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  2. Caterina’s father was Galeazzo Maria Sforza (1444–76), Francesco’s eldest son, who succeeded his father as ruler of Milan in 1466. Her mother was Lucrezia Landriani, Galeazzo’s mistress. Caterina Sforza was well educated. She was also trained in fighting, horseback riding, and hunting, which was unusual for a noblewoman of her time.

  3. Childhood & Early Life. Caterina Sforza was the illegitimate daughter of Galeazzo Maria Sforza, the future fifth Duke of Milan, and his mistress, LucreziaLandriani, who was the wife of the duke’s friend courtier, Gian Piero Landriani. Caterina was born in Milan in the year 1463, though the exact date is not known.

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    • Who Was Caterina Sforza?
    • The Ascension of An Illegitimate Daughter
    • A Renaissance Woman Ruling Alone
    • The Final Years of Caterina Sforza

    The Sforza family was well-known during the Italian Renaissance, but the family’s fate depended on military strength. Caterina Sforza’s grandfather, Francesco Sforza, was a condottiero, or a captain for hire. In the mid-15th century, Sforza took a gamble and seized power for himself in Milan. His move made the Sforzas the Dukes of Milan – for as lo...

    Girolamo Riario and his young wife Caterina Sforza settled in Rome, where Riario had become the right-hand man for the pope. Over the next two decades, Sforza gave birth to nine children – seven to Riario and one each to her later lovers. Between the spring of 1479 and the summer of 1481, she had three babies. But pregnancy barely slowed down Cater...

    In 1487, Girolamo Riario fell ill, leaving Caterina Sforza in charge of running Imola and Forli. Conspiracies against the weak Riario sprouted like mushrooms. Sforza dolled out harsh penalties to the plotters, calling for their public quartering. Heads lined the gates of Forli to warn others not to attack the ruling family. Nonetheless, assassins r...

    In 1492, the Borgia family swept into power and once again threatened Caterina Sforza’s territories in central Italy. Cesare Borgia, son of Pope Alexander VI, seized Imola and Forli from Sforza. But she still had a few tricks up her sleeves. While the Medici family had historically been enemies to the Sforza, Caterina struck up a relationship with ...

  5. Sforza, Caterina (c. 1462–1509) Countess of Forlì and the "most famous virago of the Renaissance" who conducted military operations and defended besieged fortresses in 15th-century Italy. Name variations: Caterine Sforza; Catherine Sforza, countess of Forli and Imola or Imolo; Caterina de Medici; Caterina Sforza Riario.

  6. Mar 15, 2019 · Love child. Caterina was born in 1463 in Milan, an illegitimate daughter of Galeazzo Maria Sforza, who, later in her childhood, would become Duke of Milan. Despite her illegitimacy, she was ...

  7. Caterina. In the Sforza Castle of Milan…. Caterina was educated by her fatherly grand-mother Lady Bianca Maria Visconti in the lively and refined court with major poets and writers of the Italian Renaissance, she was used to spend the summertime in the Sforza estates of Pavia. She learned about her glorious family ancestors who were skilled ...

  8. Jan 26, 2023 · Caterina Sforza was a contemporary of Machiavelli, and he did not like her. And so he writes about her I think with a little bit of admiration, but with a little bit of distaste as well.

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