Gérard du Puy

Gérard du Puy (died February 14, 1389) was a French cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and cardinal-nephew of Pope Gregory XI.

Papal legate

Marmoutier Abbey

In 1372, du Puy, already abbot of Marmoutier (Italian: abate di Monmaggiore) with the diocese of Tours, France,[1] was named Governor of Perugia and Apostolic Nuncio to Tuscany.[2]

Immediately after these appointments, du Puy corresponded with Catharine of Siena on behalf of Gregory XI,[3] and perhaps under the name of Gregory XI.[2] As nuncio, du Puy came into conflict with Florence for supporting the claims of the Salimbeni nobles in Siena.[4] du Puy's support of the Salimbeni also caused hostility toward Perugians in Siena.[5]

War of the Eight Saints

Gregory XI made him cardinal-priest on December 20, 1375,[1] with the title of S. Clemente.[6] Du Puy was the fifth and last relative that Gregory XI created cardinal, after Jean de Murat de Cros (elevated May 30, 1371) and Pierre de la Jugée (elevated December 20, 1375).[6]

He was the abbot of Mormoutier and the papal governor of Perugia during the War of the Eight Saints.[7] He crushed a peasant uprising in 1371 and constructed a citadel on Sole Hill described by contemporary chroniclers as "the finest fortress in Italy", which took three and a half years to build.[8] Circa 1373, du Puy destroyed the three papal tombs in the Perugia Cathedral (of Pope Innocent III, Pope Urban IV, and Pope Martin IV).[9] As governor, du Puy also looted the construction site of the new Duomo, demolished the ancient campanile and the chapel of St. John the Baptist, all for construction material for his Fortezza di Porte Sole linked to the Palazzo dei Priori.[10]

He was expelled by a popular uprising in 1375, and his fortification of Porta Sole was razed to the ground.[11] He had been forced to retreat to the citadel (guarded by Bernard de La Salle) along with his military entourage led by William Gold, who had been sent ahead by condottiere John Hawkwood, after crowds gathered in the town chanting "death to the abbot and the pastors of the church."[7]

Hawkwood waited outside Perugia and camped across the Ponte di San Giovanni with 300 lances while the citizens of Perugia plowed up the roads leading to the citadel and bombarded it with a trebuchet, built by Florentine craftsman Domenico Bonintende, nicknamed cacciaprete (the "priest chaser"), which was said to throw fifteen hundred pound stones, according to local sources, as well as excrement and live animals.[7] Du Puy surrendered on December 22, 1375, and was handed over to Hawkwood's custody on the day after Christmas, only to be escourted to Cesena as prisoner where he was left in the custody of Galeotto I Malatesta, the lord of Rimini.[12] Hawkwood leveraged du Puy to receive 130,000 florins in backpay from the pope.[13]

Later life

After the death of his uncle, Gregory XI, on March 26, 1378, du Puy participated in the papal conclave from April 7-9, 1378 that elected Pope Urban VI, but was among the cardinalsmostly French, but also some Italianwho left the court of Urban VI for Anagni, then Fondi, and then on September 20, 1378, elected Robert of Geneva as Clement VII.[14] Du Puy remained in the allegiance of Avignon Pope Clement VII until his death on February 14, 1389.[6]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Miranda, Salvator. 1998. "14th Century (1303-1404)."
  2. 1 2 Drane, 1899, p. 284.
  3. Scudder, 2006, p. 115.
  4. Scudder, 2006, p. 18.
  5. Del Pozzo, 1995, p. 171.
  6. 1 2 3 Miranda, Salvator. 1998. "S. Cajo --- S. Gregorio VII."
  7. 1 2 3 Caferro, 2006, p. 179.
  8. Touring Club of Italy. 2003. Umbria. p. 18.
  9. Keys to Umbria: City Walks. May 22, 2009 (retrieved). "Interior of the Duomo".
  10. Keys to Umbria: City Walks. May 22, 2009 (retrieved). "Duomo (San Lorenzo)".
  11. cf. Touring Club Italiano, Guida d'Italia: Umbria (1966)
  12. Caferro, 2006, pp. 179-180.
  13. Caferro, 2006, p. 181.
  14. Miranda, Salvator. 1998. "Papal elections of the 14th Century (1303-1394)."

References

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