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Ippolito d'Este

Ippolito (I) d'Este (Hungarian: Estei Hippolit; 20 March 1479 – 3 September 1520) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal, and Archbishop of Esztergom. He was a member of the ducal House of Este of Ferrara, and was usually referred to as the Cardinal of Ferrara. Though a bishop of five separate dioceses, he was never consecrated a bishop. He spent much of his time supporting the ducal house of Ferrara and negotiating on their behalf with the Pope.


Ippolito d'Este
Cardinal-Deacon
Portrait by Bartolomeo Veneto
ChurchS. Lucia in Silice (1493–1520)
DioceseEsztergom (1487–1497)
Milan (1497–1519)
Eger (1497–1520)
Capua (1502–1520)
Ferrara (1503–1520)
Orders
Ordinationnone
Consecrationnone
Created cardinal20 September 1493
by Pope Alexander VI
Personal details
Born20 March 1479
Died3 September 1520(1520-09-03) (aged 41)
Ferrara, Duchy of Ferrara
BuriedFerrara Cathedral
NationalityItalian
ResidenceEsztergom, Ferrara, Rome
ParentsErcole d'Este
Eleanor of Aragon
Occupationcourtier, politician
Professioncleric
Educationhome schooled, tutors
Coat of arms

Biography edit

 
Coat of Arms of Cardinal Ippolito d'Este.

Born in Ferrara, Ippolito was the son of Duke Ercole I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara, and Eleanor of Naples, daughter of Ferdinand I of Naples. His eldest brother, Alfonso became duke in 1505 (and married Lucrezia Borgia). He had another brother, Ferdinando, a brother Sigismondo, and two sisters, Beatrice (who married Ludovico Sforza) and Isabella (who married Duke Francesco of Mantua). He also had a half-brother, Giulio, and a half-sister, Lucrezia.

Youth edit

From infancy Ippolito was destined for a career in the Church, and at the age of three he was named Abbot Commendatory of Casalnovo. In December 1485, at the age of six, he received his first tonsure, and was named Abbot Commendatory of S. Maria di Pomposa (Ferrara).[1] Two years later, on 27 May 1487,[2] thanks to his aunt Beatrice of Aragon, who had married King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary, he was named archbishop of Esztergom in Hungary. The appointment by Pope Innocent VIII did not take effect, however, until he was eighteen. Ippolito nonetheless departed Ferrara for Hungary on 18 June 1487, accompanied by his cousin, Bishop Nicolò Maria d'Este of Adria; the departure was noted by Marino Sanuto in his Diarii, who traces his journey through Rovigo and Padua.[3] Ippolito joined King Matthias and Queen Beatrice, his mother's sister, in Hungary.[4]

 
Confrontation of the Este brothers' medals: Isabella, Alfonso, Ferrante, Ippolito and Sigismondo had inherited the typical Este nose of their father; Beatrice the slightly upturned one of her mother. Furthermore, all were dark-haired, except Ferrante and Sigismondo, who had recovered, as it seems, the traditional blond of the Este.

Archbishop-elect of Esztergom edit

For the next seven years, as Administrator of Esztergom, Ippolito studied at the Hungarian court, and at his own princely court in Esztergom, which was made up of some 245 persons. He had brought with him volumes of Virgil's Aeneid and Plautus' comedies, and an Italian preceptor, Sebastiano da Lugo.[5] He enjoyed the Episcopal Palace in Esztergom, but also had houses in Buda, Pressburg, and Vienna; he had houses built for himself at Érsekújvár and Aranyosmarót. He brought a French tailor with him from Ferrara.

After Matthias' death (6 April 1490), the atmosphere surrounding the Prince-Archbishop changed. He was no longer the nephew of the King, but was more and more looked on as a foreigner who enjoyed the fruits of his Hungarian archbishopric. His aunt married her late husband's competitor and successor, Vladislaus Jagiellon, King of Bohemia, who brought different policies and different personnel into the kingdom. Three years later Ippolito returned to Italy to escape the plague that was striking Hungary; he arrived in Rome with a following of 250 people.

Cardinal d'Este edit

D'Este was created cardinal by Pope Alexander VI on 20 September 1493, and named Cardinal-Deacon of S. Lucia in Silice three days later,[6] after which he resided in Rome. He was only fourteen years old.

He was appointed archbishop of Milan on 8 November 1497,[7] though he could only serve as Administrator, since he had not been consecrated a bishop. He governed the archdiocese of Milan through a vicar. According to the tax reports of the Curia for the year 1500, he was the fifth richest member of the College of Cardinals, in terms of annual income.[8] His influence grew further when his brother Alfonso married Lucrezia Borgia, daughter of Alexander VI, who granted him the title of archipresbyter of St. Peter's on 11 August 1501.[9] The bride and bridegroom were escorted from Ferrara to Rome by a large company, headed by Cardinal Ippolito, which left the city on 9 December, and arrived in Rome on 23 December. Cardinal Ippolito was granted a palazzo for his use next to the Vatican Basilica.[10] On 20 July 1502 Pope Alexander appointed Cardinal Ippolito Archbishop of Capua, though, since he still had not been consecrated a bishop, he could only be Administrator, enjoying the income from the diocese and the patronage that went with being the Archbishop, but unable to carry out any episcopal functions. But since Capua had been besieged and sacked by a French army under Cesare Borgia in 1501, there cannot have been much of an immediate gain in income.[11]

