Bianca Riario

Bianca Riario
Lady of Faenza
Marchioness of San Secondo
Countess of San Secondo
Regent of San Secondo

Bronze medallion of Bianca Riario made by goldsmith Niccolò Fiorentino
Spouse(s) Astorre III Manfredi, Lord of Faenza
Troilo I de' Rossi, 1st Marquis of San Secondo, 6th Count of San Secondo

Issue

Costanza de' Rossi
Pier Maria III de' Rossi, 2nd Marquis of San Secondo, 7th Count of San Secondo
Giovan Girolamo de' Rossi, Bishop of Pavia
Angela de' Rossi
Bertrando de' Rossi
Alessandro de' Rossi
Ettore de' Rossi, Provost of San Secondo
Camilla de' Rossi
Giulio Cesare de' Rossi, Count of Cajazzo
Noble family Riario
Sforza
Father Girolamo Riario
Mother Caterina Sforza, Lady of Imola, Countess of Forli
Born March 1478
Rome, Italy
Died 1522
Florence, Italy

Bianca Riario (March 1478 – 1522) was an Italian noblewoman, and the eldest child and only daughter of Caterina Sforza, Lady of Imola, Countess of Forlì, by the latter's first husband, Girolamo Riario, a nephew of Pope Sixtus IV.[1][2]

Bianca married twice; her first husband was Astorre III Manfredi, Lord of Faenza, and her second husband, Troilo I de' Rossi, 1st Marquis of San Secondo, 6th Count of San Secondo, by whom she had eight recorded children.

At the time, the de' Rossi was one of the most prestigious noble families in Parma.

Bianca was the half-sister of the celebrated condottiero Giovanni delle Bande Nere, to whom she acted as a substitute mother while their own mother, Caterina was held prisoner by Cesare Borgia.[3]

Early years

Bianca was born at the Palazzo Corsini in Rome, the eldest child and only daughter of Caterina Sforza and her first husband, Girolamo Riario. Her birth occurred some time in March 1478, although the exact date is unknown. Her paternal grandparents were Paolo Riario and Bianca della Rovere, sister of Pope Sixtus IV; however, it was rumoured that Girolamo's actual father was his uncle, Pope Sixtus.[4] Her maternal grandparents were Galeazzo Maria Sforza, Duke of Milan, and his mistress Lucrezia Landriani.

Bianca had five younger brothers from her mother's marriage to her father, a half-brother, Bernardino from her mother's second marriage to Giacomo Feo, and another half-brother from her mother's third and final marriage to Giovanni de' Medici il Popolano. This brother became known as the condottiero Giovanni delle Bande Nere.

Bianca's early years were turbulent, marked by the violence, treachery, family rivalry amongst the city-states, and continuous warfare which were salient features of life in Renaissance Italy. In August 1484, in Rome, following the death of Pope Sixtus IV, the city was sacked by looters and malcontents. After her father's palace was ransacked and almost destroyed, Bianca, along with her mother and her brothers, sought refuge in Castle of Sant'Angelo. Her mother immediately took command of the fortress, and began a siege in order to supervise the election of the new Pope, and coerce the Cardinals to negotiate with her. Caterina surrendered the fortress after Girolamo, who was Captain General of the Church, had taken a counterposition against her. Bianca and her family moved to Forlì and the Cardinals were able to meet in conclave.

Pope Sixtus's successor, Giovanni Battista Cybo, was not the preferred candidate of the Riarios, but instead, a long-standing opponent who took the name Innocent VIII.

On 14 April 1488, in Forlì, shortly after Bianca's tenth birthday, her father was stabbed to death inside the government palace, and his dead body was tossed from the palace into the square below where it was dragged through the streets by the citizens. His assassination was part of a conspiracy organised by members of the Orsi family over a financial dispute. After her father's palace was sacked, Bianca, her mother, and her brothers were immediately captured and taken prisoner.[5] Their lives were constantly in peril, but the Riarios were eventually released after Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan, who was Caterina's uncle, came to their assistance. Bianca's stepfather Giacomo Feo also met his death by assassination, which Bianca witnessed with her own eyes. The year was 1495. Bianca had accompanied her mother, two of her brothers, Ottaviano and Cesare, and Giacomo on a hunting expedition. Upon their return, they were ambushed, and Giacomo was murdered by a group of assassins led by Gian Antonio Ghetti.[6]

In 1500, Bianca's mother was taken prisoner, and raped and maltreated by the ferocious Cesare Borgia,[6] the same man who, one year later, deposed Bianca's first husband, Astorre III Manfredi, and arranged his murder in 1502. During her mother's imprisonment, Bianca sought refuge in a convent but soon left in order to care for her young half-brother, Giovanni. It was during this period that Bianca and her brother formed a close bond of love and affection for one another which would never be severed.

Marriages

Bianca's first marriage to Astorre III Manfredi, Lord of Faenza in 1494[7] was childless. Eight years later on 9 June 1502, Astorre was murdered by Cesare Borgia leaving her a widow at the age of 24. On an unknown date in 1503 at the Castle of Sant'Angelo, Bianca married secondly Troilo I de' Rossi, 1st Marquis of San Secondo, and 6th Count of San Secondo. He was the son of Giovanni Rossi and Angela Scotti. He was created marquis by King Louis XII of France on 15 August 1502, in gratitude for his military services in the conquest of the Duchy of Milan. Upon her marriage, Bianca was styled as Marchioness of San Secondo and Countess of San Secondo.

Bianca went to live at the castle, Rocca dei Rossi in San Secondo (modern province of Parma).

Upon the death of her husband on 3 June 1521, Bianca acted as regent of the marquisate and county of San Secondo for her son Pier Maria during his minority. Surrounded by hostile neighbours and numerous enemies which included relatives of her late husband Troilo, she summoned the assistance of her half-brother, Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, who helped protect her own interests and those of her children.

Bianca and her family formed a close friendship with author and satirist Pietro Aretino.

She died on an unknown date after 1522, in Florence.

Issue

Bianca Riario bore nine children to Troilo de' Rossi:[8]

In art

A bronze medallion of Bianca was made by goldsmith Niccolò Fiorentino. It shows Bianca in profile; her hair is worn long, and is held in place by a jewelled headband. The medallion is on display at the Museo Civico Archeologico of Bologna.

Ancestry

References

  1. Hare, Christopher. The Romance of a Medici Warrior. Riverside: The Library of the University of California.
  2. "Bianca Riario". Geneanet. 1 November 2008. Retrieved 6 December 2008.
  3. Hare, The Romance of a Medici Warrior
  4. George R. Marek, The Bed and the Throne: the Life of Isabella D'Este, p. 19, Harper & Row, 1976, ISBN 978-0-06-012810-4
  5. Niccolo Machiavelli, The Discourses, p. 347, published by International Collectors Library Book Club Edition, Garden City, New York
  6. 1 2 http://www.Worldroots.com., by Leo van de Pas
  7. Libro d'Oro della Nobilità Mediterranea, retrieved 6 December 2008
  8. Alessandro is omitted. Palio di San Secondo, retrieved on 5 December 2008.

Further reading

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