'Giuliano de' Medici' (
March 12,
1479–
March 17,
1516) was one of three sons of
Lorenzo the Magnificent.
Biography
He was born in
Florence. His brothers were
Piero and
Giovanni.
His older brother Piero was briefly the ruler of
Florence after Lorenzo's death, until the republican faction drove out the Medici in
1494. Giuliano moved therefore to
Venice. After the
Holy League, headed by Spain, drove from Italy the French forces that had supported the Florentine republicans, the
Medici family were restored to power. Giuliano reigned at Florence from
1512 to 1516.
He married Filiberta (
1498–
1524), a princess of the
House of Savoy, in February 1515, at the court of France. thanks to the intercession of his brother Giovanni, now Pope as Leo X, in the same year
Francis I of France invested him with the title of
Duke of Nemours (which had recently reverted once again to the French crown) on the occasion. The French were also apparently grooming him for the throne of
Naples (in which the French maintained a historical interest), when Giuliano died prematurely. He was followed at Florence by his nephew
Lorenzo.
Giuliano left a single illegitimate son,
Ippolito de' Medici, who became cardinal.
His portrait, painted in Rome by
Raphael (a painter favored by Leo), shows Rome's
Castel Sant'Angelo behind a curtain. (A studio version is at the
Metropolitan Museum.)
Giuliano's tomb in the
Medici Chapel in the
Church of San Lorenzo, Florence, is ornamented with the ''Night'' and ''Day'' of
Michelangelo, along with a statue of Giuliano by Michelangelo. Due to the identical common name (
Giuliano de' Medici) which he shares with his
uncle, whose tomb is also in the Medici chapel, his tomb is often mistaken for that of his uncle.
External links
★
Giuliano di Lorenzo de' Medici's portrait at the Metropolitan Musem of Art