It was not a safe time to be a cardinal. In April 1502, King Louis XII sent a French army, under the command of Louis d'Armagnac, Duke of Nemours, to invade Apulia. In his service was Cesare Borgia, Duke of the Romagna and Lord of Piombino, the Pope's son, who had commanded French troops in 1501 at the siege of Naples and the siege of Capua. Many rulers in Italy preferred to deal with the French rather than the Spanish, who had been favored for a decade. On 21 June 1502 Pope Alexander took the extraordinary step of sending a cardinal and one of his secretaries to Savona to attempt to kidnap and bring to Rome Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere, a consistent supporter of the French cause. The trick failed. On 12 July Cardinal Orsini sought an audience with Pope Alexander to get permission to go to Milan to negotiate with King Louis XII. When he was refused the audience, he left Rome anyway and headed for Milan. When he came back to Rome, Orsini was arrested and sent to the Castel S. Angelo, where he died on 22 February 1503.[12] Cardinal d'Este remained in Rome, though his relations with Pope Alexander were said in the first week of November 1502 to have deteriorated due to Duke Ercole's failure to send aid to the Pope.[13] It was reported to Venice on 24 November that the Cardinal's maestro di casa and three other persons had come from Rome in disguise; one was said to have been the Cardinal, because he was in disaccord with the Pope.[14] On 15 February 1503, after he had participated in the day's papal Consistory, Ippolito was compelled to flee from the wrath of Cesare Borgia, with whose sister-in-law both Este and Borgia were engaged in illicit affairs.[15] Fortunately, Alexander VI died on 12 August. Cardinal Ippolito was not able to return to Rome until 28 October, and then with a broken leg from a fall from his horse, because of which he had been absent from the Conclave of 16–22 September 1503.[16]

While Cardinal Ippolito was recuperating, one of his old friends was engaged in an operation against his interests. Cardinal Tamás Bakócz, Archbishop of Esztergom and Chancellor of Hungary (on account of which he did not attend the conclaves), wrote a letter to the Signoria of Venice, which Marino Sanuto saw on 23 November 1503. In his letter, which was purely concerned with benefices, he wanted the Signoria to get Cardinal d'Este to resign the Bishopric of Eger. The Doge replied that they had already tried to do so, and that he did not want to acquiesce.[17] Bakócz certainly had a point in canon law, in that Cardinal Ippolito had been bishop for nearly sixteen years and was not yet consecrated, and yet there seems to be a case of ingratitude, since Bakócz, who had been educated at Bologna and Ferrara, had once been Cardinal d'Este's private secretary.

Julius II edit

After Alexander's death, on 8 October 1503 Pius III appointed Cardinal Ippolito bishop of Ferrara.[18] When Pius III died on 18 October, d'Este was able to participate in the second Conclave of 1503, at which Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere was elected Pope Julius II on 1 November. One of Cardinal Ippolito's conclavists was his half-brother Giulio d'Este.[19] Julius' pro-French policies ought to have made life easier for Ferrara, but his determination to humble the power of Milan and Venice placed Ferrara in the exact center of what would become a major war. The Cardinal of Ferrara, therefore, endured a rough and dangerous relationship with Pope Julius.

After the Conclave and the Coronation (26 November), Cardinal Ippolito was reported to be ill and did not attend the papal ceremonies of taking possession of his cathedral church of Saint John Lateran on 5 December 1503.[20] He returned to Ferrara on 10 December 1503,[21] and he was still in Ferrara when he was present at his father's deathbed on 15 June 1505.[22] In 1506 a plot was discovered in Ferrara against the new duke, Alfonso, and his brother Cardinal Ippolito. The leaders, their brother Ferrante and their half-brother Giulio, were tried in September and sentenced to death. The sentence, however, was commuted to life imprisonment. Ferrante died in prison thirty-four years later, and Giulio was finally released after fifty-three years.[23]

In 1507 Cardinal d'Este was named Bishop of Modena, but, still unconsecrated, he could only act as Administrator.[24] Ippolito, however, was again at odds with Pius' successor Julius II (della Rovere), and in 1507 he left the Curia. On 24 May he was in Milan and took part in the formal reception of King Louis XII of France, along with Cardinals Georges d'Amboise, Clermont de Castelnau, Pallavicini, Caretto, San Severino, and Trivulzio.[25] As Archbishop of Milan, he was only doing his duty, and Pope Julius had to suppress his annoyance. In September 1507, Duke Alfonso of Ferrara happened to be in Rome on his way to Naples, and, according to a report of 22 September, the Pope had named Cardinal Ippolito to the post of Apostolic Legate in Bologna.[26] But in the following year Julius praised him for his conduct in the Bentivoglio plot.

In June 1509 Cardinal d'Este joined the King of France in his camp near Brescia. The King had sent the Duke of Ferrara a demand for 100,000 ducats for his campaign.[27] The Cardinal successfully led a military contingent to regain the Polesine territories that the Este had lost in the war with Venice in 1484, winning the decisive battle of Polesella. On 27 July the pope recalled him to Rome, but, feeling his life was unsafe, trapped as he was between King and Pope, Ippolito fled to Hungary.

In May 1510, upon the death of Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, the office of Abbot Commendatory of the Abbazia di Nonantola (diocese of Modena) became vacant. Cardinal Ippolito immediately rushed to the monastery and browbeat the six electors into electing him to the position. Pope Julius objected, and Cardinal Ippolito had to send his secretary, Ludovico Ariosto, to Rome to explain the circumstances to the Pope.[28] The cardinal held the abbey until his death.

