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LUCREZIA BORGIA (1480-1519) , duchess of See also: Ferrara, daughter of See also: Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia, afterwards See also: Pope See also: Alexander VI
.
(q.v.), by his
See also: mistress Vanozza dei Cattanei, was See also: born at See also: Rome in 1480
.
Her early years were spent at her See also: mother's See also: house near her See also: father's splendid palace; but later she was given over to the care of Adriana de Mila, a relation of Cardinal Borgia and mother-in-See also: law of Giulia Farnese, another of his mistresses
.
Lucrezia was educated according to the usual curriculum of See also: Renaissance ladies of See also: rank, and was taught See also: languages, See also: music, embroidery, See also: painting, &c.; she was famed for her beauty and charm, but the corrupt See also: court of Rome in which she was brought up was not conducive to a See also: good moral See also: education
.
Her father at first contemplated a See also: Spanish See also: marriage for her, and at the age of eleven she was betrothed to See also: Don Cherubin de Centelles, a Spanish nobleman
.
But the engagement was broken off almost immediately, and Lucrezia was married by See also: proxy to another Spaniard, Don Gasparo de Procida, son of the count of See also: Aversa
.
On the See also: death of Innocent VIII
.
(1492), Cardinal Borgia was elected pope as Alexander VI., and, contemplating a yet more ambitious marriage for his daughter, he annulled the union with Procida; in See also: February 1493 Lucrezia was betrothed to Giovanni See also: Sforza, See also: lord of See also: Pesaro, with whose See also: family Alexander was now in close See also: alliance
.
The See also: wedding was celebrated in See also: June; but when the pope's policy changed and he became friendly to the See also: king
of Naples, the enemy of the house of Sforza, he planned the subjugation of the vassal lords of Romagna, and Giovanni, feeling his position insecure,
See also: left Rome for Pesaro with his wife
.
By See also: Christmas 1495 they were back in Rome; the pope had all his See also: children around him, and celebrated the carnival with a series of magnificent festivities
.
But he decided that he had done with Sforza, and annulled the marriage on the ground of the See also: husband's impotence (See also: March 1497)
.
In
See also: order to cement his alliance with Naples, he married Lucrezia to See also: Alphonso of See also: Aragon, duke of Bisceglie, a handsome youth of eighteen, related to the Neapolitan king
.
But he too realized the fickleness of the Borgias' favour when Alexander backed up See also: Louis XII. of
See also: France in the latter's schemes for the See also: conquest of Naples
.
Bisceglie fled from Rome, fearing for his See also: life, and the pope sent Lucrezia to receive the homage of the city of See also: Spoleto as governor
.
On her return to Rome in 1499, her husband, who really loved her, was induced to join her once more
.
A See also: year later he was murdered by the order of her See also: brother Cesare
.
After the death of Bisceglie, Lucrezia retired to See also: Nepi, and then returned to Rome, where she acted for a See also: time a+s See also: regent during Alexander's See also: absence
.
The latter now was anxious for a union between his daughter and Alphonso, son and heir to Ercole d' See also: Este, duke of Ferrara
.
The negotiations were somewhat difficult, as neither Alphonso nor his father was anxious for a connexion with the house of Borgia, and Lucrezia's own reputation was not unblemished
.
However, by bribes and threats the opposition was overcome, and in See also: September 1501 the marriage was celebrated by proxy with See also: great magnificence in Rome
.
On Lucrezia's arrival at Ferrara she won over her reluctant husband by her youthful charm (she was only twenty-two), and from that time forth she led a peaceful life, about which there was hardly a breath of See also: scandal
.
On the death of Ercole in 1505, her husband became duke, and she gathered many learned men, poets and artists at her court, among whom were See also: Ariosto, Cardinal See also: Bembo, Aldus See also: Manutius the printer, and the painters See also: Titian and Dosso Dossi
.
She devoted herself to the education of her children and to charitable See also: works; the only tragedy connected with this See also: period of her life is the See also: murder of Ercole See also: Strozzi, who is said to have admired her and fallen a victim to Alphonso's jealousy
.
She died on the 24th of June 1519, leaving three sons and a daughter by the duke of Ferrara, besides one son Rodrigo by the duke of Bisceglie, and possibly another of doubtful paternity
.
She seems to have been a woman of very mediocre talents, and only played a See also: part in See also: history because she was the daughter of Alexander VI. and the See also: sister of Cesare Borgia
.
While she was in Rome she was probably no better and no worse than the See also: women around her, but there is no serious evidence for the charges of See also: incest with her father and See also: brothers which were brought against her by the scandal-mongers of the time
.
See the See also: bibliographies for ALEXANDER VI. and BORGIA, CESARE; and especially F
.
See also: Gregorovius's Lucrezia Borgia (See also: Stuttgart, 1874), the See also: standard See also: work on the subject; also W
.
See also: Gilbert's Lucrezia Borgia, Duchess of Ferrara (
See also: London, 1869), which, while containing much information, is quite without historic value; and G
.
Campori s "Una Vittima della Storia, Lucrezia Borgia," in the Nuova A ntologia (See also: August 31, 1866), which aims at the rehabilitation of Lucrezia
.
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