fbpx
Wikipedia

Piccolomini

The House of Piccolomini (pronounced [pikkoˈlɔːmini]) is the name of an Italian noble family, Patricians of Siena, who were prominent from the beginning of the 13th century until the 18th century.[3] The family achieved the recognized titles of Pope of the Catholic Church, Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, Grandee of Spain, and Duke of Amalfi. The family is also featured in Florentine Histories, a book written by Niccolò Machiavelli, where he describes the reign of Pope Pius II, who had allied himself with the Venetians and Prince Vlad Dracula, to wage a war against the Sultan of the Ottoman empire.[4]

Piccolomini
Noble family
Country Italian Republic

Republic of Siena
 Papal States
 Grand Duchy of Tuscany
 Kingdom of Naples
 Holy Roman Empire

 Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
EtymologyLiterally "little men"
Place of originProbably Kingdom of the Lombards
Founded1098; 926 years ago (1098)
FounderMartino Piccolomo[1]
TitlesPope (non-hereditary)

Princes of the Holy Roman Empire
Prince of Náchod
Prince of Valle di Casale
Prince of Maida
Grandee of Spain
Duke of Amalfi
Duke of Laconia
Duke of Girifalco
Duke of Montemarciano
Marquess of Gioiosa
Marquess of Montesoro
Marquess of Città Sant'Angelo
Imperial Count
Count Palatine
Count of Celano and Gagliano
Patricians of Siena
Patrician of Orvieto

Several minor dukedoms, marquisates and counties across Italy.[2]
MembersPope Pius II
Pope Pius III
Francesco Piccolomini
Joachim Piccolomini
Francesco Piccolomini
Celio Piccolomini
Marietta Piccolomini
Motto
Et Deo et hominibus

("both for God and for men")
Cadet branchesPiccolomini Todeschini
Piccolomini Pieri
Piccolomini Naldi Bandini
Piccolomini Salamoneschi
Piccolomini of Modanella
Piccolomini of Rustichino
Piccolomini Clementini Adami
Piccolomini of Aragon

History edit

In 1220, Engelberto d'Ugo Piccolomini received the fief of Montertari in Val d'Orcia from the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II as a reward for the services rendered. The family acquired houses and towers in Siena as well as castles and territories in the republic, including Montone and Castiglione; the latter sold to the comune in 1321.[3]

They obtained great wealth through trade, and established counting-houses (merchant banks) in Venice, Genoa, Trieste, Aquileia, and in various cities of France and Germany. Supporters of the Guelph cause in the civil broils by which Siena was torn, they were driven from the city during the time of King Manfred of Sicily. Their houses were demolished but they returned in triumph after the victory of the Angevin Kings. They were expelled once more during the brief reign of King Conradin, and again returned to Siena with the help of King Charles of Anjou. But through their riotous political activity, the Piccolominis lost their commercial influence, which passed into the hands of the Florentines, although they retained their palaces, castles and about twenty fiefs, some of which were in the territory of Amalfi, to a great extent.[3]

Another branch of the family obtained great success in the Kingdom of Naples, becoming one of the "seven great houses"[5] of the Kingdom.

Ancestry edit

In the 17th century, two Piccolomini brothers, from the Modanella branch, were about to make a large family tree of the family. To seal their ancient genealogy with a legal certification, they commissioned a notary, Alessandro Rocchigiani, to put in order the various sources that disserted the family's origin. Evidently the fascination of myth, mixed with the reverence due to the illustrious patrons, instead of eliminating the legendary components ended up increasing them. Horatius Cocles was indicated with certainty, by the zealous notary, as the new progenitor of the family. Undoubtedly some coincidences arouse astonishment. Indeed, in the column that adorned the Campidoglio, his enterprise, was a coat of arms identical to that of the Sienese family, stood out carved in the shield of the ancient Roman.[6] Once attached to Horace, the Piccolomini lineage had, in ancient Rome, the name of Parenzi, and from there one of its members chose the Sienese colony as his new residence, became Podestà (chief magistrate), and abandoned his name, Chiaramontese, and changed it to Piccholuomo.[7]

