Read The Rise and Fall of the House of Medici Online
Authors: Christopher Hibbert
Gorini, Simonetta,
233
Grandi
, and government of Florence,
28
; and Cosimo di Giovanni,
43
; Medici declared to be,
52
; become eligible for election to office,
61
‘Great Schism’, the (1378–1417),
34
Grocyn, William (
c
1446–1519),
170
Guadagni family,
58
Guasconi family,
58
Guicciardini family,
58
Guicciardini, Francesco (1483–1340),
315
; on Cosimo
Pater Patriae
,
63
; on Lorenzo the Magnificent,
146
,
157
; on Capponi and Charles VIII,
190
; on the French in Naples,
193
; on French artillery,
195
; on the sack of Prato,
213–14
; on Giulio de’ Medici,
233
; on Giovanni delle Bande Nere,
242
; on Clement VII,
243
; on Cardinal Passerini,
248
; on the aftermath of the siege of Florence,
251
; eulogizes Alessandro de’ Medici,
254
; leader of the
Palleschi
,
256
,
257
; and Cosimo I,
257
,
258
,
264
; Varchion,
263
Guicciardini, Luigi,
160
Guicciardini, Piero,
56
Guilds, trade, Florentine,
25–6
; and
Signoria
,
26
; cloth and wool,
33
;
Am del Cambio
,
33
,
73
;
Arte di Por Santa Maria
, 71; and the Cathedral dome,
72
; commission statues for Orsanmichele,
73
; and number of working-days per year,
119
; on verge of ruin,
210
; of the Calimala,
319–20
Hadfield, Charles,
325
Handel, George Frederick (1685–1759),
300
Hanno,
elephant belonging to
Pope Leo X,
226
Henry II, King of France,
see
Orléans, Henri
de Valois, Duke of
Henry IV, King of France (1553–1610),
281
Holy Leagues, Florence, Milan, the Pope and Venice,
85
; Alexander VI’s,
194
; mercenaries in battle,
195
; Savonarola and,
196
; League of Cambrai,
207
,
223
; Julius II’s,
208
,
209
,
211–12
,
214
Humanists, Cosimo
Pater Patriae
,
37–8
; Albizzi and,
43–4
; friends of Cosimo
Pater Patriae
,
43
,
46
,
47
; Piccolimini and Parentucelli,
88
; and vernacular poetry,
170
Insignia, of Florence,
26
,
33
,
313
; of the Medici,
30
,
48
,
102
,
111
,
313
,
319
,
323
; of
Arte della Lana
,
33
; of Cosimo
Pater Patriae
,
76
,
111
; of the Medici bank,
87
; Valois lilies,
102
; seal of the
Signoria
,
109
; standard of Lorenzo the Magnificent,
117
; of citizens of Florence,
215
; Cardinal Giovanni’s personal device,
216
; of
Del Cimento
,
284
; Peruzzi family emblem,
315
; arms of Piero di Cosimo,
320
; the Castracani leopard,
321
; Francesco I and the Medici emblem,
331
Joanna, Archduchess of Austria,
see
Medici, Joanna de’, Grand Duchess
John VII Paleologus, Emperor of die East (c. 1423–48),
83
; and the Pope,
64
; enters Florence,
66
; and the Council of Florence,
67
,
68
;and the Florentine-Milanese alliance,
83
; Gozzoli and,
110
Kallistos, Andronicus,
122
Knights of St John of Jerusalem,
267
Knights of Santo Stefano,
266
La Badia, monastery of,
73
Ladislaus, King of Naples,
35
Lama, Guaspare di Zanobi del,
109
Landini, Taddeo,
328
Landucci, Luca, on Italian warfare,
151
; on the attack on Colle,
152
; on an alleged assassin,
158
; and die influence of Savonarola,
193
; on die burning of Savonarola,
200
; on the national militia,
211
; his confidence,
211–12
Lannoy, Charles de,
241
Latimer, William,
170
Latino, Cardinal,
116
Lenzi, Lorenzo,
185
Libraries, of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice,
