'Cardinal Francesco Salviati Riario' was the
archbishop of Pisa in
1475. A blood-member of the
Riario family, and of the
Salviati family (to whom Pope
Sixtus IV had re-awarded the papal banking contract after taking it away from the Medici), he was also related by marriage to the Pazzi, Medici, Vettori, and other powerful families. Orphaned at a young age, Salviati was educated as a humanist but vied to succeed in the church, knowing he could not rise to power in the family after losing his father. Pro-Medici sources paint Salviati as a flatterer, a gambler, and lusted for the power that could be attained through church favour.
In 1464, Salviati moved to Rome to attach himself to Francesco della Rovere - who would later become Pope Sixtus IV - and his nephews,
Girolamo and
Pietro Riario. This paid off in his appointment as archbishop.
The
Medici family of
Florence opposed his appointment as archbishop and so in spring 1478, he sent to Florence his nephew
Raffaele Riario to lure both Lorenzo and Giuliano to the Duomo for assassination in the
Pazzi Conspiracy, and invited him to a mass at the
Duomo at which the assassination would take place. When the bell that was rung during the elevation rang, Salviati was to go the
Palazzo Vecchio, kill the
Gonfaloniere Petrucci and take possession of the
Signoria, whilst the main killing occurred in the cathedral, but on arriving there he was arrested by Petrucci and within an hour had been hung by a lynch mob from the window of the
Sala dei Duecento.
Sources
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Duomo
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Telus