Read Lucrezia Borgia: Life, Love and Death in Renaissance Italy Online
Authors: Sarah Bradford
Tags: #Nobility - Papal States, #Biography, #General, #Renaissance, #Historical, #History, #Italy - History - 1492-1559, #Borgia, #Nobility, #Lucrezia, #Alexander - Family, #Ferrara (Italy) - History - 16th Century, #Women, #Biography & Autobiography, #Europe, #Italy, #Papal States
Index
Adria, Bishop of
Agenensis, Cardinal
Agnadello, battle of (1509)
Agrimont, M. de
Alba, Duke of
Albret, Cardinal d’
Albret, Charlotte d’
see
Borgia, Charlotte
Albret, Jean d’
Aldobrandini, Cardinal
Aldobrandino, Ugo
Alègre, Yves d’
Alexander VI, Pope (Rodrigo Borgia; LB’s father): elected and enthroned; divides New World; powers; birth and background; character and qualities; fondness for LB; illegitimate children; passion for Giulia Farnese; religious piety; nepotism; and LB’s marriage to Giovanni Sforza; and claims to Naples; and Juan Gandia’s marriage; leaves Rome in plague; Gonzagas seek favour from; relations with Giovanni Sforza; offended by Juan Gandia; dependence on women; Caterina Gonzaga appeals to for protection; alliance with Alfonso of Naples; conflicts with rivals; demands to Giulia and Adriana; and ransom demand for Giulia Farnese; retreats before French; painted by Pinturicchio; Dolfo disparages; and appointment of Juan Gandia as Captain General; and LB’s divorce from Giovanni; and Juan Gandia’s disappearance and death; rumoured incest with LB; accepts Jews; appropriates goods and money; and LB’s marriage to Alfonso Bisceglie; supports Louis ; accused of simony; appoints LB to Governorship of Spoleto; at Nepi; deprives rivals of status as papal vicars; poisoning attempts on; welcomes Cesare Borgia on return to Rome; exploits Ascanio Sforza’s downfall; nearly killed in whirlwind; and attack on Alfonso Bisceglie; and murder of Alfonso Bisceglie; resilience; promotes marriage of LB and Alfonso d’Este; negotiates LB’s marriage settlement with d’Este; celebrates LB’s marriage to Alfonso d’Este; LB intercedes with for Ercole’s plea for nuns; praises LB to Ferrarese; present at Cesare’s Vatican orgy; and LB’s dowry on marriage to Bisceglie; and LB’s departure for Ferrara; anxiety of LB’s marriage to d’Este; differences with Ercole over LB’s annual allowance; and LB’s illness and loss of child in Ferrara; and Orsini and Vitelli plot; on killing of Lorqua; death and burial; mistrusts French alliance; praises LB’s friendship with Ippolito d’Este; and appointment of new cardinals; and death of Giovanni Michiel; health worries
Alexandrine Bulls
Alfonso I d’Este, Duke of Ferrara (LB’s third husband): and LB’s marriage to Giovanni; father denies marriage to LB; marriage to LB; with Ludovico Sforza; meets LB; character and interests; and LB’s arrival in Ferrara; marriage relations; presented with Pope’s sword and cap; meets Louis ; visits sick LB; hostility to Strozzi; leaves Ferrara during plagues; attitude to Cesare; tour of European courts; and Bembo’s relations with LB; and Francesco Gonzaga; and father’s impending death; returns to Ferrara; succeeds to dukedom; administration and rule; improvements and decoration in Ferrara; seeks Cesare’s release from prison in Spain; LB’s correspondence with; and feud between brothers Giulio and Ippolito; Alberto Pio stirs up trouble with Francesco Gonzaga; absence on pilgrimage; and
Congiura
conspiracy rebuffed by Venice; syphilis; submits to Julius ; blames LB for miscarriage; alliance with Louis XII; on Cesare’s death; keeps birth of son Ercole secret from Gonzaga; and murder of Ercole Strozzi; defends Ferrara against Julius II’s forces; appointed Gonfalonier of Church; Julius II’s hostility to; in war against Venice; excommunicated and deprived of duchy; injured at La Bastia; keeps children in Ferrara; victory at Ravenna (1512); clemency towards prisoners; seeks reconciliation with Julius ; portrait plaque; attends Leo X’s coronation; Leo X suspends edict on; and Leo’s resumption of war against Ferrara; recovers territorial possessions; relations with Francis I of France; keeps Lent; makes own pottery; dislikes Giovanni Borgia; absence in Abano; attitude to offenders; returns to manage Ferrara
Alfonso I d’Este –
cont.
