HOUSE OF BORGIA
(Redirected from Borgia)
:''For the Italian'' comune ''and town, see Borgia (CZ)''
'Borja' (better known by the Italian spelling of the name, 'Borgia') was an influential Spanish family during the Renaissance. Callixtus III (1378-1458) was a Borgia and a pope. His nephew, Alexander VI (1431-1503), also a pope, was notorious for his unpontifical private life. Alexander's illegitimate children included Cesare Borgia, a political operator and intriguer, and Lucrezia Borgia, married to the Duke of Ferrara and a patron of learning and art. The Borgias legendarily poisoned people to gain political advantage and wealth, although little documentary evidence for this exists. A later member of this family, Francis Borgia, was canonized as a saint.
Although the Borgia family is closely associated with the Italian Renaissance, they were of Spanish origin and the name is of Valencian/Catalan origin; the family used the Valencian language among themselves, for privacy, even in Italy. There is a town in Spain called 'Borja' which is the seat of the Camp de Borja ''comarca,'' in the province of Zaragoza in Aragon. But the Borjas themselves were Valencian.
Alexander VI created for Giovanni Borgia the title duke of Gandía, a Valencian fief he purchased from King Ferdinand II of Aragon.
The following members of the 'Borgia' or 'Borja' family have individual entries:
★ Pope Callixtus III (born "Alfons de Borja (Italian Alfonso di Borgia)" and his nephew:
★ Pope Alexander VI (born "Roderic de Borja (Italian Rodrigo Borgia)" and Alexander's well-known children:
★ Giovanni Borgia, 2nd Duke of ''Gandia''
★ Cesare Borgia, made archbishop of Valencia and duke of Borja, in Aragon
★ Lucrezia Borgia
★ Giovanni Borgia, the ''Infans Romanus''
★ Saint Francis Borgia
The world-famous Spanish operatic soprano, Lucrezia Bori, whose real surname was Borja and who came from Valencia, was always said to belong to a collateral branch of the famous Borja/Borgia family.
''Borja'' also refers to an espresso drink similar to a café mocha, but with the addition of orange extract. (Valencia province grows famous oranges.)
There exist rumors that the Borgia Family had family ties with the Mastai-Ferretti but they were never proven.
In the classic 1926 film Don Juan, John Barrymore, as Don Juan, fights the Borgias.
Neil Jordan's proposed film ''Borgia'' and the Spanish-Italian 2006 film ''Los Borgia'' depict the life of the family. The family were also the subject of the critically-derided BBC series ''The Borgias''.
Alan Moore's comic book Promethea makes mention of a restaurant named Borgia's, in which five courses are served, followed by an antidote.
The character of Pope Julius II in the film The Agony and the Ecstasy states that he is not a Borgia when presenting his plans to rebuild Saint Peter's Basilica.
The Godfather Part III refers to The Borgias when Michael Corleone is in the Vatican attempting to receive a ratification from the Pope on a business deal owned by the Catholic church.
The Third Man (1949) offers a famous quote, penned by Orson Welles for his character Harry Lime, in which he says: "Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. So long, Holly."
The 1949 Prince of Foxes (film) is Welles vehicle more directly related to the Borgias; it is an adaptation of 1947 novel Prince of Foxes by Samuel Shellabarger. Orson Welles plays Cesare Borgia as the villain to Tyrone Power's hero, an artist-politico called Andrea Orsini. While Orsini's character is fictional and the film adheres to a romantic swashbuckling formula, the action's setting in the Borgia conquest of the Romagna region and the political machinations behind Lucrezia Borgia's marriage into the powerful d'Este family give the film a modicum of historical legitmacy.
★ Prince of Foxes by Samuel Shellabarger
★ ''The Family'' by Mario Puzo
★ ''Mirror, Mirror'' by Gregory Maguire
★ ''De scharlaken stad (The scarlet city)'' by Hella Haasse
★ ''Borgia'' by Alejandro Jodorowsky and Milo Manara
★ ''The Count of Monte Cristo'' by Alexandre Dumas, père
★ In Margaret Mitchell's ''Gone with the Wind'', Ashley Wilkes states to Charles Hamilton and Scarlett O'Hara that Rhett Butler looks like one of the Borgias.
★ "Cantarella" by You Higuri- manga version with Cesare as the main character.
★ Milo Manara, an Italian comic book creator, drew a comic book divided in three parts depicting the story of the Borgia family. The texts were written by Alejandro Jodorowsky.
★ Borgia, the novel of a family by Klabund
★ The Borgia Bride by Jeanne Kalogridis
★ ''Silent Spring'' by Rachel Carson has a chapter entitled, ''"Beyond the Dreams of the Borgias"''
★ The Antipope by Robert Rankin.
★ The Black Legend, a corpus of books and rumors spreading a bad image of Spain.