On 16 May 1511, the summons of the Pope to appear at the schismatic Council of Pisa was signed by four cardinals, led by Bernardino Carvajal, Bishop of Sabina; they claimed to have the mandates of five other cardinals, including Cardinal d'Este, but several of them denied that they were involved and protested vehemently at the misuse of their names.[29] D'Este's brother Alfonso later convinced him to disassociate himself from the schism, and Pope Julius authorized him to return to Ferrara.

Leo X edit

In 1513 Ippolito moved again to Hungary but, when in his absence Cardinal Giovanni de' Medici was elected pope, taking the name Leo X, the Cardinal returned again to his native city. On 22 April 1514 he and his family were pardoned for all their past anti-papal acts.

From October 1517[30] to the Spring of 1520, Cardinal d'Este visited Hungary, Poland and Germany. On 7 April 1518, the Cardinal left Eger to go to Cracow for the marriage of King Sigismund and Bona, the daughter of Gian Galeazzo Sforza, who also happened to be a niece of the Emperor Maximilian. He was accompanied by the two Provosts and the entire body of Canons of the Cathedral of Eger. They stayed an entire month.[31] In the winter and spring of 1519 he became involved in a struggle over the office of Count Palatine of Hungary, on the death of Emeric Perényi. Cardinal d'Este favored the candidacy of the Count of Temes, while Cardinal Bakócz favored that of John Zápolya, the Voivode of Transylvania. The party favored by d'Este prevailed.[32]

On 12 January 1519 the Emperor Maximilian I died. Competition to be his successor developed between King Francis I of France, Frederick III, Elector of Saxony, Duke Charles of Burgundy, and King Henry VIII of England. Agents of each of the candidates descended upon Buda, to speak with Vladislaus, who was one of the Electors as King of Bohemia. Cardinal d'Este was consulted by all parties, and he also sent his representative, Celio Calcagnini, to the meeting of the Diet at Frankfurt.[33] On 28 June 1519 Charles Duke of Burgundy became the Emperor Charles V.

On 20 May 1519[34] he resigned the archbishopric of Milan, and his nephew Ippolito II d'Este, the son of Lucrezia Borgia, Duchess of Ferrara, was appointed his successor in Consistory by Pope Leo X.

He returned home to Ferrara on Monday of Holy Week, 2 April 1520, entered the city on Holy Saturday, and celebrated the Easter festival in his cathedral.[35]

On Friday 10 August the Cardinal took a long walk of some five miles (eight km) to a property of his at Baura, east of Ferrara. On Sunday he took a walk to his property at Sabioncello, a distance of twelve miles, but he felt troubled the whole day; he was advised to return to Ferrara and avoid the heat. The Duke made the Castel Nuovo on the Po available to Ippolito, where he remained ill until Friday, 31 August, when he got out of bed in the morning, feeling in much better spirits. He travelled to Piscalo (Pescara) for the sake of the fish, since he did not wish to eat meat, presumably due to the Friday fast. He asked for grilled fish and some Vernaccia, which his doctor permitted and which made him feel better. But in the evening his discomfort returned and he began to run a fever. On Saturday, 1 September, he was so much worse that the Duke summoned all his doctors, who indeed found the Cardinal much worse, and agreed to administer a dose of medicine at the seventh hour, if the fever had not gone down. But at that time it was impossible to administer medicine because Ippolito was already in extremis.[36] Cardinal d'Este was reported to be ill by the Ferrarese Ambassador in Venice, Jacomo Tebaldo, who said he had had a letter of 2 September 1520 which stated that the Cardinal was seriously ill and in danger of death.[37] He died in Ferrara on 3 September 1520,[38] and was buried in the Sacristy of the Cathedral of Ferrara on the evening of his death.

His estate, inherited by his brother Alfonso I, amounted to some 200,000 ducati. In Rome, on 5 September, Pope Leo X was trying to divide up the late Cardinal's benefices, in the midst of three attacks of tertian fever. He made the announcement of the various distributions in the Consistory of 10 September.[39]

Ippolito had two illegitimate children.

The Cardinal was a famous patron of the arts, as were other members of his family. Among his protegés were the poet Ludovico Ariosto and architect Biagio Rossetti. He also patronized the Flemish musician Adrien Willaert.[40]

