on 17 August 1389 to Louis I, Duke of Orléans[15]
  • Carlo (b. Pavia, 11 September 1372 – d. Pavia, 1374).

After Galeazzo's wife Isabelle died in childbirth in 1372, he married secondly, on 2 October 1380, his cousin Caterina Visconti,[15] daughter of Bernabò; with her he had:

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ He was also Signore di Verona, Cremona, Bergamo, Brescia, Belluno, Pieve di Cadore, Feltre, Pavia, Novara, Como, Lodi, Vercelli, Alba, Asti, Pontremoli, Tortona, Alessandria, Valenza, Piacenza, Parma, Reggio Emilia, Vicenza, Vigevano, Borgo San Donnino and of the valli del Boite.
  2. ^ To his son Giovanni Maria he assigned the title of Duke of Milan, which included Como, Lodi, Cremona, Bergamo, Brescia, Reggio Emilia, Piacenza, Parma, and claims to Perugia and Siena. To Filippo Maria, conte di Pavia, he assigned in addition Vercelli, Novara, Alessandria, Tortona, Feltre, Verona, Vicenza, Bassano and the shores of Trento. To his illegitimate son, Gabriele Maria, went Pisa and Crema.

References edit

  1. ^ Tuchman, Barbara Wertheim (1978). A distant mirror : the calamitous 14th century. New York: Knopf. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-394-40026-6.
  2. ^ Hoeniger, Cathleen. The Illuminated Tacuinum sanitatis Manuscripts from Northern Italy ca. 1380-1400: Sources, Patrons, and the Creation of a new Pictorial Genre. in: Givens, Jean Ann; Reeds, Karen; Touwaide, Alain. (2006) Visualizing medieval medicine and natural history, 1200-1550. Ashgate Publishing Ltd. pp. 51-82. ISBN 0754652963.
  3. ^ Mueller 2019, p. 550.
  4. ^ John T. Paoletta and Gary M. Radke, Art in Renaissance Italy
  5. ^ Barbara Tuchman A Distant Mirror A.A.Knopf, New York (1978) p.418
  6. ^ Bueno de Mesquita (2011), pp. 69–83.
  7. ^ Bueno de Mesquita (2011), pp. 122–123.
  8. ^ Bueno de Mesquita (2011), p. 173.
  9. ^ Bueno de Mesquita (2011), pp. 165–167, 276–277.
  10. ^ Symonds, John Addington (1888) [1875]. Renaissance in Italy: The age of despots. Vol. 1 (American ed.). New York: Henry Holt and Company. p. 142. ASIN B003YH9WF0. hdl:2027/mdp.39015026749849. OCLC 664406875. Retrieved 8 March 2011. It was he who invented bureaucracy by creating a special class of paid clerks and secretaries of departments. Their duty consisted in committing to books and ledgers the minutest items of his private expenditure and the outgoings of his public purse; in noting the details of the several taxes, so as to be able to present a survey of the whole state revenue; and in recording the names and qualities and claims of his generals, captains, and officials.
  11. ^ Frazee, Charles A. (June 1992). "The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Edited by Alexander P. Kazhdan, New York: Oxford University Press, 1991. 3 vols. xxxi + 2232 pp. $225.00". Church History. 61 (2): 241–243. doi:10.2307/3168272. ISSN 0009-6407. JSTOR 3168272. S2CID 162432200.
  12. ^ Bueno de Mesquita (2011), pp. 63, 158–159.
  13. ^ "Giangaleazzo Visconti, Duke of Milan | History Today". www.historytoday.com. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  14. ^ Morelli 2015, p. 200-201.
  15. ^ a b c d Ward, Prothero & Leathes 1934, p. table 68.

Sources edit

  • Bueno de Mesquita, D. M. (Daniel Meredith) (2011) [1941]. Giangaleazzo Visconti, Duke of Milan (1351-1402): A Study in the Political Career of an Italian Despot (reprint ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521234559. OCLC 746456124.
  • Morelli, Giovanni Di Paolo (2015). "Memoirs". In Branca, Vitorre (ed.). Merchant Writers: Florentine Memoirs from the Middle Ages and Renaissance. University of Toronto Press.
  • Mueller, Reinhold C. (2019). The Venetian Money Market: Banks, Panics, and the Public Debt, 1200-1500. The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Ward, A.W.; Prothero, G.W.; Leathes, Stanley, eds. (1934). The Cambridge Modern History. Vol. XIII. Cambridge at the University Press.