The civil discords that agitated Rome in those times favored Siena because of their previous affiliation with the members of the Horatia gens, of which Chiaramontese belonged to.[8] Having left from his homeland in Rome and also his surname, he came to live in the jurisdiction of Siena, and just as it is customary for men from one city when they move to another to take a different name from the usage of their native country, so it happened, Rocchigiani explained, that the Roman exile named Chiaramontese, took on in his new homeland the nickname Piccoluomo (Piccholuomo) from which the surname Piccolomini was later derived.[9] The Piccolominis also descended from a certain Iulius Piccolomini Amideis, a member of the Amidei family, who was also of Roman descent.[10][11] Pope Pius II, his full name being Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini, was named in relation to his Roman ancestry and refers to Aeneas Silvius, King of Alba Longa, from which the Amideis also claimed descent through the gens Julia.[12]

Prominent family members edit

Many members of the house were distinguished ecclesiastics, generals and statesmen in Siena and elsewhere.[3]

Two of them became popes:[3]

Other distinguished members include:

Castles edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Vittorio Spreti - Enciclopedia Storico Nobiliare Italiana 1928–1936 (Ristampa Anastatica Forni Editore Bologna -1981) Vol. V, pag. 325.
  2. ^ Anderson, James (1732). "Royal Genealogies: Or, the Genealogical Tables of Emperors, Kings, and Princes, from Adam to These Times". Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  3. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 580.
  4. ^ Penny cyclopaedia, Vol. 18, citing Niccolò Machiavelli. (1532). Historie fiorentine (History of Florence and of the affairs of Italy: from the earliest times to the death of Lorenzo the Magnificent).
  5. ^ Le "Serenissime Sette Grandi Case del Regno di Napoli" comprendevano: Acquaviva, Celano, Evoli, Marzano, Molise, Ruffo, Sanseverino; estintesi le famiglie d'Evoli, Marzano e Molise, queste furono sostituite da quelle dei d'Aquino, del Balzo e Piccolomini (in merito si vedano: Archivio di Stato di Napoli scheda famiglia Sanseverino 2013-12-24 at the Wayback Machine; B. Filangieri di Candida Gonzaga, op.cit, ad voces; Spreti, op.cit, ad voces).
  6. ^ Roberta Mucciarelli, op. cit. 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, p. 6
  7. ^ Roberta Mucciarelli, op. cit. 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 1 - 7
  8. ^ Roberta Mucciarelli, op. cit. 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 7
  9. ^ Roberta Mucciarelli, op. cit. 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 6-7
  10. ^ Fabio Stok. "Aeneas redivivus: Piccolomini and Virgil: From Piccolomini to Pope Pius II, Musings on a Renaissance Holy Man". www.academia.edu. Baylor University (Waco, Texas). p. 6. Retrieved 2022-11-02.
  11. ^ Ponsonby and Murphy (1879). The Journal of the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland. Fourth series. Vol. IV. The Association of Ireland. pp. 263–264. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  12. ^ Giovanni Nuzzo (2009). La "Chrysis" di Enea Silvio Piccolomini. Note di lettura (PDF), in Mario Blancato e Giovanni Nuzzo (a cura di), La commedia latina: modelli, forme, ideologia, fortuna, Palermo (PDF). Istituto Nazionale del Dramma Antico. pp. 135–147. ISBN 9788890705717. Retrieved 30 September 2022.

General bibliography edit

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Piccolomini" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 580. Endnotes
  • Lisini, A.; Liberati, A. (1899), Albero della famiglia Piccolomini (in Italian), Siena{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Lisini, A., Miscellanea Storica Senese, 3rd series 12, and 4th series 17 and 189 (in Italian), three articles
  • Roberta Mucciarelli, Piccolomini a Siena. XIII-XIV secolo. Ritratti possibili, Pacini editore, 2005, 552 p., available online, Academia.edu. (in Italian)
  • Richter, Heinrich M. (1874), Die Piccolomini (in German), Berlin: Lüderitz{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Julien Théry, Faide nobiliaire et justice inquisitoire de la papauté à Sienne au temps des Neuf : les recollectiones d’une enquête de Benoît XII contre l'évêque Donosdeo de’ Malavolti (ASV, Collectoriae 61A et 404A), in Als die Welt in die Akten kam. Prozeßschriftgut im europäischen Mittelalter, éd. Susanne Lepsius, Thomas Wetzstein, Francfort : V. Klostermann (Rechtsprechung, 27), 2008, pp. 275–345, online. (in French)