See also edit

References and notes edit

  1. ^ Lucy Byatt, Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani 43 (1993).
  2. ^ Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi, sive Summorum pontificum, S.R.E. cardinalium, ecclesiarum antistitum series, editio altera, Tomus II (Monasterii 1913), p. 242.
  3. ^ Sanuto gives the departure date as the 14th. Marino Sanudo (1879). F. Stefani (ed.). I diarii di Marino Sanuto: (MCCCCXCVI-MDXXXIII) (in Italian). Vol. Tomo I. Venezia: F. Visentini. p. 44.
  4. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, p. 8.
  5. ^ Gerevich, p. 49. A. Venturi, "L'arte Ferrarese nel periodo d' Ercole I d'Este," Atti e memorie della R. Deputazione di storia patria per le provincie di Romagna. terza serie (in Italian). Vol. VI. Bologna: R. Deputazione di storia patria. 1888. pp. 116–118.
  6. ^ Conradus Eubel (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana., pp. 22 note 1 and 23 no. 13.
  7. ^ Eubel, II, p. 188.
  8. ^ Johannes Burchard (1885). Louis Thuasne (ed.). Diarium, siue rerum urbanarium commentarii (in French and Latin). Vol. Tome Troisième (1500-1506). Paris: Ernest Leroux. pp. 56–57.
  9. ^ Burchard, Diarium III, p. 157: Missa finita, Papa commendavit archipresbyteratum basilicae S. Petro Rmo. D. cardinali Estense; 163 n. 1; and see p. 174. Este's predecessor as Archpriest, Cardinal Juan Lopez, had died on 5 August, after having held the office only since 10 May. Eubel, II, p. 56, no. 643.
  10. ^ Diario Ferrarese, under 9 December 1501, in: Ludovico Antonio Muratori, ed. (1738). Rerum italicarum Scriptores (in Italian and Latin). Vol. Tomus vigesimusquartus (24). Milan. pp. 397–398. ISBN 9788827159262.
  11. ^ Eubel, II, p. 118.
  12. ^ Eubel, II, p. 56, nos. 649-651, 656.
  13. ^ Marino Sanudo (1880). Nicolo Barozzi (ed.). I diarii di Marino Sanuto (in Italian). Vol. Tomo IV. Venezia: F. Visentini. p. 444.
  14. ^ Sanuto, IV, p. 485. This seems to have been just a rumor.
  15. ^ Burchard Diarium III, p. 237: pro eo quod idem Cardinalis diligebat et cognoscebat principissam uxorem fratris dicti ducis, quam etiam ipse dux carnaliter cognoscebat. Eubel, II, p. 56, no. 657.
  16. ^ Burchard, Diarium III, p. 291. Marino Sanudo (1881). F. Stefani (ed.). I diarii di Marino Sanuto (in Italian). Vol. Tomo V. Venezia: F. Visentini. p. 77. Cardinal Ippolito is officially noted as being absent from the opening of the Conclave on 16 September 1503, Florentiae infirmus: Marino Sanuto I diarii V, p. 102.
  17. ^ Marino Sanuto I diarii V, p. 375.
  18. ^ Eubel, II, p. 153.
  19. ^ Burchard, Diarium III, p. 303.
  20. ^ Burchard, Diarium III, p. 313.
  21. ^ Burchard, Diarium III, p. 318.
  22. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, p. 15, who has the wrong day, the 24th.
  23. ^ Sarah Bradford (2005). "12: The Congiura". Lucrezia Borgia: Life, Love, and Death in Renaissance Italy. New York: Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-14-303595-4.
  24. ^ Eubel, III, p. 252.
  25. ^ Marino Sanuto (1882). R. Fulin (ed.). I diarii di Marino Sanuto ... (in Italian). Vol. VII. Venezia. pp. 83–84.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  26. ^ Marino Sanuto, Diario VII, p. 639.
  27. ^ Marino Sanuto, Diario, VIII, p. 350.
  28. ^ Lodovico Ariosto (1862). Antonio Cappelli (ed.). Lettere: tratte dagli autografi dell' Archivio palatino di Modena (in Italian). Modena. pp. xxv–xxvi, 129.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Cappelli's dates are quite wrong. The cardinal did not die until 15 May 1510. Eubel, II, p. 22 note 6.
  29. ^ J.-D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXXV, pp. 160-161.
  30. ^ Marino Sanuto, Diario Vol. XXV, p. 34, records on 18 October 1517 that Cardinal d'Este had departed for Hungary not many days earlier. On 4 December the Venetian Ambassador reported from Buda that the Cardinal was in his diocese of Eger. Sanuto, p. 214.
  31. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, pp. 21-22.
  32. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, pp. 23-24.
  33. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, pp. 24-25.
  34. ^ Conradus Eubel; Guilelmus Gulik (ed.) (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 240. {{cite book}}: |last2= has generic name (help)
  35. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, p. 28.
  36. ^ Monferrato de'Calcagnini, pp. 29-30.
  37. ^ Marino Sanuto, Diario Vol. XXIX, p. 156: el reverendissimo cardinal Estense fratello dil Duca stava malissimo e se dubitava di lui.
  38. ^ Eubel, II, p. 23. Marino Sanuto, Diario Vol. XXIX, p. 164, notes the receipt of a letter from Duke Alfonso in which the Duke states that Ippolito died on 2 September at the seventh hour of the night.
  39. ^ Sanuto, pp. 172, 180.
  40. ^ Lewis Lockwood, "Adrian Willaert and Cardinal Ippolito I d'Este: New Light on Willaert's Early Career in Italy," Early Music History, Vol. 5 (1985), pp. 85-112; retrieved: 2017-08-22. (JSTOR, subscription required)

Bibliography edit

  • Banfi, F. (1938). "Il cardinale Ippolito d'Este nella vita politica d'Ungheria," in: L'Europa orientale, XVIII (1938), pp. 61–77.
  • Byatt, Lucy (1993), "ESTE, Ippolito d'". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 43 (1993) (in Italian)
  • Cardella, Lorenzo (1793). Memorie storiche de'cardinali della santa Romana chiesa (in Italian). Vol. Tomo Terzo. Roma: Pagliarini. pp. 258–262.
  • Gerevich, Tiberio (1921). "Ippolito d'Este, Arcivescovo di Strigonio," Corvina Vol. 1 (1921), pp. 48–52. (in Italian)
  • Hollingworth, Mary (2021). Conclave 1559: Ippolito d'Este and the Papal Election of 1559 (Hardcover). New York: Apollo. ISBN 978-1800244733.
  • Hollingworth, Mary (2000). "Ippolito d'Este: A Cardinal and his Household in Rome and Ferrara in 1566". The Court Historian. 5 (2). London: Taylor & Francis: 105–126. doi:10.1179/cou.2000.5.2.002. S2CID 162281410.
  • Kun Enikő: Estei Hippolit, Magyarország legfiatalabb érseke, National Geographic Magazine, 2008. február 7.
  • Kovács Péter: Estei Hippolit püspök egri számadáskönyvei, 1500–1508, kandidátusi/PHD disszertáció, a Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Történettudományi Intézete, 1992. [1], letéve a Heves Megyei Levéltárban.
  • Marcora, C. (1958), "Il cardinale Ippolito I d'Este," in Memorie Storiche della diocesi di Milano V, Milano 1958, pp. 325–520.
  • Monferrato de'Calcagnini, Giovanni Girolamo (1843). Vita del cardinale Ippolito I. d'Este scritta da un anonimo, con annotazioni (in Italian). Milan: Ripamonti-Carpano.