during LB’s illness; visit to Francis I in Paris; arrives home from Paris; and LB’s final illness and death
Alfonso II d’Este, Duke of Ferrara
Alfonso, Duke of Bisceglie: marriage to LB; leaves Rome for Naples; returns to LB; in Cesare Borgia’s Rome procession; and Louis XII’s claim on Naples; complains of judgement against Beatrice d’Aragona; attacked and wounded at St Peter’s; murdered; LB mourns; and LB’s dowry
Alfonso, King of Naples
(formerly
Duke of Calabria)
Alidosi, Cardinal
Alviano, Bartolommea d’
Alviano, Bartolommeo d’
Amelia, Agapito da
Anguillara
Anjou dynasty: claim to throne of Naples
Anne de Bretagne, Queen of France
Annunzio, Gabriele d’
Anselmo, Fra
Aragon, kingdom of
Aragona, Eleonora d’, see Eleonora d’Este
Aragona, Federigo d’
Aragona, Giovanna d’, Duchess of Amalfi
Aragona, Giulia d’
Aragona (Sforza), Isabella d’, Duchess of Bari
Aragona, Cardinal Luigi d’; death
Aranda, Pedro de, Bishop of Calahorra
Aretino, Pietro:
I Ragionamenti
Arienti, Giovanni Sabadino degli;
Colloquium ad Ferrarem urbem
Ariosto,Alfonso
Ariosto, Ludovico; La
Cassaria
;
Orlando Furioso
Ariosto, Rainaldo
Artes, Juan
Artigianova, Gian de (Gian Cantore)
Atri, Jacopo d’
Bacchelli, Riccardo
Baglioni family
Baglioni, Gian Paolo
Banchi, Ippolito da li
banquets
Barbara the Spaniard
Barone, il (jester)
Bartolommeo, Fra
Bassanello
Bastia, La
Bayard, Chevalier
Beatrice d’Aragona, Queen of Hungary
Bellini, Giovanni
Bellonci, Maria
Belriguardo (villa)
Bembo, Bernardo
Bembo, Carlo
Bembo, Pietro: romance and correspondence with LB; and LB’s grief at father’s death parting from LB; as secretary to Leo X and birth and death of LB’s son; moves to Urbino;
Gli Asolani
Bendedei, Jacobo
Bendedeo, Girolamo, Prior of San Giorgio
Bendedeo, Niccolò
Bentivoglio family
Bentivoglio, Annibale
Bentivoglio, Costanza
Bentivoglio, Ercole
Bentivoglio, Ginevra
Bentivoglio, Giovanni
Bentivoglio, Laura
Bentivoglio, Lucrezia
Berlinguer, Hector
Bernardino of Siena, San
Bisceglie, Duke of see Alfonso, Duke of Bisceglie
Bisceglie, Rodrigo (LB’s son): allowance; in LB’s will; given cape; sent to Castel Sant’Angelo; upbringing and inheritance; flees from Rome with Cesare; in Bari; death; affairs wound up
Boccaccio, Giovanni Andrea;
Cento novelle
Boiarda, Sister Laura, abbess of San Bernardino
Boiardo, Giovanni, Count of Scandiano
Boiardo, Matteo Maria
Bologna: LB travels through; Julius II takes over; Bentivoglio return to
Bologna, Antonio da
Bonaccioli, Lodovico
Bonfiglio, Baldassare
Bonleo, Giovanni Batista
Borgia family (de Borjas): background; dynastic ambitions; wealth; genealogy sent to Ercole d’Este; lands in Italy ; poisonings
Borgia, Angela (Dona Angela): El Prete praises; accompanies LB to Ferrara; with LB in Ferrara; illness; clothes; and Francesco Gonzaga; and d’Este family feud; gives birth; marriage with Pio da Sassuolo; comforts LB over Cesare’s death; returns to Ferrara; pregnancy and child by Pio; keeps LB company during pregnancy; LB asks Francesco Gonzaga to help; meets Prospero Colonna in Ferrara
Borgia, Camilla Lucrezia (Cesare’s daughter)
