(Redirected from Lodovico il Moro)
'Ludovico Sforza'
Duke of Milan ('Ludovico il Moro', "The Moor") (
July 27,
1452 –
May 27,
1508), a member of the
Sforza dynasty of
Milan,
Italy, was the second son of
Francesco Sforza, and was famed as patron of
Leonardo da Vinci and other artists. It is said that he was called ''il Moro'' because of his dark skinned
complexion.
Ludovico Sforza was born at
Vigevano, in what is now
Lombardy.
Ludovico married
Ercole I d'Este's youngest daughter
Beatrice d'Este in January 1491 in a double Sforza-Este marriage. Ludovico Sforza married Beatrice d'Este, while Beatrice's brother,
Alfonso d'Este, married
Anna Sforza the sister of
Gian Galeazzo Sforza.
Leonardo daVinci orchestrated the wedding celebration.
Beatrice and Alfonso’s sister,
Isabella d'Este (1474–1539) was married
Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua.
Ludovico had many mistresses.
Cecilia Gallerani was Ludovico’s favorite mistress. She gave birth to his child, a son, in the same year as he married Beatrice d'Este. She is thought to be the subject of Leonardo da Vinci’s Lady with an Ermine. The ermine was the heraldic animal of Ludovico il Moro.
On the assassination of Ludovico's elder brother
Galeazzo in
1476, the crown passed to his seven-year-old nephew
Gian Galeazzo Sforza. Ludovico seized control of the government of Milan during Gian Galeazzo's minority despite attempts to keep him out of power. When Gian Galeazzo died in
1494, Ludovico received the ducal crown from the Milanese nobles on
October 22.
The same year, he simultaneously encouraged the French under
Charles VIII of France, and the
Holy Roman Emperor,
Maximilian I, to become involved in Italian politics, hoping to manipulate the two and reap the rewards himself—thus starting the
Italian Wars. Things did not go as planned, and finding his own position endangered by the French, he joined the league against Charles VIII, giving his niece
Bianca in marriage to
Maximilian I and receiving in return imperial investiture of the duchy.
After first defeating the French at the
Battle of Fornovo in
1495 (making weapons from 70 tons of bronze originally intended for a da Vinci statue), Ludovico was later driven from Milan by the new French king,
Louis XII in
1499. In
1500, Louis XII laid siege to the city of
Novara, where Ludovico was based. The armies of both sides included
Swiss mercenaries. The Swiss did not want to fight each other and chose to leave Novara. Ludovico was handed over to the French in April 1500 and died a prisoner in the castle of Loches. The Swiss later executed a soldier from
Uri called Hans Turmann who had, they claimed, betrayed Ludovico for money.
The Swiss later restored the duchy of Milan to Ludovico's son,
Maximilian Sforza.
References
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External links
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Portrait and family tree