External links edit

Italian nobility
Preceded by Lord of Milan
1378–1395
Became duke
New creation Duke of Milan
1395–1402
Succeeded by

gian, galeazzo, visconti, october, 1351, september, 1402, first, duke, milan, 1395, ruled, late, medieval, city, just, before, dawn, renaissance, also, ruled, lombardy, jointly, with, uncle, bernabò, founding, patron, certosa, pavia, completing, visconti, cast. Gian Galeazzo Visconti 16 October 1351 3 September 1402 was the first duke of Milan 1395 a and ruled the late medieval city just before the dawn of the Renaissance He also ruled Lombardy jointly with his uncle Bernabo 1 He was the founding patron of the Certosa di Pavia completing the Visconti Castle at Pavia begun by his father and furthering work on the Duomo of Milan He captured a large territory of Northern Italy and the Po valley He threatened war with France in relation to the transfer of Genoa to French control as well as issues with his beloved daughter Valentina When he died of fever in the Castello of Melegnano his children fought with each other and fragmented the territories that he had ruled Gian Galeazzo ViscontiDuke of MilanReign5 September 1395 3 September 1402Coronation5 September 1395 Basilica of Sant AmbrogioSuccessorGian Maria ViscontiLord of MilanReign6 May 1385 5 September 1395PredecessorBernabo ViscontiLord of PaviaReign4 August 1378 5 September 1395PredecessorGaleazzo II ViscontiLord of PisaReign13 February 1399 3 September 1402PredecessorGherardo AppianiSuccessorGabriele Maria ViscontiBorn16 October 1351Pavia ItalyDied3 September 1402 1402 09 03 aged 50 Melegnano Duchy of Milan ItalyBurialCertosa di PaviaSpouseIsabella Countess of Vertus m 1360 died 1372 wbr Caterina Visconti m 1380 died 1402 wbr IssueValentina Countess of Vertus Giovanni Maria Duke of Milan Filippo Maria Duke of Milan Illegitimate Gabriele Maria Visconti Lord of Pisa Antonio Visconti it HouseViscontiFatherGaleazzo II ViscontiMotherBianca of Savoy Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Conflict with France 1 2 Uniting Italy and death 2 Marriage and issue 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBiography editDuring his patronage of the Visconti Castle he contributed to the growth of the collection of scientific treatises and richly illuminated manuscripts in the Visconti Library 2 Gian Galeazzo was the son of Galeazzo II Visconti and Bianca of Savoy 3 His father possessed the signoria of the city of Pavia In 1385 Gian Galeazzo gained control of Milan by overthrowing his uncle Bernabo through treacherous means by faking a religious conversion and ambushing him during a religious procession in Milan 4 He imprisoned his uncle who soon died supposedly poisoned on his orders 5 Galeazzo s role as a statesman also took other forms Soon after seizing Milan he took Verona Vicenza and Padua establishing himself as Signore of each and soon controlled almost the entire valley of the Po 6 including Piacenza where in 1393 he gave the feudal power to Confalonieri family on the lands they already had in the valleys around Piacenza citation needed He lost Padua in 1390 when it reverted to Francesco Novello da Carrara 7 He received the title of Duke of Milan from Wenceslaus King of the Romans in 1395 for 100 000 florins 8 Gian Galeazzo spent 300 000 golden florins citation needed in attempting to turn from their courses the rivers Mincio from Mantua and the Brenta from Padua in order to render those cities helpless before the force of his arms 9 Notable are his library housed in the grandest princely dwelling in Italy the Castello in Pavia and his rich collection of manuscripts many of them the fruits of his conquests In 1400 Gian Galeazzo appointed a host of clerks and departments entrusted with improving public health For the new system of administration and bookkeeping this established he is credited with creating the first modern bureaucracy with the assistance of his Chancellor Francesco Barbavara 10 Conflict with France edit Galeazzo was a devoted father to his daughter Valentina He reacted to gossip about Valentina at the French Court by threatening to declare war on France 11 The wife of King Charles VI of France was Isabeau of Bavaria the granddaughter of Bernabo Visconti and thus a bitter rival of Valentina and her father Gian Galeazzo 12 Furious at French political manoeuvring that had removed Genoa from his influence Gian Galeazzo had been attempting to stop the transfer of Genoese sovereignty to France and Enguerrand VII was dispatched to warn him that France would consider further interference a hostile act The quarrel was more than political Valentina Visconti the wife of the Duke of Orleans and Gian Galeazzo s beloved daughter had been exiled from Paris due to the machinations of Queen Isabeau the same month as the departure of the crusade citation needed In 1396 after the disaster of Nicopolis Galeazzo was strongly suspected of having informed the Ottomans of the Crusaders plans and of the size and strength of their army as vengeance for his daughter being accused of being behind the illness of King Charles VI of France and for France s increasing control over the city of Genoa that he had attempted to hamper for which he had been rebuked by Enguerrand VII before the battle citation needed Uniting Italy and death edit Gian Galeazzo had dreams of uniting all of northern Italy into one kingdom a revived Lombard empire 13 Obstacles included Bologna and especially Florence In 1402 Gian Galeazzo launched assaults upon these cities The warfare was extremely costly