:''For the Italian'' comune ''and town, see Borgia (CZ)''
'Borja' (better known by the Italian spelling of the name, 'Borgia') was an influential Spanish family during the Renaissance. Callixtus III (1378-1458) was a Borgia and a pope. His nephew, Alexander VI (1431-1503), also a pope, was notorious for his unpontifical private life. Alexander's illegitimate children included Cesare Borgia, a political operator and intriguer, and Lucrezia Borgia, married to the Duke of Ferrara and a patron of learning and art. The Borgias legendarily poisoned people to gain political advantage and wealth, although little documentary evidence for this exists. A later member of this family, Francis Borgia, was canonized as a saint.
Although the Borgia family is closely associated with the Italian Renaissance, they were of Spanish origin and the name is of Valencian/Catalan origin; the family used the Valencian language among themselves, for privacy, even in Italy. There is a town in Spain called 'Borja' which is the seat of the Camp de Borja ''comarca,'' in the province of Zaragoza in Aragon. But the Borjas themselves were Valencian.
Alexander VI created for Giovanni Borgia the title duke of Gandía, a Valencian fief he purchased from King Ferdinand II of Aragon.
The following members of the 'Borgia' or 'Borja' family have individual entries:
★ Pope Callixtus III (born "Alfons de Borja (Italian Alfonso di Borgia)" and his nephew:
★ Pope Alexander VI (born "Roderic de Borja (Italian Rodrigo Borgia)" and Alexander's well-known children:
★ Giovanni Borgia, 2nd Duke of ''Gandia''
★ Cesare Borgia, made archbishop of Valencia and duke of Borja, in Aragon
★ Lucrezia Borgia
★ Giovanni Borgia, the ''Infans Romanus''
★ Saint Francis Borgia
The world-famous Spanish operatic soprano, Lucrezia Bori, whose real surname was Borja and who came from Valencia, was always said to belong to a collateral branch of the famous Borja/Borgia family.
''Borja'' also refers to an espresso drink similar to a café mocha, but with the addition of orange extract. (Valencia province grows famous oranges.)
There exist rumors that the Borgia Family had family ties with the Mastai-Ferretti but they were never proven.
| Contents |
| In popular culture |
| Film and TV |
| Novels |
| See also |
In popular culture
Film and TV
In the classic 1926 film Don Juan, John Barrymore, as Don Juan, fights the Borgias.
Neil Jordan's proposed film ''Borgia'' and the Spanish-Italian 2006 film ''Los Borgia'' depict the life of the family. The family were also the subject of the critically-derided BBC series ''The Borgias''.
Alan Moore's comic book Promethea makes mention of a restaurant named Borgia's, in which five courses are served, followed by an antidote.
The character of Pope Julius II in the film The Agony and the Ecstasy states that he is not a Borgia when presenting his plans to rebuild Saint Peter's Basilica.
The Godfather Part III refers to The Borgias when Michael Corleone is in the Vatican attempting to receive a ratification from the Pope on a business deal owned by the Catholic church.
The Third Man (1949) offers a famous quote, penned by Orson Welles for his character Harry Lime, in which he says: "Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock. So long, Holly."
The 1949 Prince of Foxes (film) is Welles vehicle more directly related to the Borgias; it is an adaptation of 1947 novel Prince of Foxes by Samuel Shellabarger. Orson Welles plays Cesare Borgia as the villain to Tyrone Power's hero, an artist-politico called Andrea Orsini. While Orsini's character is fictional and the film adheres to a romantic swashbuckling formula, the action's setting in the Borgia conquest of the Romagna region and the political machinations behind Lucrezia Borgia's marriage into the powerful d'Este family give the film a modicum of historical legitmacy.
Novels
★ Prince of Foxes by Samuel Shellabarger
★ ''The Family'' by Mario Puzo
★ ''Mirror, Mirror'' by Gregory Maguire
★ ''De scharlaken stad (The scarlet city)'' by Hella Haasse
★ ''Borgia'' by Alejandro Jodorowsky and Milo Manara
★ ''The Count of Monte Cristo'' by Alexandre Dumas, père
★ In Margaret Mitchell's ''Gone with the Wind'', Ashley Wilkes states to Charles Hamilton and Scarlett O'Hara that Rhett Butler looks like one of the Borgias.
★ "Cantarella" by You Higuri- manga version with Cesare as the main character.
★ Milo Manara, an Italian comic book creator, drew a comic book divided in three parts depicting the story of the Borgia family. The texts were written by Alejandro Jodorowsky.
★ Borgia, the novel of a family by Klabund
★ The Borgia Bride by Jeanne Kalogridis
★ ''Silent Spring'' by Rachel Carson has a chapter entitled, ''"Beyond the Dreams of the Borgias"''
★ The Antipope by Robert Rankin.
See also
★ The Black Legend, a corpus of books and rumors spreading a bad image of Spain.
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