External links edit

  • (in Spanish) 1506 - Diario Borja - Borgia

ippolito, este, nephew, also, cardinal, ippolito, este, 1509, 1572, ippolito, este, hungarian, estei, hippolit, march, 1479, september, 1520, italian, roman, catholic, cardinal, archbishop, esztergom, member, ducal, house, este, ferrara, usually, referred, car. For his nephew also a cardinal see Ippolito II d Este 1509 1572 Ippolito I d Este Hungarian Estei Hippolit 20 March 1479 3 September 1520 was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal and Archbishop of Esztergom He was a member of the ducal House of Este of Ferrara and was usually referred to as the Cardinal of Ferrara Though a bishop of five separate dioceses he was never consecrated a bishop He spent much of his time supporting the ducal house of Ferrara and negotiating on their behalf with the Pope His EminenceIppolito d EsteCardinal DeaconPortrait by Bartolomeo VenetoChurchS Lucia in Silice 1493 1520 DioceseEsztergom 1487 1497 Milan 1497 1519 Eger 1497 1520 Capua 1502 1520 Ferrara 1503 1520 OrdersOrdinationnoneConsecrationnoneCreated cardinal20 September 1493by Pope Alexander VIPersonal detailsBorn20 March 1479Ferrara Duchy of FerraraDied3 September 1520 1520 09 03 aged 41 Ferrara Duchy of FerraraBuriedFerrara CathedralNationalityItalianResidenceEsztergom Ferrara RomeParentsErcole d EsteEleanor of AragonOccupationcourtier politicianProfessionclericEducationhome schooled tutorsCoat of arms Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Youth 1 2 Archbishop elect of Esztergom 1 3 Cardinal d Este 1 4 Julius II 1 5 Leo X 2 See also 3 References and notes 4 Bibliography 5 External linksBiography edit nbsp Coat of Arms of Cardinal Ippolito d Este Born in Ferrara Ippolito was the son of Duke Ercole I d Este Duke of Ferrara and Eleanor of Naples daughter of Ferdinand I of Naples His eldest brother Alfonso became duke in 1505 and married Lucrezia Borgia He had another brother Ferdinando a brother Sigismondo and two sisters Beatrice who married Ludovico Sforza and Isabella who married Duke Francesco of Mantua He also had a half brother Giulio and a half sister Lucrezia Youth edit From infancy Ippolito was destined for a career in the Church and at the age of three he was named Abbot Commendatory of Casalnovo In December 1485 at the age of six he received his first tonsure and was named Abbot Commendatory of S Maria di Pomposa Ferrara 1 Two years later on 27 May 1487 2 thanks to his aunt Beatrice of Aragon who had married King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary he was named archbishop of Esztergom in Hungary The appointment by Pope Innocent VIII did not take effect however until he was eighteen Ippolito nonetheless departed Ferrara for Hungary on 18 June 1487 accompanied by his cousin Bishop Nicolo Maria d Este of Adria the departure was noted by Marino Sanuto in his Diarii who traces his journey through Rovigo and Padua 3 Ippolito joined King Matthias and Queen Beatrice his mother s sister in Hungary 4 nbsp Confrontation of the Este brothers medals Isabella Alfonso Ferrante Ippolito and Sigismondo had inherited the typical Este nose of their father Beatrice the slightly upturned one of her mother Furthermore all were dark haired except Ferrante and Sigismondo who had recovered as it seems the traditional blond of the Este Archbishop elect of Esztergom edit For the next seven years as Administrator of Esztergom Ippolito studied at the Hungarian court and at his own princely court in Esztergom which was made up of some 245 persons He had brought with him volumes of Virgil s Aeneid and Plautus comedies and an Italian preceptor Sebastiano da Lugo 5 He enjoyed the Episcopal Palace in Esztergom but also had houses in Buda Pressburg and Vienna he had houses built for himself at Ersekujvar and Aranyosmarot He brought a French tailor with him from Ferrara After Matthias death 6 April 1490 the atmosphere surrounding the Prince Archbishop changed He was no longer the nephew of the King but was more and more looked on as a foreigner who enjoyed the fruits of his Hungarian archbishopric His aunt married her late husband s competitor and successor Vladislaus Jagiellon King of Bohemia who brought different policies and different personnel into the kingdom Three years later Ippolito returned to Italy to escape the plague that was striking Hungary he arrived in Rome with a following of 250 people Cardinal d Este edit D Este was created cardinal by Pope Alexander VI on 20 September 1493 and named Cardinal Deacon of S Lucia in Silice three days later 6 after which he resided in Rome He was only fourteen years old He was appointed archbishop of Milan on 8 November 1497 7 though he could only serve as Administrator since he had not been consecrated a bishop He governed the archdiocese of Milan through a vicar According to the tax reports of the Curia for the year 1500 he was the fifth richest member of the College of Cardinals in terms of annual income 8 His influence grew further when his brother Alfonso married Lucrezia Borgia daughter of Alexander VI who granted him the title of archipresbyter of St Peter s on 11 August 1501 9 The bride and bridegroom were escorted from Ferrara to Rome by a large company headed by Cardinal Ippolito which left the city on 9 December and arrived in Rome on 23 December Cardinal Ippolito was granted a palazzo for his use next to the Vatican Basilica 10 On 20 July 1502 Pope Alexander appointed Cardinal Ippolito Archbishop of Capua though since he still had not been