Borgia, Cesare: appearance; Alexander VI’s fondness for; name; character and qualities; Church preferments; relations with LB; at proxy marriage of LB and Giovanni Sforza; at LB’s marriage to Giovanni; dress; reproves brother Juan Gandia; Juan Gandia pleads for help to return to Italy; and Caterina Gonzaga; supports Alexander VI,; escapes from Charles VIII; portrait; relations with Sancia; and LB’s divorce from Giovanni; and Juan Gandia’s disappearance; nominated legate for Federigo’s coronation in Naples; pursues vendetta against Orsini; dynastic and political ambitions; proposed marriage to Carlotta of Aragon; devotion to LB; and LB’s second marriage to Alfonso Bisceglie; participates in bullfight; leaves for France; Louis XII subsidizes; titles; growing power; syphilis; marriage to Charlotte d’Albret; with Louis XII on campaign in Italy; triumphal procession in Rome; relations with Fiammetta de‘Michelis; suspected of attack on Alfonso Bisceglie; and murder of Alfonso Bisceglie; and internal family conflicts; accused of incest with LB; ruthlessness; retinue; orders murder of Troche; and LB’s third marriage to Alfonso d’Este; military conquests; returns from Naples campaign; visits Nepi and Civita Castellani; orgy in Vatican; Savelli attacks; receives Este brothers in Rome on LB’s marriage; and daughter’s inheritance; and LB’s journey to Ferrara; relations and putative children with Drusilla; suspected of capturing Dorotea Malatesta; attacks and captures Urbino; and LB’s illness in Ferrara; takes Camerino; visits Louis XII in Milan; takes over Church lands; League formed against; kills Lorqua; coup against
condottiere
conspirators; allowance settled; Louis XII obstructs; father confers rewards and estates on; falls sick; and rumours of father’s poisoning; plunders father’s apartments on death; and election of Alexander VI’s successor; LB’s concern for; strengthens alliance with French; moves to Nepi after father’s death; attacked by Orsini after death of Pius ; Julius II’s attitude to; confined by Julius II; imprisonment in Spain; escapes from La Mota; killed
Borgia, Charlotte (
née
d’Albret): marriage to Cesare; daughter by Cesare; and Cesare’s imprisonment in Spain
Borgia, Francesco, Cardinal of Cosenza
Borgia, Geronima
Borgia, Giovanni (‘
Infans Romanus’
): birth; Alexander requests ‘state’ for from Louis XII; parentage; given Macerata estate; Camerino lordship granted to; given cape; sent to Castel Sant’Angelo; upbringing; flees from Rome with Cesare; shares tutor with Rodrigo Bisceglie; Alfonso d’Este dislikes; in Paris
Borgia, Girolamo (Cesare’s son)
Borgia, Joana (Alexander VI’s sister)
Borgia, Jofre: birth; Alexander VI’s relations with; marriage to Sancia; in Naples; returns to Rome; and LB’s marriage to Alfonso; detained in Castel Sant’Angelo; at Nepi with Alexander; in Cesare Borgia’s Rome procession; Aragonese sympathies; accompanies Cesare to Nepi; death
Borgia, Juan see Gandia, Juan Borgia Duke of
Borgia y Navarro, Juan, Cardinal of Monreale