External links edit

  •   Media related to House of Piccolomini at Wikimedia Commons

piccolomini, house, pronounced, pikkoˈlɔːmini, name, italian, noble, family, patricians, siena, were, prominent, from, beginning, 13th, century, until, 18th, century, family, achieved, recognized, titles, pope, catholic, church, prince, holy, roman, empire, gr. The House of Piccolomini pronounced pikkoˈlɔːmini is the name of an Italian noble family Patricians of Siena who were prominent from the beginning of the 13th century until the 18th century 3 The family achieved the recognized titles of Pope of the Catholic Church Prince of the Holy Roman Empire Grandee of Spain and Duke of Amalfi The family is also featured in Florentine Histories a book written by Niccolo Machiavelli where he describes the reign of Pope Pius II who had allied himself with the Venetians and Prince Vlad Dracula to wage a war against the Sultan of the Ottoman empire 4 PiccolominiNoble familyCountry Italian Republic Republic of Siena Papal States Grand Duchy of Tuscany Kingdom of Naples Holy Roman Empire Kingdom of the Two SiciliesEtymologyLiterally little men Place of originProbably Kingdom of the LombardsFounded1098 926 years ago 1098 FounderMartino Piccolomo 1 TitlesPope non hereditary Princes of the Holy Roman Empire Prince of Nachod Prince of Valle di Casale Prince of Maida Grandee of Spain Duke of Amalfi Duke of Laconia Duke of Girifalco Duke of Montemarciano Marquess of Gioiosa Marquess of Montesoro Marquess of Citta Sant Angelo Imperial Count Count Palatine Count of Celano and Gagliano Patricians of Siena Patrician of Orvieto Several minor dukedoms marquisates and counties across Italy 2 MembersPope Pius IIPope Pius IIIFrancesco PiccolominiJoachim PiccolominiFrancesco PiccolominiCelio PiccolominiMarietta PiccolominiMottoEt Deo et hominibus both for God and for men Cadet branchesPiccolomini TodeschiniPiccolomini PieriPiccolomini Naldi BandiniPiccolomini SalamoneschiPiccolomini of ModanellaPiccolomini of RustichinoPiccolomini Clementini AdamiPiccolomini of Aragon Contents 1 History 2 Ancestry 3 Prominent family members 4 Castles 5 Citations 6 General bibliography 7 External linksHistory editSee also it Piccolomini In 1220 Engelberto d Ugo Piccolomini received the fief of Montertari in Val d Orcia from the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II as a reward for the services rendered The family acquired houses and towers in Siena as well as castles and territories in the republic including Montone and Castiglione the latter sold to the comune in 1321 3 They obtained great wealth through trade and established counting houses merchant banks in Venice Genoa Trieste Aquileia and in various cities of France and Germany Supporters of the Guelph cause in the civil broils by which Siena was torn they were driven from the city during the time of King Manfred of Sicily Their houses were demolished but they returned in triumph after the victory of the Angevin Kings They were expelled once more during the brief reign of King Conradin and again returned to Siena with the help of King Charles of Anjou But through their riotous political activity the Piccolominis lost their commercial influence which passed into the hands of the Florentines although they retained their palaces castles and about twenty fiefs some of which were in the territory of Amalfi to a great extent 3 Another branch of the family obtained great success in the Kingdom of Naples becoming one of the seven great houses 5 of the Kingdom Ancestry editIn the 17th century two Piccolomini brothers from the Modanella branch were about to make a large family tree of the family To seal their ancient genealogy with a legal certification they commissioned a notary Alessandro Rocchigiani to put in order the various sources that disserted the family s origin Evidently the fascination of myth mixed with the reverence due to the illustrious patrons instead of eliminating the legendary components ended up increasing them Horatius Cocles was indicated with certainty by the zealous notary as the new progenitor of the family Undoubtedly some coincidences arouse astonishment