Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore

Giuliano Cesarini the Younger (It.: Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore; 1466–1510) was an Italian Catholic prelate and cardinal.

Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore
Coat of arms of Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore.

Biography

Giuliano Cesarini, iuniore was born in Rome in 1466, the son of Gabriele Cesarini, Gonfaloniere of the Senate and Roman People (Senatus populusque Romanus), and his wife Giulina (Godina). Her father was Giovanni Andrea Colonna, and her mother was Ambroscina de'Astalli. Giuliano had two brothers, Pietro Paolo and Giovanni Giorgio.[1] Giovanni Giorgio succeeded his father as Gonfaloniere in 1499.[2] A third brother, Giovanni Andrea, was married to Gerolama Borgia, daughter of Pope Alexander VI, but both spouses died in 1483.[3] They were the grand-nephews of Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, seniore.[4] Giuliano also had four sisters: Antonina (wife of Carlo Muti), Caterina (wife of Antonino Albertoni), Alteria (who married a Margana), and Livia (wife of Pietro Ludovico Capizucchi).[5]

Early in his career, he was a protonotary apostolic, and a canon of the chapter of St. Peter's Basilica (attested between 1490 and 1493).[6] From March 13, 1491, Giuliano was a canon of the Cathedral chapter of Liège.[4]

Cardinal

In the consistory of September 20, 1493, Pope Alexander VI created Cesarini a cardinal deacon.[7] Cesarini received the red hat and the deaconry of Santi Sergio e Bacco on September 23, 1493.[4] He lived in a palazzo in the Pigna region of the city of Rome, which had been reconstructed from several family houses by his great-uncle, Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, seniore.[8]

King Charles VIII of France, who was on his way to Naples, entered Rome with his army on 31 December 1494. Cardinals Colonna, Savelli, Peraudi, de la Grolaie, Sanseverino, Lunati, and della Rovere were with him. The king was met privately ahead of time by Johann Burchard, the papal Master of Ceremonies, who briefed the King on protocol, but Charles wanted a quiet entry without pomp. Cardinal Sforza came out to meet the King, and at the Milvian Bridge (Ponte Mollo) he was greeted by Cardinal Cibò. On January 2, 1495, the King received all of the cardinals at the Palazzo San Marco, where he was lodged, with the exception of Carafa and Orsini, who were in attendance upon the Pope. The King received them coldly, without the customary honors. Cesarini visited Charles after dinner and was admitted by the Duke of Albany, and he and the king walked up and down together.[9] It is possible that he was carrying a private message from Alexander. On May 27, 1495, Cesarini and nineteen other cardinals accompanied the Pope to Civitavecchia, then Orvieto, and then Perugia, in order to avoid problems that might arise from the further visit to Rome by Charles, now on the return journey from his war against Naples. The Curia returned to Rome with Alexander on June 27, 1495.[10]

On 13 February 1500, Bishop Prospero Caffarelli of Ascoli Piceno was buried at the Minerva in Rome.[11] The following day, Cesarini was appointed apostolic administrator of the diocese a post he held until his death.[12] On 20 February, Cesarini's majordomo, Bishop Antonio Bavano of Parenzo, died of the plague. The papal Master of Ceremonies, Johann Burchard, notes in his Diary that he knew neither where nor how he was buried, since Bavano's padrone "was lacking in all goodness and humanity."[13]

On 26 February 1500, there a grand reception was staged in Rome for Duke Valentino (Cesare Borgia) at the Porta del Popolo and a festive procession through the city to the Saint Peter's. Alexander VI awaited his son in the loggia above the entrance to the Vatican Palace, in the company of Cardinals Juan de Borja, Giovanni de San Giorgio, Juan Lopez, Cesarini, and Alessandro Farnese.[14] Cesarini also participated in a similar ceremonial capacity in the investiture of Duke Valentino as Gonfaloniere of the Holy Roman Church and the award of the Golden Rose on Laetare Sunday, 29 March 1500.[15] On Holy Thursday, 17 April 1500, Cesarini read out the papal bull which proclaimedd the granting of a plenary indulgence on the occasion, and on Easter Sunday at the Papal Solemn Mass he had the privilege, as cardinal deacon, of reading the Latin Gospel.[16]

On March 5, 1503, Cesarini was appointed archpriest of the Basilica of St Mary Major.[4]