consecrated a bishop he could only be Administrator enjoying the income from the diocese and the patronage that went with being the Archbishop but unable to carry out any episcopal functions But since Capua had been besieged and sacked by a French army under Cesare Borgia in 1501 there cannot have been much of an immediate gain in income 11 It was not a safe time to be a cardinal In April 1502 King Louis XII sent a French army under the command of Louis d Armagnac Duke of Nemours to invade Apulia In his service was Cesare Borgia Duke of the Romagna and Lord of Piombino the Pope s son who had commanded French troops in 1501 at the siege of Naples and the siege of Capua Many rulers in Italy preferred to deal with the French rather than the Spanish who had been favored for a decade On 21 June 1502 Pope Alexander took the extraordinary step of sending a cardinal and one of his secretaries to Savona to attempt to kidnap and bring to Rome Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere a consistent supporter of the French cause The trick failed On 12 July Cardinal Orsini sought an audience with Pope Alexander to get permission to go to Milan to negotiate with King Louis XII When he was refused the audience he left Rome anyway and headed for Milan When he came back to Rome Orsini was arrested and sent to the Castel S Angelo where he died on 22 February 1503 12 Cardinal d Este remained in Rome though his relations with Pope Alexander were said in the first week of November 1502 to have deteriorated due to Duke Ercole s failure to send aid to the Pope 13 It was reported to Venice on 24 November that the Cardinal s maestro di casa and three other persons had come from Rome in disguise one was said to have been the Cardinal because he was in disaccord with the Pope 14 On 15 February 1503 after he had participated in the day s papal Consistory Ippolito was compelled to flee from the wrath of Cesare Borgia with whose sister in law both Este and Borgia were engaged in illicit affairs 15 Fortunately Alexander VI died on 12 August Cardinal Ippolito was not able to return to Rome until 28 October and then with a broken leg from a fall from his horse because of which he had been absent from the Conclave of 16 22 September 1503 16 While Cardinal Ippolito was recuperating one of his old friends was engaged in an operation against his interests Cardinal Tamas Bakocz Archbishop of Esztergom and Chancellor of Hungary on account of which he did not attend the conclaves wrote a letter to the Signoria of Venice which Marino Sanuto saw on 23 November 1503 In his letter which was purely concerned with benefices he wanted the Signoria to get Cardinal d Este to resign the Bishopric of Eger The Doge replied that they had already tried to do so and that he did not want to acquiesce 17 Bakocz certainly had a point in canon law in that Cardinal Ippolito had been bishop for nearly sixteen years and was not yet consecrated and yet there seems to be a case of ingratitude since Bakocz who had been educated at Bologna and Ferrara had once been Cardinal d Este s private secretary Julius II edit After Alexander s death on 8 October 1503 Pius III appointed Cardinal Ippolito bishop of Ferrara 18 When Pius III died on 18 October d Este was able to participate in the second Conclave of 1503 at which Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere was elected Pope Julius II on 1 November One of Cardinal Ippolito s conclavists was his half brother Giulio d Este 19 Julius pro French policies ought to have made life easier for Ferrara but his determination to humble the power of Milan and Venice placed Ferrara in the exact center of what would become a major war The Cardinal of Ferrara therefore endured a rough and dangerous relationship with Pope Julius After the Conclave and the Coronation 26 November Cardinal Ippolito was reported to be ill and did not attend the papal ceremonies of taking possession of his cathedral church of Saint John Lateran on 5 December 1503 20 He returned to Ferrara on 10 December 1503 21 and he was still in Ferrara when he was present at his father s deathbed on 15 June 1505 22 In 1506 a plot was discovered in Ferrara against the new duke Alfonso and his brother Cardinal Ippolito The leaders their brother Ferrante and their half brother Giulio were tried in September and sentenced to death The sentence however was commuted to life imprisonment Ferrante died in prison thirty four years later and Giulio was finally released after fifty three years 23 In 1507 Cardinal d Este was named Bishop of Modena but still unconsecrated he could only act as Administrator 24 Ippolito however was again at odds with Pius successor Julius II della Rovere and in 1507 he left the Curia On 24 May he was in Milan and took part in the formal reception of King Louis XII of France along with Cardinals Georges d Amboise Clermont de Castelnau Pallavicini Caretto San Severino and Trivulzio 25 As Archbishop of Milan he was only doing his duty and Pope Julius had to suppress his annoyance In September 1507 Duke Alfonso of Ferrara happened to be in Rome on his way to Naples and according to a report of 22 September the Pope had named Cardinal Ippolito to the post of Apostolic Legate in Bologna 26 But in the following year Julius praised him for his conduct in the Bentivoglio plot In June 1509 Cardinal d Este joined the King of France in his camp near Brescia The King had sent the Duke of Ferrara a demand for 100 000 ducats for his campaign 27 The Cardinal successfully led a