Indeed in the column that adorned the Campidoglio his enterprise was a coat of arms identical to that of the Sienese family stood out carved in the shield of the ancient Roman 6 Once attached to Horace the Piccolomini lineage had in ancient Rome the name of Parenzi and from there one of its members chose the Sienese colony as his new residence became Podesta chief magistrate and abandoned his name Chiaramontese and changed it to Piccholuomo 7 The civil discords that agitated Rome in those times favored Siena because of their previous affiliation with the members of the Horatia gens of which Chiaramontese belonged to 8 Having left from his homeland in Rome and also his surname he came to live in the jurisdiction of Siena and just as it is customary for men from one city when they move to another to take a different name from the usage of their native country so it happened Rocchigiani explained that the Roman exile named Chiaramontese took on in his new homeland the nickname Piccoluomo Piccholuomo from which the surname Piccolomini was later derived 9 The Piccolominis also descended from a certain Iulius Piccolomini Amideis a member of the Amidei family who was also of Roman descent 10 11 Pope Pius II his full name being Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini was named in relation to his Roman ancestry and refers to Aeneas Silvius King of Alba Longa from which the Amideis also claimed descent through the gens Julia 12 Prominent family members editFor other uses see Piccolomini disambiguation Many members of the house were distinguished ecclesiastics generals and statesmen in Siena and elsewhere 3 Two of them became popes 3 Enea Silvio Piccolomini papal name Pope Pius II supporter of Vlad Dracula against the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Francesco Piccolomini papal name Pope Pius III protector of England and Germany legate to King Charles VIII of France Other distinguished members include Joachim Piccolomini 1258 1305 beatified Sienese Antonio Piccolomini First Duke of Amalfi d 1493 a nephew of Pope Pius II and brother of Pope Pius III Alfonso I Piccolomini Duke of Amalfi d 1498 son of Antonio and duke from 1493 hapless husband of Giovanna d Aragona Duchess of Amalfi granddaughter of King Ferdinand I of Naples He was murdered in 1498 The story of his widow is dramatised in John Webster s play The Duchess of Malfi Giovanni Piccolomini 1475 1537 Archbishop of Siena 1503 1529 Cardinal Priest 1517 1524 Cardinal Bishop 1524 1537 elected by Pope Leo X of the House of Medici Girolamo Piccolomini senior Bishop of Pienza 1498 1510 and Bishop of Montalcino 1498 1510 elected by Pope Alexander VI of the House of Borgia Girolamo Piccolomini junior Bishop of Pienza 1510 1535 and Bishop of Montalcino 1510 1528 elected by Pope Julius II of the House of Della Rovere patron of Michelangelo Alessandro Piccolomini 1508 1579 astronomer and author worked for Lord Cosimo de Medici of the Medici Bank Alessandro Piccolomini Bishop of Pienza 1535 1563 and Bishop of Montalcino 1528 1554 elected by Pope Clement VII of the House of Medici Ascanio I Piccolomini d 1597 Archbishop of Siena from 1588 served Pope Gregory XIII who commissioned the Gregorian calendar Francesco Piccolomini Jesuit 1582 1651 8th Superior General of the Society of Jesus Ascanio II Piccolomini 1590 1671 Archbishop of Siena from 1629 patron of the Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei Ottavio Piccolomini 1599 1656 Imperial general in the Thirty Years War prominent in the events leading to Albrecht von Wallenstein s assassination and basis for a main character in Schiller s Wallenstein Married to Maria Benigna Francisca of Saxe Lauenburg daughter of Duke Julius Henry of Saxe Lauenburg Celio Piccolomini 1609 1681 titular archbishop of Caesarea 1656 created cardinal 1664 Costanza Piccolomini Bonarelli 1614 1662 merchant and art dealer lover and muse of the sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini one of her paintings was sold to Louis XIV and is now at the Louvre Enea Silvio Piccolomini c 1640 1689 Imperial general in the Great Turkish War served in the Habsburg