Conclaves

Cardinal Cesarini participated in the papal conclave of September 1503 that elected Pope Pius III. The principal problem during the Sede Vacante that preceded the Conclave's opening on 16 September was that of security. There was a French army descending on Rome, and at the same time a Neapolitan army was approaching from the South. Cesare Borgia was in command of a force of 12,000 troops, mostly Spanish, who occupied the Leonine City (Vatican area). Most Cardinals refused to approach the Papal Palace while Cesare was in charge, and were actually negotiating with the Castellan of the Castel S. Angelo to use that fortress as a secure place to hold the Conclave. On 28 August Cardinal Cesarini was sent along with Cardinals Carvajal, Vera, and Medici to persuade the Castellan to hand over the keys. This he refused, in accordance with his sworn oath to hand over the fortress only to the new pope.[17] Cesare, who in the meantime had decided to switch to the French side, was finally persuaded to vacate the Papal Palace and remove his troops. As he was departing for the heights of Monte Mario on 2 September, and passing through the Garden Gate (Porta Vineae extra Portam Viridarii), he was accosted by Cardinal Cesarini, his sister's brother-in-law, who wanted to speak with Cesare. The reply given him was that "The Duke is not granting an audience."[18] Cesarini could only return to the business meetings of the Cardinals and the contemplation of the possible future of the supporters of the Borgia clan. The Conclave opened on 16 September, but no vote was taken until 21 September. Cesarini voted for Della Rovere and Piccolomini.[19] Then some concentrated negotiation produced a substantial and successful two-thirds majority for Cardinal Francesco Tedeschini-Piccolomini of Siena on 22 September. He chose the name Pius III. Piccolomini's brother was married to the illegitimate daughter of Ferdinand I of Naples. The French had lost. But temperamentally Piccolomini was a temporizer, and the French hopes revived when Pius III granted Charles VIII permission to march his troops through Rome as he headed toward Naples.[20]

The death of Pius III after only twenty-six days on the papal throne gave everyone a second chance. Cesarini then participated in the papal conclave of October 1503 that elected Pope Julius II. There was no ballot. Giuliano Della Rovere was elected by acclamation on the morning of 1 November.[21]

On November 29, 1503, Cardinal Cesarini opted for the deaconry of Sant'Angelo in Pescheria.[22]

He died in Rome on May 1, 1510. Paris de Grassis, the Papal Master of Ceremonies, provided a comment at his death: vir alioqui formosus, grandis, pomposus, et totus in vita et virtute magnificus.[23] His tomb is in Santa Maria in Aracoeli.[24]

References

  1. Nicola Ratti (1795). Della famiglia Sforza (in Latin). Vol. Parte II. Roma: Presso Il Salomone. pp. 270–272.
  2. Gaetano Moroni, ed. (1845). Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica (in Italian). Vol. XXXI. Venezia: Tipografia Emiliana. pp. 276–277.
  3. Ferdinand Gregorovius (1900). History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages. Vol. 7, Part 1. London: George Bell. p. 353. ISBN 978-1-108-01509-7.
  4. Salvador Miranda, Biographical Dictionary of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Archived 2008-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, "Cesarini, Giuliano iuniore"; retrieved: 2017-09-01.
  5. Patrizia Rosini, Genealogia di Casa Cesarini published on-line at Nuovo Rinascimento (2015); retrieved: 2017-09-02.
  6. Alfonso Chacón (Ciaconius) (1677). A. Oldoin (ed.). Vitae et res gestae pontificum romanorum: et S.R.E. cardinalium ab initio nascentis ecclesiae usque ad Clementem IX P. O. M. (in Latin). Vol. Tomus tertius (3). Roma: P. et A. De Rubeis (Rossi). p. 179. Ciaconius is quoting from a manuscript in the Archive of the Vatican Basilica.
  7. Eubel, II, p. 22 no. 6. Burchard, Diarium II (ed. Thuasne) p. 84. This was the famous occasion on which Pope Alexander extracted more than 100,000 ducats each for the privilege.
  8. Carlo Pietrangeli (1980). Guide rionali di Roma (in Italian). Vol. 9, parte 1: Pigna. Roma: Fratelli Palombi. pp. 11–12. Francesco Albertini (1886). August Schmarsow (ed.). Opusculum de mirabilibus novae urbis Romae (in Latin). Heilbronn: Henninger. p. 28.
  9. Pastor, V, pp. 450–453. Pastor quotes Cesarini's own notes on the meeting, preserved in a manuscript in the Barberini collection.
  10. Eubel, II, p. 52, nos. 580–581. Gregorovius, VII, part 1, pp. 396–401. Pastor, V, pp. 468–472.
  11. Burchard, Diarium, III, p. 15.
  12. Eubel, II, p. 96.
  13. Burchard, Diarium, III, p. 16: cum patronus suus careat omni bonitate et humanitate.
  14. Burchard, Diarium, III, pp. 19–21.
  15. Burchard, Diarium, III, pp. 26–31, at p. 31.
  16. Burchard, Diarium, III, p. 36-37.
  17. Burchard, Diarium III (ed. Thuasne) pp. 252–253.
  18. Responsum ei fuit quod dux non daret audientiam. Burchard, Diarium, iii, p. 256, not p. 257 as stated in Pastor, VI, p. 188.
  19. Burchard, Diarium III, p. 274.
  20. John Paul Adams, California State University Northridge, Conclave, Sede Vacante 1503, I; retrieved: 2017-09-01.
  21. John Paul Adams, California State University Northridge, Conclave, Sede Vacante 1503, II; retrieved: 2017-09-01.
  22. Eubel, III, p. 72 column 2.
  23. Casimiro (da Roma) (1736). Memorie istoriche della chiesa e conventu di S. Maria in Araceli di Roma (in Italian). Roma: Rocco Bernabo. p. 349. "He was a rather handsome man, tall, stately, and completely impressive in life and virtue."
  24. Chacón (Ciaconius), III, p. 179.

Bibliography

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