Milan 1551 ‒ The Games of Medeghino
Franco Pratesi
1. Introduction
I can begin to better illustrate the title. Already the date requires a comment, because this study is based on a letter dated Milan 1550, and therefore the year seems certain; however, both the sender of the letter and the recipient are two Florentines and their January 1550 (ab Incarnatione [after the Incarnation, i.e. of Jesus in Mary’s womb]) becomes our 1551, and also that of the time for Milan.
Medeghino, on the other hand, was the nickname of Gian Giacomo de' Medici, and I will have to dwell on this personage. I can immediately admit that in decades of studies and readings, I had encountered several related Medici families, but I had not yet come across this one. The fact is that this Medici family is not Florentine like the others, but Milanese; it is described as being of ancient nobility but, until the generation of the personage in question, it had been of little importance, both in the economic and political fields. The existence of a kinship relationship in origins with the Medici of Florence has been denied by historiography, but in its time, it was accepted, probably for mutual convenience. I will also indicate other members of the family, but on Medeghino I must add several pieces of information to characterize the main character.
2. Medeghino's adventurous life
Gian Giacomo dei Medici (Milan 1498-1555) was a figure of great importance especially in the military field, recognized in the sector as one of the main protagonists of the era. Therefore we should not be surprised if we have a rich bibliography on his life and in particular on the feats of arms in which he was involved.
The main information can already be found in the Treccani Dizionario Biografico [Biographical Dictionary]. [note 1] Numerous details on his activity as a military commander are collected on the well-known site dedicated to the mercenary leaders of the time. [note 2] One can also read two books dedicated entirely to this personage: the oldest, by Marcantonio Missaglia, can now be consulted on Google Books; [note 2] two editions of the second have been printed, but it is present in few libraries. [note 4]
Summarizing the information contained in the works cited is difficult, especially because the episodes and battles in which Medeghino was involved are not only very numerous but also tangled with regard to alliances and objectives, especially for the initial period, in which he fought several times both on his own account and in alliance with one or the other of the warring camps, the followers of Duke Francesco II Sforza, the French armies, and the Spanish-imperial ones.
The family of Medici di Nosiggia is variously indicated by chroniclers and historians, either as of ancient nobility but poor, or, vice versa, as rather rich but not noble; it can be concluded that only with the generation of Gian Giacomo did it acquire an extraordinary fame, thanks above all to Gian Giacomo himself but also to his brother Giovan Angelo, who had a brilliant diplomatic and ecclesiastical career up to being elected as Pope Pius IV; furthermore his sister Margherita was the mother of Saint Carlo Borromeo.
His father Bernardino had been, among other things, a rich tax contractor for the Duchy of Milan, but with the political changes of the early sixteenth century, the French government confiscated his assets, and Bernardino, with about ten children, after a period spent in prison found himself in poverty. In addition
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1. https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/gi ... ografico)/
2. https://condottieridiventura.it/gian-gi ... y-warfare/
3. M. Missaglia, M. Fabi, F. Benedetti, Vita di Giangiacomo Medici, marchese di Marignano. Milan 1854. https://www.google.it/books/edition/Bib ... frontcover
4. V. Palmisano, Gian Giacomo de' Medici, Marquis di Marignano. Melegnano 2006. https://opac.bncf.firenze.sbn.it/Record/BRI0476523 ,
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to his brother who became pope, others also accompanied Gian Giacomo, who was the eldest, in several of his adventures. We will meet his brother Augusto later.
The details of Gian Giacomo's youth are not known, but he must have revealed a restless character early on, and while still a teenager he was forced to flee Milan after being accused of murder. The shelter he found in the territory on the edge of Lake Como was frequented by various armed groups of exiles and bandits dedicated to looting in the towns and countryside around and even on the waters of the lake. After a few years Gian Giacomo found himself in command of a small irregular army with which he carried out several daring enterprises for the reconquest of towns in the Como area and Valtellina in favor of the Duke of Milan Francesco II, who accepted his conquest of the castle of Musso, recognizing him as castellan.
For a few years he was then at the head of an army of Lombard and Swiss mercenaries who fought on several occasions alongside the French, while in 1528 he passed into the service of Charles V, obtaining recognition as Marquis of Musso. In the following years, we witness continuous battles on opposing fronts, for or against, both towards the Duke of Milan and towards the imperial troops. An agreement of 1532 concluded with the cession to the Duke of the territories he had conquered around Lake Como and his recognition in exchange by the title of Marquis of Marignano (today Melegnano).
At the end of 1536, the Marquis of Vasto, the new imperial commander in Lombardy, had Gian Giacomo and his brother Giovan Battista imprisoned for treason in favor of France. Released from prison after a year and a half on bail, thanks to the intervention of numerous governors urged by his brother Giovan Angelo (the future Pope, then Governor of Parma), Medeghino went directly to Spain to the court of Charles V and managed to convince the Spanish of his loyalty to the empire.