army of Leopold I Holy Roman Emperor Marietta Piccolomini 1834 1899 soprano married to Marquis Francesco Caetani della Fargna performed for Emperor Napoleon III of the House of BonaparteCastles edit nbsp Palazzo Chigi Saracini Siena nbsp Castello Piccolomini in Celano Italy nbsp Castello Piccolomini Italy nbsp The medieval city of Amalfi in the 17th century nbsp La Casa del Sole Fondazione Nicolo Piccolomini Rome nbsp Palazzo Piccolomini Pienza Italy nbsp Torre Piccolomini Italy nbsp Palazzo Piccolomini Clementini Italy nbsp Castello di Nachod Bohemia 1740 nbsp Castello Piccolomini Ortucchio Italy nbsp Castello Piccolomini di Ripa d Orcia Italy nbsp Napoli Santa Maria Della Sapienza nbsp Castello Piccolomini Capestrano Italy nbsp Palazzo delle Papesse ItalyCitations edit Vittorio Spreti Enciclopedia Storico Nobiliare Italiana 1928 1936 Ristampa Anastatica Forni Editore Bologna 1981 Vol V pag 325 Anderson James 1732 Royal Genealogies Or the Genealogical Tables of Emperors Kings and Princes from Adam to These Times Retrieved 2022 10 26 a b c d e Chisholm 1911 p 580 Penny cyclopaedia Vol 18 citing Niccolo Machiavelli 1532 Historie fiorentine History of Florence and of the affairs of Italy from the earliest times to the death of Lorenzo the Magnificent Le Serenissime Sette Grandi Case del Regno di Napoli comprendevano Acquaviva Celano Evoli Marzano Molise Ruffo Sanseverino estintesi le famiglie d Evoli Marzano e Molise queste furono sostituite da quelle dei d Aquino del Balzo e Piccolomini in merito si vedano Archivio di Stato di Napoli scheda famiglia Sanseverino Archived 2013 12 24 at the Wayback Machine B Filangieri di Candida Gonzaga op cit ad voces Spreti op cit ad voces Roberta Mucciarelli op cit Archived 2014 05 18 at the Wayback Machine p 6 Roberta Mucciarelli op cit Archived 2014 05 18 at the Wayback Machine pp 1 7 Roberta Mucciarelli op cit Archived 2014 05 18 at the Wayback Machine pp 7 Roberta Mucciarelli op cit Archived 2014 05 18 at the Wayback Machine pp 6 7 Fabio Stok Aeneas redivivus Piccolomini and Virgil From Piccolomini to Pope Pius II Musings on a Renaissance Holy Man www academia edu Baylor University Waco Texas p 6 Retrieved 2022 11 02 Ponsonby and Murphy 1879 The Journal of the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland Fourth series Vol IV The Association of Ireland pp 263 264 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Giovanni Nuzzo 2009 La Chrysis di Enea Silvio Piccolomini Note di lettura PDF in Mario Blancato e Giovanni Nuzzo a cura di La commedia latina modelli forme ideologia fortuna Palermo PDF Istituto Nazionale del Dramma Antico pp 135 147 ISBN 9788890705717 Retrieved 30 September 2022 General bibliography editChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Piccolomini Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 580 Endnotes Lisini A Liberati A 1899 Albero della famiglia Piccolomini in Italian Siena a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lisini A Miscellanea Storica Senese 3rd series 12 and 4th series 17 and 189 in Italian three articles Roberta Mucciarelli Piccolomini a Siena XIII XIV secolo Ritratti possibili Pacini editore 2005 552 p available online Academia edu in Italian Richter Heinrich M 1874 Die Piccolomini in German Berlin Luderitz a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Julien Thery Faide nobiliaire et justice inquisitoire de la papaute a Sienne au temps des Neuf les recollectiones d une enquete de Benoit XII contre l eveque Donosdeo de Malavolti ASV Collectoriae 61A et 404A in Als die Welt in die Akten kam Prozessschriftgut im europaischen Mittelalter ed Susanne Lepsius Thomas Wetzstein Francfort V Klostermann Rechtsprechung 27 2008 pp 275 345 online in French External links edit nbsp Media related to House of Piccolomini at Wikimedia Commons nbsp This page lists people with the surname Piccolomini If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page you may wish to change that link by adding the person s given name s to the link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piccolomini amp oldid 1219524364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.