military contingent to regain the Polesine territories that the Este had lost in the war with Venice in 1484 winning the decisive battle of Polesella On 27 July the pope recalled him to Rome but feeling his life was unsafe trapped as he was between King and Pope Ippolito fled to Hungary In May 1510 upon the death of Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini the office of Abbot Commendatory of the Abbazia di Nonantola diocese of Modena became vacant Cardinal Ippolito immediately rushed to the monastery and browbeat the six electors into electing him to the position Pope Julius objected and Cardinal Ippolito had to send his secretary Ludovico Ariosto to Rome to explain the circumstances to the Pope 28 The cardinal held the abbey until his death On 16 May 1511 the summons of the Pope to appear at the schismatic Council of Pisa was signed by four cardinals led by Bernardino Carvajal Bishop of Sabina they claimed to have the mandates of five other cardinals including Cardinal d Este but several of them denied that they were involved and protested vehemently at the misuse of their names 29 D Este s brother Alfonso later convinced him to disassociate himself from the schism and Pope Julius authorized him to return to Ferrara Leo X edit In 1513 Ippolito moved again to Hungary but when in his absence Cardinal Giovanni de Medici was elected pope taking the name Leo X the Cardinal returned again to his native city On 22 April 1514 he and his family were pardoned for all their past anti papal acts From October 1517 30 to the Spring of 1520 Cardinal d Este visited Hungary Poland and Germany On 7 April 1518 the Cardinal left Eger to go to Cracow for the marriage of King Sigismund and Bona the daughter of Gian Galeazzo Sforza who also happened to be a niece of the Emperor Maximilian He was accompanied by the two Provosts and the entire body of Canons of the Cathedral of Eger They stayed an entire month 31 In the winter and spring of 1519 he became involved in a struggle over the office of Count Palatine of Hungary on the death of Emeric Perenyi Cardinal d Este favored the candidacy of the Count of Temes while Cardinal Bakocz favored that of John Zapolya the Voivode of Transylvania The party favored by d Este prevailed 32 On 12 January 1519 the Emperor Maximilian I died Competition to be his successor developed between King Francis I of France Frederick III Elector of Saxony Duke Charles of Burgundy and King Henry VIII of England Agents of each of the candidates descended upon Buda to speak with Vladislaus who was one of the Electors as King of Bohemia Cardinal d Este was consulted by all parties and he also sent his representative Celio Calcagnini to the meeting of the Diet at Frankfurt 33 On 28 June 1519 Charles Duke of Burgundy became the Emperor Charles V On 20 May 1519 34 he resigned the archbishopric of Milan and his nephew Ippolito II d Este the son of Lucrezia Borgia Duchess of Ferrara was appointed his successor in Consistory by Pope Leo X He returned home to Ferrara on Monday of Holy Week 2 April 1520 entered the city on Holy Saturday and celebrated the Easter festival in his cathedral 35 On Friday 10 August the Cardinal took a long walk of some five miles eight km to a property of his at Baura east of Ferrara On Sunday he took a walk to his property at Sabioncello a distance of twelve miles but he felt troubled the whole day he was advised to return to Ferrara and avoid the heat The Duke made the Castel Nuovo on the Po available to Ippolito where he remained ill until Friday 31 August when he got out of bed in the morning feeling in much better spirits He travelled to Piscalo Pescara for the sake of the fish since he did not wish to eat meat presumably due to the Friday fast He asked for grilled fish and some Vernaccia which his doctor permitted and which made him feel better But in the evening his discomfort returned and he began to run a fever On Saturday 1 September he was so much worse that the Duke summoned all his doctors who indeed found the Cardinal much worse and agreed to administer a dose of medicine at the seventh hour if the fever had not gone down But at that time it was impossible to administer medicine because Ippolito was already in extremis 36 Cardinal d Este was reported to be ill by the Ferrarese Ambassador in Venice Jacomo Tebaldo who said he had had a letter of 2 September 1520 which stated that the Cardinal was seriously ill and in danger of death 37 He died in Ferrara on 3 September 1520 38 and was buried in the Sacristy of the Cathedral of Ferrara on the evening of his death His estate inherited by his brother Alfonso I amounted to some 200 000 ducati In Rome on 5 September Pope Leo X was trying to divide up the late Cardinal s benefices in the midst of three attacks of tertian fever He made the announcement of the various distributions in the Consistory of 10 September 39 Ippolito had two illegitimate children The Cardinal was a famous patron of the arts as were other members of his family Among his proteges were the poet Ludovico Ariosto and architect Biagio Rossetti He also patronized the Flemish musician Adrien Willaert 40 See also editGiulio d Este Angela Borgia Alfonso I d Este Castello EstenseReferences and notes edit Lucy Byatt Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani 43 1993 Conradus Eubel Hierarchia catholica medii aevi sive Summorum pontificum S R E cardinalium ecclesiarum antistitum series editio altera Tomus II Monasterii 1913 p 242 Sanuto gives the departure date as the 