Borgia, Lucrezia: birth; appearance and dress; father’s fondness for; education and upbringing; character and qualities; name; relations with brother Cesare; religious piety; and father’s ambitions; betrothed to Procida; inheritance from Pedro Luis; marriage to Giovanni Sforza; requests jewellery and clothes from Juan in Spain; in Pesaro; divorce from Giovanni; portraits; deteriorating relations with Giovanni; meets Francesco Gonzaga; meets Sancia in Rome; takes refuge in convent; proposed Neapolitan marriage; second marriage to Alfonso Bisceglie; sexual profligacy; suspected of incest; supposed child; influence with Alexander VI; early pregnancies; and Alfonso’s departure from Rome; appointed Governor of Spoleto; celebrates Cesare’s marriage; birth of son Rodrigo; as ruler of Sermoneta; supports Alfonso against Cesare; and attacks on and death of Alfonso; exiled to Nepi; third marriage (to Alfonso d’Este) planned; confides in Vincenzo Giordano; secret correspondence from Nepi; marries Alfonso d’Este; marriage settlement with Ferrara; as father’s regent in Vatican; Ercole appeals to for help in releasing Sister Lucia; present at Cesare’s Vatican orgy; reception in Ferrara; books; meets and entertains Ferrara delegation for marriage; journey to Ferrara; attendants and ladies; hair washing and beauty treatment; El Prete reports on; meets Alfonso d’Este; meets father – in – law Ercole; arrival and reception in Ferrara; marriage relations with
Borgia, Lucrezia –
cont.
d’Este; life and amusements in Ferrara; under scrutiny in Ferrara; pregnancies by d’Este; relations with Isabella d’Este; and Cesare’s coup in Urbino; illness and recovery in Ferrara; stillborn daughter; allowance agreed; and father’s death; rivalry with Isabella d’Este; eulogized; reliance on Ercole Strozzi; romance and correspondence with Bembo; friendship with Ippolito d’Este; and Cesare’s military ambitions; fevers; Louis XII disapproves of marriage to d’Este; concern for Cesare; and son Rodrigo’s upbringing; parting from Bembo; leaves Ferrara during plague; miscarriages; relations with Ercole d’Este; relations and correspondence with Francesco Gonzaga ; and Ercole’s impending death; ambitions to be Duchess of Ferrara; as Duchess of Ferrara; administrative duties in Ferrara; household; musical interests; and Cesare’s imprisonment in Spain; correspondence with Alfonso; birth and death of son Alexandro; and d’Este family feud (‘
Congiura
’); improves and decorates rooms and buildings in Ferrara; trains and prepares young Ferrarese girls for marriage; and Alfonso’s absence on pilgrimage; and Lucrezia Bentivoglio; learns of Cesare’s escape; new year carnivals; and Cesare’s death; and birth of son Ercole; apartments; appeals to Gonzaga to apprehend Don Martino’s killer; and war against Venice; pawns jewellery; congratulates Francesco Gonzaga on liberation from Venice prison; and papal war against Ferrara; appeals to Francesco Gonzaga for help in papal wars; and evacuation of sons from Ferrara; pleads with Isabella to intercede with Francesco Gonzaga; entertains French forces in Ferrara; health cure at San Bernardino convent; orders defence of Ferrara against papal forces; and death of son Rodrigo; entertains Prospero Colonna; view of Leo X; birth of later children; household management; improved relations with Isabella; health decline; maintains interest in Cesare’s children; merciful nature; and Alfonso’s absence in Paris; and mother’s death; and Francesco Gonzaga’s death; final illness and death
Borgia, Cardinal Ludovico
Borgia, Ludovico, Prior of Santa Eufemia