This video is sponsored by Squarespace. The cultural renaissance is fascinating for the artistic productions developed during this period. But behind Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Donatello, among other artists, there were great families vying for hegemony in cities, duchies, or countries. We already have talked here about the Borgias, who during the 15th and 16th centuries dominated Rome and the papacy. In today's video, we'll talk about the Medici. The Medici were a family from the city-state of Florence, with humble origins as merchants and bankers, later becoming Randukes of Tuscany. But, how did they achieve this? And how important were they to the Renaissance? That's what we'll see in today's video. Creating a website has never been easier. With Squarespace, you will have access to amazing templates for all tastes and purposes. And you can create your blog, personal website, or the website of your business. If you create content like I do, then Squarespace offers exclusive areas for their community members, where you can interact easily and efficiently. They also allow you to contribute with your projects via PayPal, Apple Pay, Stripe, and Venmo. The Squarespace blogging platform allows your content to reach further and further, thanks to customizable buttons that allow you to easily share your content on the most popular social media platforms. Squarespace also provides all the tools to create your online store and advertise all your products easily and securely. Check out Squarespace.com for a free trial. Click the link in the description, or go to squarespace.com slash see you in history to save 10% off of your first purchase of a website or domain. Be sure to share your stories, creations, or products with the world and increase your online presence with Squarespace.
In the 15th century, the Medici of Florence made a banking fortune and survived the business crisis and exile. They also managed to conquer the papacy. The medieval popes ruled for almost 20 years and managed to establish themselves as dukes of their hometown. In addition, two women of the family became queens of France. It was a stellar, but sometimes brutal, rise. But how? Well, it all started with Cosimo de Medici, later known as Cosimo the Elder. According to Popeyes II, he, apart from the name, was the king of everything in Florence. This was not entirely a compliment. Florence was a republic, and as such, should not have a king. Cosimo did not come from the nobility. He was a bourgeois who made his fortune as a banker. Cosimo's father, Giovanni, had made money from the wool trade and from banking. In the late Middle Ages, the Italian peninsula was very important for trade between East and West. Commercial activity took place at the crossroads of the Mediterranean, connecting the Silk Roads in the East with the routes in Northern Europe. The Medici were bankers to the popes of lucrative business. In their hometown, they built an alliance with a group of prominent families, often cemented by intermarriage that gave them control of the authorities. Although pioneers in this political and ideological articulation, the Medici were not an isolated case in Renaissance Italy. The phenomenon was common at that time. What set the Medici apart was perhaps the relatively non-violent method of their rise to power, by which they very slowly and steadily eroded Florence's republican institutions. The Medici did not always get what they wanted. In 1433, opponents planned Cosimo's arrest. But as a banker to the Republic of Venice and Duke of Ferrara, he had influential friends. He managed not to be executed, but was exiled, though not for long. When his supporters won elections the following year, Cosimo returned to power. He returned with a different idea to show the size of his power. He used his wealth to sponsor art, architecture, and cultural products, commissioning a new palace for the family, bronze sculptures by Donatello, and allowing the completion of the dome of the city's cathedral to Felipe Gruneleci's design. He transformed the city of Florence into the capital of the Renaissance.
After Cosimo's death in 1464, his son, Bierro Demedici, became head of the family. He survived a coup attempt, but died in 1469, leaving his son in charge, Lorenzo Demedici, who was only 20 years old. This young man became known in history as the Magnificent. Lorenzo brought the first phase of Demedici rule in Florence to its peak in 1469, cultured, citizen in philosophy, poetry, and the other arts. He was also a born diplomat. He brought the best artists of the time to Florence and strengthened the local economy.
The family fortune had become so legendary in Europe that everyone expected the most extravagant expenditures from them, including Florence's allies, who had become accustomed to taking out loans, many of which were never repaid. In order not to lose prestige, Lorenzo kept spending high. The bank eventually went bust in 1494, two years after the Magnificent's death. Lorenzo was succeeded by a second Bierro in 1492. He proved to be a weaker ruler. In 1494, when war broke out on the Italian peninsula and French troops marched south to claim Naples, the Bierici were again driven out of Florence and Bierro was named the Unfortunate.
The family became dependent on its power base in Rome, where during 18 years of exile, Pierro's brother, Cardinal Giovanni Demedici rebuilt alliances. Lorenzo the Magnificent had another son named Giuliano, who became a Cardinal in Rome. Giuliano, Lorenzo's brother, who had been assassinated in a coup attempt in 1478, had a son named Giulio, who also became a Cardinal in Rome.
With Pierro's expulsion from Florence, the Cardinals began to move the church's vast arsenal of money and allies against the restored Republic, represented by the old aristocracy of the guild, and, to a lesser extent, the middle class. In 1512, Florence was defeated by a papal army and had to accept Giovanni, the Magnificent Son, as informal head estate. A year later, he was elected Pope Leo X.