14th Marino Sanudo 1879 F Stefani ed I diarii di Marino Sanuto MCCCCXCVI MDXXXIII in Italian Vol Tomo I Venezia F Visentini p 44 Monferrato de Calcagnini p 8 Gerevich p 49 A Venturi L arte Ferrarese nel periodo d Ercole I d Este Atti e memorie della R Deputazione di storia patria per le provincie di Romagna terza serie in Italian Vol VI Bologna R Deputazione di storia patria 1888 pp 116 118 Conradus Eubel 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana pp 22 note 1 and 23 no 13 Eubel II p 188 Johannes Burchard 1885 Louis Thuasne ed Diarium siue rerum urbanarium commentarii in French and Latin Vol Tome Troisieme 1500 1506 Paris Ernest Leroux pp 56 57 Burchard Diarium III p 157 Missa finita Papa commendavit archipresbyteratum basilicae S Petro Rmo D cardinali Estense 163 n 1 and see p 174 Este s predecessor as Archpriest Cardinal Juan Lopez had died on 5 August after having held the office only since 10 May Eubel II p 56 no 643 Diario Ferrarese under 9 December 1501 in Ludovico Antonio Muratori ed 1738 Rerum italicarum Scriptores in Italian and Latin Vol Tomus vigesimusquartus 24 Milan pp 397 398 ISBN 9788827159262 Eubel II p 118 Eubel II p 56 nos 649 651 656 Marino Sanudo 1880 Nicolo Barozzi ed I diarii di Marino Sanuto in Italian Vol Tomo IV Venezia F Visentini p 444 Sanuto IV p 485 This seems to have been just a rumor Burchard Diarium III p 237 pro eo quod idem Cardinalis diligebat et cognoscebat principissam uxorem fratris dicti ducis quam etiam ipse dux carnaliter cognoscebat Eubel II p 56 no 657 Burchard Diarium III p 291 Marino Sanudo 1881 F Stefani ed I diarii di Marino Sanuto in Italian Vol Tomo V Venezia F Visentini p 77 Cardinal Ippolito is officially noted as being absent from the opening of the Conclave on 16 September 1503 Florentiae infirmus Marino Sanuto I diarii V p 102 Marino Sanuto I diarii V p 375 Eubel II p 153 Burchard Diarium III p 303 Burchard Diarium III p 313 Burchard Diarium III p 318 Monferrato de Calcagnini p 15 who has the wrong day the 24th Sarah Bradford 2005 12 The Congiura Lucrezia Borgia Life Love and Death in Renaissance Italy New York Penguin Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 14 303595 4 Eubel III p 252 Marino Sanuto 1882 R Fulin ed I diarii di Marino Sanuto in Italian Vol VII Venezia pp 83 84 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Marino Sanuto Diario VII p 639 Marino Sanuto Diario VIII p 350 Lodovico Ariosto 1862 Antonio Cappelli ed Lettere tratte dagli autografi dell Archivio palatino di Modena in Italian Modena pp xxv xxvi 129 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cappelli s dates are quite wrong The cardinal did not die until 15 May 1510 Eubel II p 22 note 6 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXXV pp 160 161 Marino Sanuto Diario Vol XXV p 34 records on 18 October 1517 that Cardinal d Este had departed for Hungary not many days earlier On 4 December the Venetian Ambassador reported from Buda that the Cardinal was in his diocese of Eger Sanuto p 214 Monferrato de Calcagnini pp 21 22 Monferrato de Calcagnini pp 23 24 Monferrato de Calcagnini pp 24 25 Conradus Eubel Guilelmus Gulik ed 1923 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana p 240 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last2 has generic name help Monferrato de Calcagnini p 28 Monferrato de Calcagnini pp 29 30 Marino Sanuto Diario Vol XXIX p 156 el reverendissimo cardinal Estense fratello dil Duca stava malissimo e se dubitava di lui Eubel II p 23 Marino Sanuto Diario Vol XXIX p 164 notes the receipt of a letter from Duke Alfonso in which the Duke states that Ippolito died on 2 September at the seventh hour of the night Sanuto pp 172 180 Lewis Lockwood Adrian Willaert and Cardinal Ippolito I d Este New Light on Willaert s Early Career in Italy Early Music History Vol 5 1985 pp 85 112 retrieved 2017 08 22 JSTOR subscription required Bibliography editBanfi F 1938 Il cardinale Ippolito d Este nella vita politica d Ungheria in L Europa orientale XVIII 1938 pp 61 77 Byatt Lucy 1993 ESTE Ippolito d Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 43 1993 in Italian Cardella Lorenzo 1793 Memorie storiche de cardinali della santa Romana chiesa in Italian Vol Tomo Terzo Roma Pagliarini pp 258 262 Gerevich Tiberio 1921 Ippolito d Este Arcivescovo di Strigonio Corvina Vol 1 1921 pp 48 52 in Italian Hollingworth Mary 2021 Conclave 1559 Ippolito d Este and the Papal Election of 1559 Hardcover New York Apollo ISBN 978 1800244733 Hollingworth Mary 2000 Ippolito d Este A Cardinal and his Household in Rome and Ferrara in 1566 The Court Historian 5 2 London Taylor amp Francis 105 126 doi 10 1179 cou 2000 5 2 002 S2CID 162281410 Kun Eniko Estei Hippolit Magyarorszag legfiatalabb erseke National Geographic Magazine 2008 februar 7 Kovacs Peter Estei Hippolit puspok egri szamadaskonyvei 1500 1508 kandidatusi PHD disszertacio a Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia Tortenettudomanyi Intezete 1992 1 leteve a Heves Megyei Leveltarban Marcora C 1958 Il cardinale Ippolito I d Este in Memorie Storiche della diocesi di Milano V Milano 1958 pp 325 520 Monferrato de Calcagnini Giovanni Girolamo 1843 Vita del cardinale Ippolito I d Este scritta da un anonimo con annotazioni in Italian Milan Ripamonti Carpano External links edit in Spanish 1506 Diario Borja Borgia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ippolito d 27Este amp oldid 1223790418, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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