From 1538 onwards there were no more exchanges of alliances as in the past, and Gian Giacomo began a rapid career progression in the Habsburg army. In his new position it is understandable that the theatre of his military actions expanded to the whole of Europe. In 1539 he fought against the rebellious city of Ghent, and in the following years first in Hungary against the Ottomans and then in France.
During a break in 1545 he married in Rome a young widow of the noble Roman Orsini family, who died in 1548 without leaving him children. Then Gian Giacomo, in order to have heirs, pushed his brother Augusto to marry, giving him the family home and part of his capital and also naming him heir to the noble title.
Portrait of Medeghino (From Wikimedia Commons)
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Medeghino's military activity resumed in 1546 with the war against the German Lutheran princes of the Schmalkalda League, followed by a campaign in Bohemia. For a couple of years around 1550, Medeghino stayed in Milan, and this is the short period of greatest interest for the present study, as can be seen from the information commented on below.
Already in 1551 Medeghino was found in the war of Parma and immediately after in the battles around Metz. In 1553 he obtained the command in the war against Siena in the imperial army allied with the Florentine duke Cosimo I, with whom he had already established collaborative relations, in particular for the construction of the fortress of Siena.
The war of Siena was his last important campaign, and as general in charge of the Florentine and imperial forces he showed all his ruthlessness in order to achieve the goal of starving the citizens of Siena to the extreme ‒ it is written that the inhabitants of the city were reduced from 40 to 6 thousand. The following figure shows in particular the capture of the Fortress of Camollia on 27 January 1554, with Medeghino in the foreground. Some details on his strategy can also be found in the aforementioned book by Missaglia.
It can be admitted that the loss of freedom of the Sienese was in tune with the developments towards a more modern political system of the Italian states, such that the Duchy of Florence was able to transform itself shortly after into the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, with the administration strengthened in every branch and new fortifications strategically spread throughout the state. However, the means with which the Florentines obtained the goal and the strategies themselves of Medeghino were certainly despicable.Since he sought every hope of taking it by storm, he resolved to use every possible means to press it with the utmost severity of the siege, and to conquer it by hunger; and therefore, having first laid waste around the walls of Siena and razed to the ground an infinite number of noble buildings, which were the ancient delights of the Sienese nobility, he not only also had severe penalties published against anyone who brought, or consented to bring, any quantity of provisions into that city, but he proposed large rewards to anyone who caught and delivered such bearers; and yet the country people, for a rather long time [or, less likely, in great part] drawn by love of country and greed for great gain, did not cease to expose themselves every hour to this risk, so that the soldiers took a great quantity of them, of whom a certain number were killed every day, and placed on very high gallows in sight of the Sienese, they made a horrible spectacle to that city and kept that country in a constant terror, and for this the marquis was damned by many, since with such cruelties he seemed to offend not only Christian piety but Humanity itself and the distant ears of those who heard them.
A few months later, in November 1555, death overtook Medeghino in Milan after he had already committed himself to leading yet another campaign of the imperial army in Piedmont. His brother, Pope Pius IV, commissioned the construction of his prestigious funeral monument in the Cathedral of Milan.
3. Connections with Cosimo I de' Medici and the war of Siena
I have not identified the first approaches between Gian Giacomo and the Duke of Florence, Cosimo I, and I have not researched in depth to understand in detail the relationship between the two. In particular, I would not be able to distinguish how much the imperial leader's approach to Tuscany depended on the projects of Emperor Charles V or developed spontaneously, also on the basis of a supposed common family ancestry.
Later, in the preparations and conduct of the war of Siena, the duke obviously considered the general as a very valid collaborator, to be continuously assisted in the best way, responding promptly to every request for supplies of weapons and personnel. Subduing the Sienese republic was not only an imperial need, but was the way to extend the Florentine duchy to all of Tuscany. Siena was not a city like the other Tuscan cities that had already been subjugated by Florence: it was at the head of a territory of great extension, second only to that of Florence.
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Giorgio Vasari and assistants, The War of Siena
Florence, Palazzo Vecchio, Hall of the Five Hundred
However, the relationship with Cosimo I did not begin with the war of Siena. In the ASFi, and precisely in the collection Mediceo del Principato, several letters are preserved in which Medeghino informs the duke on various events and situations of which he is a witness.
The need to be kept informed about distant events was deeply felt, and the correspondence of the Florentine ducal secretariat is full of letters from various European capitals and other centers of political and economic interest, with reports and updates. Often the senders were Florentine envoys who moved specifically for the purpose of gathering the most useful information, or local correspondents who periodically sent their reports to Florence. In these correspondences Medeghino also appears, as in the following cases.