The retaking was not a pretty show. The troops of the future Pope sacked Brato, the neighboring town, torturing, raping women, and murdering not only rifle soldiers, but also women, children, and priests, without any remorse. Fearing the same treatments, the Florentine surrendered. In 1513, Cardinal Giovanni was elected Pope, assuming the name Pope Leo X. Suddenly, the papal states and Florence had become an unofficial Medici fiefdom. To be Pope was to be at the head of one of the strongest states in Italy, a source of more power and also an instrument to maintain the lordship status of Florence.
The Pope was an important patron of the arts. Raphael painted a triple portrait of Pope Leo with his cousin, Cardinal Giulio, and another relative, Luigi Dirocie. The Pope commissioned Michelangelo to design a funeral chapel for the family. It was necessary to show the greatness of the family. However, the following years were not easy at all. The Medici quickly lost two heirs, first Pope Leo's brother Giuliano, and then his nephew, Lorenzo.
Leo quickly acted to strengthen his power in Rome, but no maneuver at the papal court could solve the problem the Medici faced in 1519. They had no legitimate heir in the main line. Only two illegitimate boys, Ipolito and Alessandro, both under the age of ten, and a girl, Catherine, who was excluded from the political structures of the Florentine Republic because she was a woman. In 1521, Pope Leo X died after eight years of papacy.
The family would wait another two years before Giulio was elected Pope, taking the name Clement VII. In Florence, the bastard Ipolito was legitimized and promoted as future ruler. The Pope by then had an agreement with Charles V, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, but eventually betrayed him by marrying his niece Catherine de Medici to the son of Charles V's greatest enemy, King Francis I of France. Catherine became the first of the two queens of France.
The breaking the alliance between the Pope and Charles V led to the capture and sacking of Rome by Imperial forces. In 1527, this was the cue that allowed the Republicans of Florence to recapture the city and end Medici control. With the loss of the city, Pope Clement VII made Ipolito cardinal. It wasn't for long before the family returned to their hometown.
In 1532, they regained power and Alessandro became the first member of the family to rule the city with the noble title as the Duke of Florence. Clement VII died in 1534 after ten years of the papacy. Alessandro was the illegitimate son of Lorenzo II de Medici, who in turn was the grandson of Lorenzo de Medici the Magnificent. Today, many scholars believe he was the illegitimate son of Julio de Medici, who became Pope Clement VII.
Alessandro's mother was described as a slave and half-black, who had probably worked in the Medici household. Alessandro was also black and became known by the nickname the Moore. He was widely considered unsuitable to rule, but became a friend of Charles V. More than that, he took the hand of the Empress' daughter, Margaret of Parma. They were married in 1536. However, the union was never consummated due to the murder of the groom in 1537. Alessandro was murdered by a distant cousin, Lorenzo, who claimed to want to restore a republic in Florence. But this did not happen. Another cousin, Cosimo, became the Duke of Florence.
In power, Cosimo proved to be tough and an excellent administrator, conquering the city of Sienna and unifying the entire region around Florence into the so-called Grand Duchy of Tuscany. He remained in power for 37 years. Like his predecessors, Cosimo ran a spectacular and cultured court. He sponsored artists, had portraits of the family made, as well as renovating the Palazzo Vecchio, all to glorify Medici history. Cosimo's successors also welcomed several important artists and thinkers, including Galileo Galilei, whom Fernando de Medici protected to the fullest from the Inquisition. As well as Artemisia Gintileschi, who, during Cosimo the Second's reign, became the first woman to enter the Florentine Academy.
By the Italian peninsula, two women stood out as Queens of France. The first was Catherine de Medici, considered the most powerful relative in her lineage. She married in 1533, Henry, Duke of Orlion, second son of French King Francis I. When Francis's heir died unexpectedly, Henry inherited the crown in 1547 as Henry II, and Catherine became queen consort. When Henry died in 1559, after an accident at a joust, she became an important advisor to his sons, having influence and power in the political decisions of three sons who would become kings.
Contrary to what we might imagine, being a Medici was not an asset for Catherine. She was attacked for her mercantile origins. She was blamed for the Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre in 1572, when important Protestants were killed, generating a wave of religious violence throughout France. Still, she was not the only Medici queen in France. Marie de Medici, wife of Henry IV, also held this title and ruled the kingdom as regent after her husband's assassination. She was the harsh mother of Louis XIII.
The Medici grand dukes of the 17th century continued to patronize arts and sciences, just as her ancestors did. But the economic center of Europe shifted to the Atlantic ports and the family became less influential. The main line of the dynasty ended in 1739, with the death of Jean-Gastone. His sister, Ana Maria Luisa, left the family's art collection to the city of Florence, remaining intact while other collections were divided and sold. But, what happened to the Medici? Do the Medici still exist?
The Medici continued to rule in Florence until they ran out of legitimate heirs in the two main lineages of the family. At the time, in 1737, a third line of the family tried to claim rights, but they were not considered legitimate enough to take control. This branch of the Medici still exists today. One of the last descendants, if not the last, is Lorenzo de Medici, a 76-year-old writer. He bears the same name as the Magnificent. But the guy looks like a carbon copy of the ancestor who lived 500 years ago. Tell me if he is or is not a clone. Lorenzo believes that what turned the Medici into one of the most powerful clans in history was marketing. Other families, such as the Rockefeller and Fuger, have tried to imitate them without as much success.