Online Encyclopedia

SFORZA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 756 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

SFORZA  , the name of a famous

See also:
Italian
See also:
family . They were descended from a peasant condottiere, Giacomo or Muzio (some-times abbreviated into Giacomuzzo) Attendolo, who was born at Cotignola in the Romagna on the loth of
See also:
June 1369, gained command of a
See also:
band of adventurers by whom he had been kid-napped, took the name of Sforza in the field, became constable of Naples under Joanna II., fought bravely against the Spaniards, served Pope Martin V., by whom he was created a
See also:
Roman count, and was drowned on the 4th of
See also:
January 1424 in the Pescara near Aquila while engaged in a military expedition . His natural sou FRANCESCO (1401–1466) succeeded in command of the condottieri, and showed military genius and
See also:
political acumen . He served the-
See also:
Visconti against the Venetians and then the Venetians against the Visconti; he attacked the pope, deprived him of the Romagna, and later defended him; he married in 1441 Bianca, the only daughter of Filippo Maria Visconti, duke of Milan, and received
See also:
Pontremoli and Cremona as dowry and the promise of succession to the duchy of Milan . The short-lived Ambrosian republic, which was established by the Milanese on the
See also:
death of Visconti (1447), was overthrown by Francesco,who made his triumphal entry as duke of Milan on the 25th of March 1450 . He suppressed a revolt at Piacenza, formed close alliances with Cosmo de' Medici and with Louis XI. of France, and exercised authority over
See also:
Lombardy, several districts south of the Po and even Genoa . He rebuilt the fortress of Porta Giovio and constructed the
See also:
Great Hospital and the canal of the Martesana, which connects Milan with the Adda; and his court, filled with Italian scholars and Greek exiles, speedily became one of the most splendid in Italy . His daughter Ippolita was renowned for her Latin discourses . Francesco
See also:
left several sons, among whom were Galeazzo Maria, Lodovico, surnamed the
See also:
Moor, and Ascagnio, who became a cardinal . GALEAllO MARIA, who succeeded to the duchy, was born in 1444, and was a lover of
See also:
art, eloquent in speech, but dissolute and cruel . He was assassinated at the porch of the
See also:
cathedral on the 26th of December 1476 by three young Milanese noblemen desirous of imitating Brutus and Cassius . His daughter Caterina is separately noticed .

GIAN GALEAllO (1469-1494), son of Galeazzo, succeeded to the duchy under the regency of his

See also:
mother, Bona of Savoy, who was supplanted in her power (1481) by the boy's
See also:
uncle, Lodovico the Moor . Gian Galeazzo married Isabella of Aragon, granddaughter of the king of Naples, and his sudden death was attributed by some to
See also:
poison administered by the regent . His daughter, BONA SFORZA (1493-1557), married King Sigismund of Poland in 1518 . She displayed remarkable ability in government, built castles,
See also:
schools and hospitals, but increased corruption and intrigue at the
See also:
Polish court . She was accused of having killed her daughter-in-law, the wife of Sigismund Augustus . On the death of her
See also:
husband she returned to Italy and was poisoned (1557) by her paramour Pappacoda . LODOVico THE MOOR [Lodovico it Moro] (1451-1508), who is famed as
See also:
patron of Leonardo da Vinci and other artists, had summoned Charles VIII. of France to his aid (1494) and received the ducal
See also:
crown from the Milanese nobles on the 22nd of
See also:
October in the same
See also:
year, but finding his own position endangered by the French policy, he joined the
See also:
league against Charles VIII., giving his niece Bianca in
See also:
marriage to Maximilian I. and receiving in return imperial investiture of the duchy . Lodovico was driven from Milan by Louis XII. in 1499, and although reinstated for a short time by the Swiss he was eventually delivered over by them to the French (
See also:
April 1500) and died a prisoner in the castle of
See also:
Loches . FRANCESCO, the son of Gian Galeazzo, was also taken to France by Louis XII., became abbot of Marmoutiers, and died in 1511 . The two sons of Lodovico, MASSIMILIANO and FRANCESCO MARIA, took
See also:
refuge in Germany; the former, was restored to the duchy of Milan by the Swiss in 1512, but after the overwhelming defeat of his allies at Marignano (1515) he abandoned his rights to Francis I. for a pension of 30,000 ducats, and died at Paris in 153o; the latter was put in possession of Milan after the defeat of the French at La Bicocca in 1522, subsequently entered the Italian League against the emperor Charles V., was unpopular on account of oppressive taxation, and his death (24th of October 1535) marked the extinction of the
See also:
direct male
See also:
line of the Sforza . The duchy went to Charles V . The dukes of Sforza-Cesarini and the
See also:
counts of
See also:
Santa Fiora are descended from collateral branches of the Sforza family .

See J .

Burckhardt, The
See also:
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy, trans. by S . G . C . Middlemore (
See also:
London, 1898) ; J . A . Symonds, Age of the Despots (New York, 1888) ; W . P . Urquhart,
See also:
Life and Times of Francesco Sforza (2 vols.,
See also:
Edinburgh, 1852) ; Mrs Julia Ady,
See also:
Beatrice d'Este, duchess of Milan, 1475—1497 (London, 1905) ; F .
See also:
Calvi, Bianca Maria Sforza-Visconti e gli ambasciatori di Lodovico it Moro (Milan, 1888) ; A . Segre, Lodovico Sforza, duca di Milano," in R . Accad. d .

Sci . Atli, vol . 36 (

See also:
Turin, 1901) . There is a critical bibliography by
See also:
Otto von Schleinitz in Zeitschrift fur Bucherfreunde, vol. v . (
See also:
Bielefeld, 1901) . (C . H .

End of Article: SFORZA
[back]
SFAX (Arabic Asfakis or Safakus, the cucumbers)
[next]
CATERINA SFORZA (1463-1509)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.