- Piero di Cosimo de' Medici
Piero de' Medici (the
Gout y), Italian "Piero "il Gottoso"" (1416 – December 2 , 1469), was the "de facto" ruler ofFlorence from 1464 to 1469, during the ItalianRenaissance . He was also the father of Giuliano andLorenzo de' Medici .Biography
Piero was born in
Florence , the son ofCosimo de' Medici the Elder andContessina de' Bardi . In 1444 Piero married the wise, tolerant [She raised Piero's illegitimate daughter with her own children.] and cultured Lucrezia Tornabuoni (1425-1482), a link to the old Florentine nobility. [ [http://home.infionline.net/~ddisse/tornabuo.html Lucrezia Tornabuobi] .]During his father's life he did not play an extensive role due to his perpetual poor health, the source of his nickname, which he inherited from Cosimo. He was the last
Medici elected to the office ofGonfaloniere , however, in 1461.Upon taking over the family
Medici bank from his father, Piero had a financial overview prepared; the results led him to call up a number of long-standing loans, many to various Medici supporters, which his father had let stand. This immediately drove a good number of the merchants involved into bankruptcy, and added to the ranks of those who opposed the Medici.His time as leader of Florence was marked by an attempted coup led by
Luca Pitti ,Niccolò Soderini ,Diotisalvi Neroni ,Angelo Acciaiuoli and his cousinPierfrancesco de' Medici , using troops provided byBorso d'Este , Duke of Modena and Reggio, and commanded by his brother Ercole d'Este (planned for August 26, 1466). Piero was warned byGiovanni II Bentivoglio , and was able to escape the coup, in part because his son Lorenzo discovered a road-block set up by the conspirators to capture Piero in his trip towards the Medici villa atCareggi ; he was not recognized, and was able to warn his father. The coup failed, as did an attempted repeat backed byVenice , using troops commanded byBartolomeo Colleoni .In 1467 he had to face the war against the
Republic of Venice , prompted by the Florentine support given toFrancesco I Sforza , the newduke of Milan . However, the Venetian army under Colleoni was defeated at theBattle of Molinella by the league of Florence, Naples, Papal States and Milan.He also continued the family's tradition of artistic patronage, including Gozzoli's fresco "Procession of the Magi" (in which are also present both of Piero's sons, Lorenzo and Giuliano, as well as Piero himself). His taste was more eclectic than that of his father, extending to Dutch and Flemish work.
He also continued to collect rare books, adding many to the Medici collections. Although not as brilliant a banker as his father, he was able to keep things running smoothly during his tenure.
He died in 1469, due to gout and lung disease, and is buried in the Church of San Lorenzo, next to his brother Giovanni; their tombs are decorated with a statue by
Andrea del Verrocchio commissioned by his sons Lorenzo and Giuliano.Notes
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