54
,
315
; the Medici,
69
,
88
,
107
,
169
,
187
,
240
,
299
; Vatican,
69
; of San Barto-lommeo,
73
;
Biblioteca Laurenziana
,
240
,
326
; Biblioteca Nazionale,
332
; the Palatina,
332
Linacre, Thomas (c. 1460–1524),
170
Lippi, Anniballe,
330
Lippi, Filippino (c. 1458–1504),
165
,
168
,
319
; his birth,
93
; Lorenzo the Magnificent and,
167
; his mural at Poggio a Caiano,
322
Lippi, Fra Filippo,
called
Lippo lippi
(c
. 1406–69); his history,
92–3
; his behaviour,
93
; Cosimo
Paler Patriae
and,
93–4
; Botticelli and,
109
;
The Virgin Adoring the Child
,
110
,
320
; his altarpiece in San Lorenzo,
316
;
Coronation of the Virgin
,
319
Lombardi, Giovanni,
330
Lorraine, Francesco II, Duke of,
later
Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor (1708–65),
309
Louis XIV, King of France (1638–1715),
281
; Marguerite-Louise and,
288
,
291
,
293–4
,
295
,
296
; and Cosimo III,
292
Lucretius,
prop
. Titus Lucretius Carus,
45
Machiavelli, Niccolò di Bernardo (1469–1527), and the battle of Anghiari,
194
; appearance,
210
; organizes national militia,
211
; on the sack of Prato,
214
;
The Prince
,
214
,
326
; his advice sought,
219
;
Mandragola
,
227
; his papers,
332
Maddalena, Cosimo’s
slave-girl
,
39–40
Madeleine de la Tour d’ Auvergne,
see
Urbino, Duchess of
Maffei, Raffaele,
141
Mahomet II, ‘the Conqueror’, Sultan of Turkey (1430–81),
160
Malavolti, Federigo,
51
Malespini family,
43
Manetti, Antonio,
317
Manfredi, Taddeo,
128
Mannaioni, Giulio,
319
Manuel I, King of Portugal (1469–1521),
226
Marco da Fienza,
330
Margaret of Parma,
see
Medici, Margaret de’
Marguerite Louise of Orléans,
see
Medici, Margaret Louise de’
Maria Maddalena, Archduchess of Austria,
see
Medici, Maria Maddalena de’. Grand Duchess
Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria (1717–80),
309
Marie de’ Medici, Queen of France (1573–1642),
281
Martelli family,
57
Martelli, Camilla,
see
Medici, Camilla de’
Mary, Queen of France,
219
Masolino da Panicale (1383–1447),
319
Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor (1459–1519), and Anne of Brittany,
183
; joins the Holy League,
194
; and Julius II,
207
; Leo X and,
220
; death of,
237
Mazarin, Jules, Cardinal,
orig
. Giulio Mazarini (1602–61),
288
Medici, the, origins of,
30
; insignia of,
30
; public service,
30–1
; the Albizzi and,
43
,
55
,
212
; the Martelli and,
57
; sentence of banishment revoked,
58
; opposition to,
104
; Gozzoli and,
110
; and Poliziano,
122
; and the Pazzi,
131
,
132
;
Signorla
declares them banished,
187
; Savonarola and,
191
; restoration of,
212
,
214
,
216
; election of a Medici Pope,
217
; the Sacred College and,
235
; and Henry of Navarre,
281
; and the Inquisition,
297
; the Medici holidays abolished,
310
; bequest of the Medici treasures,
310–11
; and the Palazzo Medici,
317–18
; the Medici collections,
324
,
332
Medici, Alessandro de’,
illegitimate son of
Lorenzo, Duke of Urbino
or of
Cardinal Giulio,
239
,
257
,
262
; his parentage,
236
; his unpopularity,
248
; Clement VII’s plans for,
251
; and Ippolito,
252–3
; Florentine resentment against,
253–4
; his marriage and death,
254–5
; and Lorenzaccio di Pierfrancesco,
255
; assassination of,
256