Cosimo I orders the ambassador to the imperial court to give the Marquis of Marignano money that had been earmarked for a chalice (25.9.1544). [note 5] Grifoni da Prato reports a visit to the city fortifications by Cosimo I and Eleonora di Toledo with Medeghino and Stefano Colonna (28.02.1546). [note 6] From Regensburg, Medeghino thanks Cosimo I for sending six bombardiers and writes that he has provided his ambassador with news of the latest events (21.06.1546). [note 7]
We also find news from Medeghino's own hand on the preparations for the defense of Siena, years before the city rebelled against Spanish control, starting from the construction of the Fortress. In particular, Medeghino informs Cosimo I of the difficulties encountered in Siena in finding a suitable place for the fortress (28.09.1550). [note 8] This information falls within the time frame in which Medeghino resided mainly in Milan, which is what is of interest here and which is examined in particular below.
4 . Letters from Milan to Florence in the years 1550 and 1551
Most of the information about Medeghino from that period is not obtained from the letters exchanged between him and Cosimo I, but from those between the secretaries. In particular, I have turned my attention to a manuscript Letters of Francesco Vinta, resident in Milan, from the year 1550, et 1551 ab Inc. [ab Incarnatione, before the Incarnation], [note 9] which
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5. ASFi, Mediceo del Principato, 3, c. 380r
6. ASFi, Mediceo del Principato, 1171, c. 517r
7. ASFi, Mediceo del Principato, 380, c. 83r
8. ASFi, Mediceo del Principato, 1853, c. 17r
9. ASFi, Mediceo del Principato, 3102.
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collects the correspondence of Francesco Vinta, the duke's agent in Milan, who from there kept up a close correspondence with the secretary Cristiano Pagni, who in Florence was in daily contact with the duke.
From this correspondence, we can obtain information on the events and personages who were in Milan, or about whom, even if they were far away, it was possible that important news would reach the Milanese secretariats before the Florentine ones.
It is not surprising that the news sent to Florence is of very varied importance, from precious information on the movements of the armies and the alliances that were formed and dissolved rapidly to gossip about how and with whom a nobleman had spent the previous evening dancing. Medeghino is one of the personages most followed, and Vinta reports several times in parts of his letters on what he learns about him or sees with his own eyes. What we get is not found in the books I cited at the beginning, dedicated practically exclusively to the personage’s military activity.
Here we understand that the duke was anxious to see Medeghino at work in Siena in the construction of the Fortress and later, in letters in other manuscripts, organizing and leading the assault on the Sienese Republic. The news is not very encouraging, however. In Milan it seems that Medeghino's main occupation was that of restoring and enlarging the family palace in the city center.
Most of the attention, however, is focused on the scandal involving Medeghino together with the family of his brother Augusto, who was extremely jealous of the young wife that Medeghino himself had made him marry. In Florence, news of the following kind was reached about Medeghino, not exactly in tune with the military commitment expected from him.
______________________ff. 69r-70r. The Marquis of Marignano and his brother have been sequestered in the house and also the Count Sforza del Mayno his brother-in-law by order of His Most Illustrious Lordship, who is trying to bring about reconciliation, and an Augustinian friar is managing it, and it is believed that in the end it will be concluded between them, because each will live separately. And the Marquis begs his brother that he vich(?) but the importance remains in the young woman, who is never going to trust her husband, nor to return to him for the suspicion that he will kill her. And to say it more clearly, her husband Sig. Augusto has always been very jealous of her and changed(?) himself from it into anger and continued to bring the dagger to bed for many months and has never given her anything but a bad reception for some time now. So I draw from those who have good news, and it can be believed because he is a weak subject and the added jealousy could not make him otherwise, especially since the evil or at least the suspicion seemed to be domestic. And with this way of proceeding, the young girl complained to the Lord Marquis, and he entertained her and pampered her. And therefore the brother became more alienated from her and hated her, until a certain kind of poison was found in his handkerchief, from which there was doubt about the life of the Marquis or the girl. And when it was discovered, the Marquis went to him to attack him, and he fled to the house of his brother-in-law, who is a daring and proud young man, and ordered that his sister be taken to Soncino into the house of his uncles. In these accidents two things are disputed, one if the poison was really found in the possession of Sig. Augusto, the other if the marquis is powerful enough to be a husband because by the arquebus shot [note 10] he was deprived of one testicle and the other remained beaten and swollen. His Most Illustrious Lordship will go to Marignano on Thursday the 3rd next, and with the Lord Grand Chancellor he will pass to Landriano and will stay away for four days, and in the meantime he will do what he can to deal with the narrated accident, about which many affirm the marquis is impotent and never had intercourse with his past wife. (30.06.1550)
f. 71v. The Marquis of Marignano has entered into a bad relationship with his brother, who has become aware and too sure, that he was enjoying his wife at Tre Pievi, [note 11] and there have been some nice [dirty] tricks. Finally, he has returned to Milan and those of Mayno and Count Maximiliano Stampa and other relatives of the young woman have taken her, and with fifty arquebusiers have led her to Soncino. The Marquis is
