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De Medici Family

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Page 1: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

De Medici Family

Page 2: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Pre-Medici Florence - TerritoryAt the end of the 14th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite.

Costly, continuous wars enlarged the territory of the city-state by conquering Arezzo, Cortona, Prate, Pistoia and Pisa.

Pisa’s ports made the Republic of Florence a sea power and major economic power of the West

Page 3: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

• Banking was a major source of power and income, and the Florentine gold coin, the florin was so reliable that it was the standard coinage in Europe

• Much of Florence's wealth was dependent on the manufacture and trade of cloth, primarily wool.

The Florin

Pre-Medici Florence - Economy

Page 4: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Florence was controlled by the Albizzi and Pazzi families until about 1438.

Pre-Medici Florence – Ruling Families

- The Albizzi family had controlled the republican government for two generations, but they led a lot of costly wars, so the people switched allegiances to the Medici.

- The Pazzi family were wealthy bankers that were in a semi-friendly competition with the Medici family. Eventually, they tried to depose the Medicis, failed, and their lineage ended.

Page 5: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Pre-Medici Florence – The Arts

The Palazzo Davanzati is a good example of the transition from the medieval tower house to the Renaissance palace.

• Churches and public buildings, and houses constructed with Romanesque or Gothic architecture, reminiscent of northern Italian influence.

• Most of the architecture tried to combine utilitarian and aesthetic purposes, because these mercantile elite needed to rebuilt the city from disasters (a flood in the late 1300s) but they wanted to be impressive as well

• The Albizzi family supported a lot of artists and cultural icons

Page 6: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Family Tree

Page 7: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Beginnings of Medici Power

• Giovanni di Bicci de’Medici– First of the famous ruling

Medici’s and considered founder of Medici family fortune

– Giovanni is considered to be the first prominent patron of the arts

– Giovanni was a leader not concerned with politics, but rather the family fortune and the arts

– Giovanni died in 1429 and his son Cosimo became head of the Medici family

Page 8: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Rise of Cosimo de’Medici

• Became head of powerful family bank, and amassed a fortune because he became banker to the pope, and his bank also spread to all the important financial markets throughout Europe.

• Cosimo was very interested in a rebirth of classical ideas and even went so far as to recreate Plato’s ancient academy in Carregi.

Page 9: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

• Cosimo was also a very religious man and much of his patronage of the arts was rooted in his religious fervor.

• Cosimo spent a considerable portion of his wealth on the arts

– Amassed the largest library in Europe– Supported artists such as Ghiberti, Brunellechi,

Donatello, Alberti, Fra Angelico, and Ucello• Florence became cultural center of Europe

Rise of Cosimo de’Medici

Page 10: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Fall of Cosimo de’Medici• Political career in shambles after Florence’s unsuccessful

campaign against Lucca– Campaign engineered by Brunelleschi to flood city of

Lucca, containing water with giant dam– Plan backfired when dam broke and flooded camps of

Florence as well• In September 1433, Cosimo was imprisoned on charges of

plotting to overthrow the government• Cosimo was then banished to Venice, resulting in the loss of

Brunelleschi’s most powerful patron

Page 11: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Lorenzo de’Medici

• Grandson of Cosimo• Lorenzo, know also as Lorenzo the Magnificent, was

is said to be the most brilliant of the Medici• Lorenzo was also respected as a very talented Latin

poet, and like his family members was very interested in texts of antiquity

• Lorenzo is considered to be the greatest patron of the arts

– Commissioned such artists and musicians as Michelangelo,Botticelli and Verrocchio

– Reasons for this patronage included genuine interest, continuing family tradition, and political motives

– Lorenzo even discovered the talented Michelangelo when the artist was only 15 years old

Lorenzo de Medici, Andrea del Verrocchio

Page 12: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Tomb of the Medici, Michelangelo

Page 13: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Post-Medici – The Initial Fall From Power

Girolamo Savonarola was a preacher who settled in Florence in 1489.

He attacked the tyranny of the Medici family in his sermons, and when in 1494, Charles VIII of France invaded Italy, the Medici’s lost power, and Savonarola took control, putting Florence under extremely rigid control.

Eventually, Savonarola’s followers turned on him, and he was killed.

Girolamo Savonarola

Page 14: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Post- Medici - Art and Science

At this point, most of the artistic products of Florence were in music, and the numerous academies of literature. The Accademia della Crusca compliled the Dictionary.

History of the Accademia della Crusca: http://italian.about.com/library/weekly/aa071900a.htm

When the Lorraine family took over Florence, they revived the town's economy, but they also turned Florence more provincial, so it didn’t participate in a thriving international cultural expansion. So Florence’s culture remain unchanged at staid for quite sometime.

Page 15: De Medici Family. Pre-Medici Florence - Territory At the end of the 14 th century, Florence was ruled by a merchantile elite. Costly, continuous wars

Cardinal Giovanni de Medici (Pisaro’s uncle) regained control of Florence in 1512 for the lineage.

In 1569, Cosimo III became the “Grand Duke” of Tuscany, after taking over many of the surrounding areas. He ruled with a heavy hand, not very popular.His heirs were far weaker.

In 1737, Cosimo III dies, and both of his children Gian Gastone and Anna Maria Luisa die childless. The Medici line has died out, and Florence is inherited by the Lorraine Dynasty.

Post-Medici – The Final Fall…