'Pope Innocent VIII' (
1432 –
July 25,
1492), born 'Giovanni Battista Cybo', was
Pope from
1484 until his death.
Biography
Giovanni Battista Cybo (or Cibo) was born at
Genoa of
Greek extraction
[ The Every Day Book of History and Chronology Embracing the Anniversaries of Memorable persons and events in every period and state of the world, from the creation to the present time, Joel Munsell, 1858 Appleton, University of Michigan, p.295 ][The Chronicles of Enguerrand de Monstrelet, Enguerrand de Monstrelet, Bon Joseph Dacier, 1849 H.G. Bohn, Oxford University, p.458 ][ The history of the Christian church during the Middle Ages with a summary of the reformation, centuries XI to XVI, Philip Smith, 1885 Harper & bros, University of Michigan, p.219 ], the son of Aran Cybo who under
Pope Calixtus III (1455–58) had been a
senator at Rome. His early years were spent at the
Neapolitan court, and subsequently he went to
Padua and
Rome for his education. In Rome he became a priest in the retinue of cardinal Calandnini, half-brother to
Pope Nicholas V (1447–55); the influence of his friends procured for him, from
Pope Paul II (1464–71) the
bishopric of
Savona, and in
1473, with the support of
Giuliano Della Rovere, later
Pope Julius II, he was made
cardinal by
Pope Sixtus IV (1471–84), whom he succeeded on
August 29, 1484 as Pope Innocent VIII.
The
conclave was riven with faction, while gangs rioted in the streets. Cardinal Giuliano did not have sufficient votes at the conclave to be elected, so he turned his energies towards the election of Cybo, whom he was confident that he could control.
Shortly after his coronation Innocent VIII addressed a fruitless summons to
Christendom to unite in a
crusade against the
infidels; the amount of his own zeal may in some degree be estimated from the fact that in
1489, in consideration of a yearly stipend of 40,000
ducats and a gift of the
Holy Lance, he consented to favour
Bayazid II (1481–1512) by detaining the
Sultan's fugitive brother in close confinement in the
Vatican.
Innocent VIII, in his
papal bull ''
Summis desiderantes'' (
5 December, 1484) instigated severe measures against magicians and witches in
Germany; the principles enunciated by him were afterwards embodied in the ''
Malleus Maleficarum'' (
1487). It was also he who in 1487 appointed
Tomas de Torquemada to be grand inquisitor of
Spain; he was a strong supporter of the
Spanish Inquisition; he also urged a crusade against the
Waldensians, offering plenary
indulgence to all who should engage in it. In
1486, he prohibited, on pain of severe ecclesiastical censures, the reading of the nine hundred propositions of
Pico Mirandola.
In Rome he built for summer use the
Belvedere of the Vatican, on an unarticulated slope above the
Vatican Palace, which his successor would turn into the
Cortile del Belvedere. in season he hunted at Castello della Magliana, which he enlarged. Invariably short of money, he institutionalized
simony at the papal court, creating new titles of offices that were discreetly auctioned.
In 1489,
Ferdinand I of Naples having repeatedly refused to pay the tariff for his investiture, and a shaky peace of 1486 having failed, Innocent found reason to excommunicate Ferdinand and invite
Charles VIII of France to come to Italy with an army and take possession of the
Kingdom of Naples.The conflict was not ended until 1494, after Innocent's death.
An important event that coincided with his pontificate was the fall of
Granada in January 1492, which was celebrated in the Vatican with great rejoicings. The Pope was sent a hundred fine
Moorish slaves, whom he distributed among the
Curia and to friends, and granted
Ferdinand II of Aragon the epithet "Catholic Majesty."
Innocent VIII died on
July 25, 1492, leaving behind him numerous children, of whom only two were publicly acknowledged, the others presented in the usual way as nephews (''Octo nocens pueros genuit, totidemque puellas; Hunc merito poterit dicere Roma patrem'' – "The wicked man begat eight boys, and just as many girls, so that Rome might justly call him Father"), "towards whom his
nepotism had been as lavish as it was shameless" (''Encyclopaedia Britannica'' 1911). He married his elder son
Franceschetto to
Maddalena de' Medici, the natural daughter of
Lorenzo de' Medici, who in return obtained the cardinal's hat for his thirteen-year-old son Giovanni, later
Pope Leo X.
Savonarola chastised him for his worldly ambitions. The unsympathetic Roman chronicler
Stefano Infessura provides many lively details, among them the apparent attempt to revive Innocent VIII on his deathbed by
blood transfusions from three young male children (who died as well in the process).
[1]
Notes
1. Discoveries in medicine: blood transfusion.