10. During the capture of Chiavenna in January 1525
11. Gravedona, Dongo and Sorico.
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Less interesting for the chronicle of gossip, or crime, is a letter, which instead is of some interest for the history of card games, and tarocchi in particular. For the correspondence between Milan and Florence, this is a piece of news of little importance, only to say that Medeghino was spending his time quietly playing cards, was recovering from an illness and was preparing to go to Marignano to get some good wine, presumably from his lands.in Frascarolo, and his brother is here adrift. We will see the end of the comedy, which is now performed publicly. (undated)
f. 102r. I spent two days with Sig. Dionisio Brivio to enjoy his villa, and one [day] with the Marquis of Marignano to see his building, which is beautiful and honorable, and the site is unparalleled, because it once pleased, as the best of this state, the Duke Gio. Galeazzo, Count of virtue, who was almost King of Italy and built the castle there for his pleasure.
f. 103r. The Marquis of Marignano told me His Majesty will not come to Italy until there are no military preparations here, as indicated for the affairs of Piedmont.
f. 103v. His Excellency plans to go and stay in Marignano with the Marquis tomorrow. I don't know if he will return in the evening or if he will celebrate the Mendina (?Madonna?) festival (13.08.1550)
f. 168r. The Marquis of Marignano leaves this morning for Siena; he has received 300 scudi from the chamber as his viaticum, and it is understood that five thousand will be put together to send to Don Diego, who should begin to dig the foundations, to see what hope the Sienese ambassador may have, since His Majesty is speeding up the building. The brother of the Marquis was supposed to leave prison today and go to Tre Pievi to take confinement and his wife, by order of Count Maximiliano, comes back to Marignano. In time, perhaps she will be reconciled with her husband. (10.09.1550)
ASFi, Mediceo del Principato, 3102, f. 255r. Detail (Reproduction prohibited)
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5. Comment and conclusionf. 255r. The Marquis of Marignano is so inter spem et metum [between hope and fear] of having an illness of a kind that wants some of his hair, and I believe he will go to Marignano to get some Vernaccia. However, he is up and playing primiera and tarocchi, and perhaps nothing else will follow, although some signs of this are being discovered. (24.01.1550 ‒ that is, 1551)
Medeghino, as Gian Giacomo dei Medici di Nosiggia was called (a Milanese family that does not appear to have had any kinship relations with the Florentine one), revealed himself as a military leader endowed with extraordinary ability and resourcefulness, to the point of receiving noble titles and becoming one of the main generals in the retinue of Emperor Charles V.
Entire books have been written about Medeghino's military activity. This study documents aspects and events that should be considered very secondary. In particular, his troubled relationships with his brother Augusto and his wife Barbara del Majno, which became public knowledge and the subject of news and discussions in Milan. The situation was also made known to the Florentine ducal court thanks to several letters from Francesco Vinta, a Florentine agent resident in Milan.
In one of the letters of the correspondence between Vinta from Milan and the ducal secretary Cristiano Pagni in Florence, we find a line of interest in the history of card games. The transition from entire books on military enterprises, to parts of some letters on the Milanese family scandal, to a single line on card games, in the only letter that mentions the subject, is significant. This may well represent the historical importance of the respective events, with the pastimes seen only fleetingly. Nevertheless, it is precisely the single line of the only letter that has justified all this research, given that our interest is precisely directed to the history of card games.
Then we must comment on the presence in Milan in 1551 of primiera and tarocchi in the hands of the famous leader, marquis, and general. Primiera was a game that could be considered an ancestor of poker and that was usually played with high stakes and therefore could be seen as a status symbol, with frequent participation, often exclusive, of princes and nobles.
Tarocchi was a slower, more difficult game, but is still discussed today especially on the basis of documents and decks of cards that have come down to us from the same court circles. Among the personages [in these circles] who had been playing this game for a century, military leaders [condottieri] were a frequently present category. It was probably a game suited to filling the pauses between battles during long military campaigns.
The present testimony on the game of tarocchi cannot therefore be attributed a value as a contribution to the first diffusion of the game; for this reason, the date should have gone back at least a whole century before. However, the news remains useful as a confirmation of the already known diffusion of the game among military leaders and also remains significant for the fact that, unlike other games, the testimonies on tarocchi remain still rather scarce.
Florence, 01.11.2024