on both sides but it was universally believed the Milanese would emerge victorious The Florentine leaders especially the chancellor Coluccio Salutati worked successfully to rally the people of Florence but the Florentines were being taxed hard by famine disease and poverty Galeazzo won another victory over the Bolognese at the Battle of Casalecchio on 26 27 June 1402 14 Galeazzo s dreams were to come to nought however as he succumbed to a fever at the Castello of Melegnano on 10 August 1402 He died on 3 September His empire fragmented as infighting among his successors wrecked Milan partly through the division of his lands among both legitimate and illegitimate children b Marriage and issue editHis first marriage was to Isabelle of Valois 15 who brought him the title of comte de Vertus in Champagne rendered in Italian as Conte di Virtu the title by which he was known in his early career They had Gian Galeazzo b Pavia 4 March 1366 d bef 1376 Azzone b Pavia 1368 d Pavia 4 October 1381 Valentina b Pavia 1371 d Chateau de Blois Loir et Cher 14 December 1408 married on 17 August 1389 to Louis I Duke of Orleans 15 Carlo b Pavia 11 September 1372 d Pavia 1374 After Galeazzo s wife Isabelle died in childbirth in 1372 he married secondly on 2 October 1380 his cousin Caterina Visconti 15 daughter of Bernabo with her he had Gian Maria 7 September 1388 16 May 1412 Filippo Maria 15 3 September 1392 13 August 1447 Gallery edit nbsp The painted figures of Caterina and Gian Galeazzo are shown kneeling in the foreground in this missal by Anovelo da Imbonate nbsp The Coronation of Gian Galeazzo Visconti in the Basilica of Sant Ambrogio nbsp Gian Galeazzo Visconti with his three sons presents the Certosa di Pavia to the Virgin Certosa di Pavia nbsp Detail from Gian Galeazzo donates the Certosa to the Madonna nbsp Tomb of Gian Galeazzo Visconti at the Certosa di PaviaSee also editMontechino Italian Castle PiacenzaNotes edit He was also Signore di Verona Cremona Bergamo Brescia Belluno Pieve di Cadore Feltre Pavia Novara Como Lodi Vercelli Alba Asti Pontremoli Tortona Alessandria Valenza Piacenza Parma Reggio Emilia Vicenza Vigevano Borgo San Donnino and of the valli del Boite To his son Giovanni Maria he assigned the title of Duke of Milan which included Como Lodi Cremona Bergamo Brescia Reggio Emilia Piacenza Parma and claims to Perugia and Siena To Filippo Maria conte di Pavia he assigned in addition Vercelli Novara Alessandria Tortona Feltre Verona Vicenza Bassano and the shores of Trento To his illegitimate son Gabriele Maria went Pisa and Crema References edit Tuchman Barbara Wertheim 1978 A distant mirror the calamitous 14th century New York Knopf p 240 ISBN 978 0 394 40026 6 Hoeniger Cathleen The Illuminated Tacuinum sanitatis Manuscripts from Northern Italy ca 1380 1400 Sources Patrons and the Creation of a new Pictorial Genre in Givens Jean Ann Reeds Karen Touwaide Alain 2006 Visualizing medieval medicine and natural history 1200 1550 Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 51 82 ISBN 0754652963 Mueller 2019 p 550 John T Paoletta and Gary M Radke Art in Renaissance Italy Barbara Tuchman A Distant Mirror A A Knopf New York 1978 p 418 Bueno de Mesquita 2011 pp 69 83 Bueno de Mesquita 2011 pp 122 123 Bueno de Mesquita 2011 p 173 Bueno de Mesquita 2011 pp 165 167 276 277 Symonds John Addington 1888 1875 Renaissance in Italy The age of despots Vol 1 American ed New York Henry Holt and Company p 142 ASIN B003YH9WF0 hdl 2027 mdp 39015026749849 OCLC 664406875 Retrieved 8 March 2011 It was he who invented bureaucracy by creating a special class of paid clerks and secretaries of departments Their duty consisted in committing to books and ledgers the minutest items of his private expenditure and the outgoings of his public purse in noting the details of the several taxes so as to be able to present a survey of the whole state revenue and in recording the names and qualities and claims of his generals captains and officials Frazee Charles A June 1992 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Edited by Alexander P Kazhdan New York Oxford University Press 1991 3 vols xxxi 2232 pp 225 00 Church History 61 2 241 243 doi 10 2307 3168272 ISSN 0009 6407 JSTOR 3168272 S2CID 162432200 Bueno de Mesquita 2011 pp 63 158 159 Giangaleazzo Visconti Duke of Milan History Today www historytoday com Retrieved 16 March 2023 Morelli 2015 p 200 201 a b c d Ward Prothero amp Leathes 1934 p table 68 Sources editBueno de Mesquita D M Daniel Meredith 2011 1941 Giangaleazzo Visconti Duke of Milan 1351 1402 A Study in the Political Career of an Italian Despot reprint ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521234559 OCLC 746456124 Morelli Giovanni Di Paolo 2015 Memoirs In Branca Vitorre ed Merchant Writers Florentine Memoirs from the Middle Ages and Renaissance University of Toronto Press Mueller Reinhold C 2019 The Venetian Money Market Banks Panics and the Public Debt 1200 1500 The Johns Hopkins University Press Ward A W Prothero G W Leathes Stanley eds 1934 The Cambridge Modern History Vol XIII Cambridge at the University Press External links editPortrait and family tree Archived 2013 08 23 at the Wayback Machine Italian nobility Preceded byGaleazzo II ViscontiBernabo Visconti Lord of Milan1378 1395 Became duke New creation Duke of Milan1395 1402 Succeeded byGian Maria Visconti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gian Galeazzo Visconti amp oldid 1214059713, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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