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Filippo Maria Visconti

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Filippo Maria Visconti
Duke of Milan
Portrait of Filippo Maria Visconti preparatory drawing by Pisanello for the commemorative medal of the Duke
Duke of Milan
Reign16 May 1412 - 13 August 1447
PredecessorGian Maria
SuccessorAmbrosian Republic
Born3 September 1392
Milan
Died13 August 1447(1447-08-13) (aged 54)
Milan
SpouseBeatrice Lascaris di Tenda
Marie of Savoy
IssueBianca Maria, Duchess of Milan (illegitimate)
HouseVisconti
FatherGian Galeazzo Visconti
MotherCaterina Visconti

Filippo Maria Visconti (3 September 1392 – 13 August 1447)[1] was the duke of Milan from 1412 to 1447. Reports stated that he was "paranoid", but "shrewd as a ruler." He went to war in the 1420s with Romagna, Florence, and Venice in the Wars in Lombardy but was eventually forced to surrender under Pope Martin V. He would return to war again, where another peace agreement was required to stop the war. He married twice. Her second wife was Marie, from which he married in 1448. She was the daughter of his ally Amadeus VIII. When he died, Fillippo was the last of the Visconti male line and was succeeded by Francesco Sforza, husband to his daughter.

Biography

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Gian Galeazzo Visconti, with his three sons, presents a model of the Certosa di Pavia to the Virgin (Certosa di Pavia).

In 1402, when Filippo Maria was ten years old, his father died because of the plague, and his brother, 14-year-old Gian.Maria, became the new Duke of Milan. Their mother Caterina worked for her son.

Gian Maria, however, was through the interference of people close to him. So, he came to regard Caterina as threat to his power. On 18 August 1404, he had their mother imprisoned at Monza, where she died on 17 October 1404, the death was rumored to be caused by poison.

Filippo Maria Visconti became ruler of Pavia in 1402, succeeding his assassinated brother Gian Maria Visconti as Duke of Milan in 1412.

After the assasination of Gian Maria (16 May 1412) and her brother Condottiero Faucino Cane, Filippo Maria occupied himself to Condottiero's widow Beatrice di Tenda Lascaris. In doing so, he acquired control over Condottiero's wealth and his armies[2] urging him to gain control over Milan.

Filippo Maria was the brother of the deceased Gian Maria, the legal heir, as the son of Gian Galeazzo, who had usurped the lordship of Milan by overthrowing and murdering his uncle and father-in-law Bernabo Visconti, known as the maternal grandfather of Filippo Maria.

Therefore his sucession to the lordship of Milan was opposed by other claimants, like his uncle Estorre Visconti[3] and cousin Giancarlo Visconti, who were respectively an illegitimate son and legitimate grandson of Bernabo Visconti.

They had by support of the Milanese people themselves proclaimed joint rulers of Milan directly after the death of Gian Maria. They would keep hold of the title until the 16th of June of that same year when Filippo Maria managed to retake the city.[2]

That same year he confiscated several properties belonging to the Scotti family, among them, Agazzano Castle. From Filippo's marriage to Beatrice Lascaris di Tenda, Countess of Biandrate and the unhappy widow of Facino Cane—the condottiere who had fomented strife between the factions of Filippo's elder brother and his mother, Caterina Visconti, the regent—Filippo Maria received a dowry of nearly half a million florins;[4] but when Beatrice took too great an interest in affairs of state, he accused her of adultery and had her beheaded at the castle of Binasco in 1418.

Cruel, paranoid and extremely sensitive about his ugliness, he was nevertheless a great politician, and by employing such powerful condottieri as Carmagnola, Piccinino—who unsuccessfully led his troops at the Battle of Anghiari, 1440— and Francesco Sforza, he managed to recover the Lombard portion of his father's duchy.[4]

At the death of Giorgio Ordelaffi, lord of Forlì, he took advantage of his guardianship of the boy heir, Tebaldo Ordelaffi, to attempt conquests in Romagna (1423), provoking war with Florence, which could not permit his ambitions to go uncontested. Venice, urged on by Francesco Bussone da Carmagnola, decided to intervene on the side of Florence (1425) and the war spread to Lombardy. In March 1426 Carmagnola fomented riots in Brescia, which he had conquered for Visconti just five years previously. After a long campaign, Venice conquered Brescia, extending its mainland possessions to the western shores of Lake Garda. Filippo Maria unsuccessfully sought imperial aid but was constrained to accept the peace proposed by Pope Martin V, favouring Venice and Carmagnola. The terms were grudgingly accepted in Milan and by the emperor; but hostilities were resumed at the first pretext by Filippo Maria, leading to the defeat of Maclodio (12 October 1427), followed by a more lasting peace signed at Ferrara with the mediation of Niccolò III d'Este, Marquis of Ferrara.

The following year the duke married his second wife Marie of Savoy, Duchess of Milan, daughter of Duke Amadeus VIII of Savoy, a potent ally.[5] With Visconti's support, Amadeus reigned briefly as antipope Felix V from November 1439 to April 1449.

He invited the famous scholar Gasparino Barzizza to establish a school in Milan. Barzizza would also serve as his court orator.

He died in 1447, the last of the Visconti in direct male line, and he was succeeded in the duchy, after the short-lived Ambrosian republic, by Francesco Sforza (1401–1466).[4] In 1441, Francesco married Filippo Maria's only heir, his natural daughter Bianca Maria (1425–1468)[6] by his mistress Agnese del Maino (1401–1465).

Visconti-Sforza tarot deck.

Art

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The oldest extant Tarot decks, then called carte da trionfi, were probably commissioned by Filippo Maria Visconti.[7]

Ancestors

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Filippo Maria Visconti Treccani
  2. ^ a b Black, Jane (8 October 2009). Absolutism in Renaissance Milan: Plenitude of Power under the Visconti and the Sforza 1329-1535. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-160988-6.
  3. ^ Capponi, Niccolo (3 November 2015). The Day the Renaissance Was Saved: The Battle of Anghiari and da Vinci's Lost Masterpiece. Melville House. ISBN 978-1-61219-461-5.
  4. ^ a b c Hayes 1911.
  5. ^ Wilkins & Wilkins 1996, p. 107.
  6. ^ Marina 2013, p. 379.
  7. ^ "Oldest Tarot Cards. Origin of Tarot. Research of the history of Tarot". trionfi.com. 17 April 2005. Retrieved 26 July 2016.

Sources

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Italian nobility
Preceded by Duke of Milan
1412–1447
Vacant
Title next held by
Francesco I Sforza