Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Raffaele della Rovere was born 1423 in Savona, Italy to Leonardo della Rovere (-c1430) and Luchina Monteleoni (-aft1422) and died 1477 Rome, Italy of unspecified causes. He married Teodora Manirolo (-c1480) 1442 JL .

  2. Pope Julius II was the son of Rafaello della Rovere, nephew of Pope Sixtus IV. Educated by the Franciscans, he became the Bishop of Carpentras in 1471, at the age of 18. Shortly after this, following the election of his uncle as Pope Sixtus IV, he was appointed Cardinal of San Pietro in Vincoli.

  3. Oct 27, 2021 · Sería llamado Giuliano della Rovere, siendo hijo de Rafaello della Rovere y Theodora Manerola. Su padre fue hermano del que sería el Papa Sixto IV , quien desde la infancia se ocupó de su educación y ponerlo bajo su cuidado, haciendo que estudiara junto a los franciscanos y luego en un convento donde realizaría los estudios superiores.

    • Overview
    • Early life
    • Political activities
    • Patron of the arts

    Julius II (born Dec. 5, 1443, Albisola, Republic of Genoa—died Feb. 21, 1513, Rome) greatest art patron of the papal line (reigned 1503–13) and one of the most powerful rulers of his age. Although he led military efforts to prevent French Italydomination of , Julius is most important for his close friendship with Michelangelo and for his patronage ...

    Giuliano was the son of the impoverished Rafaello della Rovere, Pope Sixtus IV’s only brother. In 1468 he became a Franciscan, and in 1471 Sixtus IV made him a cardinal. In this office Giuliano displayed all of the attributes of cupidity and corruption of an unscrupulous Renaissance prince. The Pope lavished on him six bishoprics in France and three in Italy along with an abundance of wealthy abbeys and benefices. The Cardinal, who lacked any interest in spiritual pursuits, became an outstanding patron of the arts. He is shown with his protégés in Melozzo da Forlì’s superb fresco of Sixtus IV in the Vatican Museum.

    After the death of Sixtus IV, for whom Giuliano commissioned a bronze sepulchre by Antonio Pollaiuolo, now in the Vatican Grotto of St. Peter’s, the Cardinal’s candidate, the weak Innocent VIII, was elected through bribery. When Rodrigo Borgia, elected pope as Alexander VI in 1492, plotted Giuliano’s assassination, Giuliano fled in 1494 to the court of Charles VIII of France. He accompanied the French king on his expedition against Naples in the hope that Charles would also depose Alexander VI. After accompanying Charles on his forced return to France, Giuliano took part in Louis XII’s invasion of Italy in 1502. Alexander VI twice attempted to seize him.

    Following the death of the Borgia pope in 1503, Giuliano returned to Rome, having been 10 years in exile, and, after Pius III’s brief pontificate, was, with the liberal help of simony, elected Pope Julius II in October 1503. Immediately after his election he decreed that all future simoniacal papal elections would be invalid and subject to penalty.

    Britannica Quiz

    Julius II viewed as the main task of his pontificate the restoration of the Papal States, which had been reduced to ruin by the Borgias. Large portions of it had been appropriated by Venice after Alexander VI’s death. As a first step as pope, Julius subjugated Perugia and Bologna in the autumn of 1508. Then, in March 1509, he joined the League of Cambrai, an anti-Venetian alliance formed in December 1508 between Louis XII, who then ruled Milan, Emperor Maximilian I, and Ferdinand II of Spain, who had been king of Naples since 1503. The league troops defeated Venice in May 1509 near Cremona, and the Papal States were restored.

    Having become an exponent of Italian national consciousness, Julius II proposed to drive the French from Italy, but his second war, which lasted from September 1510 to May 1511, was unsuccessful. Several cardinals defected to Louis XII and called a schismatic council, to which Julius responded by summoning the fifth Lateran Council. After concluding an alliance with Venice and Ferdinand II of Spain and Naples in October 1511, he opened the council in May 1512 at the Lateran Palace. Louis XII had defeated the troops of the alliance at Ravenna in April 1512, but the situation changed when Swiss troops were sent to the Pope’s aid. The territories in northern Italy occupied by the French revolted, the French left the country, and the Papal States were augmented by the acquisition of Parma and Piacenza. Toward the end of his life, he viewed with concern the replacement of French by Spanish efforts to attain supremacy in Italy. Julius II was Italy’s saviour.

    Students save 67%! Learn more about our special academic rate today.

    Learn More

    The enduring impact of the life of Julius II stemmed from his gift for inspiring great artistic creations. His name is closely linked with those of such great artists as Bramante, Raphael, and Michelangelo. With his wealth of visionary ideas, he contributed to their creativity. Following an overall plan, he added many fine buildings to Rome and laid the groundwork in the Vatican Museum for the world’s greatest collection of antiquities. Among the innumerable Italian churches that benefitted from his encouragement of the arts was Sta. Maria del Popolo in Rome, for which he commissioned Andrea Sansovino to create sepulchres for a number of cardinals and Pinturicchio to paint the frescoes in the apse. Donato Bramante became the architect of Julius’ fortifications in Latium, of the two galleries that form the Belvedere Court, and of other Vatican buildings. Around 1503 the Pope conceived the idea of building a new basilica of St. Peter, the first model of which Bramante created. Its foundation stone was laid on April 18, 1506.

    The Pope’s friendship with Michelangelo, begun in 1506, was enduring despite recurrent strains imposed on their relations by the two overly similar personalities. Their relationship was so close that the Pope became, in fact, Michelangelo’s intellectual collaborator. Of Julius’ tomb only the Moses in the church of S. Pietro in Vincoli, in Rome, was completed; the Pope is, however, not interred there but in St. Peter’s, along with the remains of Sixtus IV. The famous bronze statue of the Pope for the church of S. Petronio in Bologna, completed in 1508, was destroyed in 1511. In 1508 Michelangelo was prevailed upon by Julius to begin his paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, which were unveiled in October 1512. The paintings, which represent a climax in Western art, were, in form and conception, a product of the artistic symbiosis of Michelangelo and the Pope.

    By 1509 Raphael, introduced to Julius, had begun his masterpieces for the Pope, the frescoes in three rooms of the Vatican. Spiritual references to the person and the pontificate of Julius II are evident in one of the rooms (the Stanza della Segnatura), where earthly and celestial wisdom are juxtaposed in the School of Athens and the Disputa, while the beauty of creativity is represented in the Parnassus. The theme of another room (the Stanza d’Eliodoro), which could be called a transcendental “political” biography of the Pope, is still more personal. The Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple symbolizes the expulsion of the French and the subjugation of all the church’s enemies, with Julius II depicted witnessing the scene from his portable throne. Closely related to this is the Liberation of St. Peter, in which light and darkness serve to symbolize the historic events of the pontificate. The third great fresco in this room, the Mass of Bolsena, shows the Pope kneeling, rather than enthroned, in commemoration of his veneration of the corporale (communion cloth) of Bolsena in the cathedral of Orvieto. In addition to these fresco portraits, there is one by Raphael in the Uffizi gallery in Florence, one of the masterpieces of portraiture, which shows the Pope not as the victorious Moses springing to his feet, as Michelangelo portrayed him, but as a resigned, pensive old man at the end of an adventurous, embattled life. Michelangelo’s chalk drawing of the Pope in the Uffizi gallery approaches it in quality.

    As cardinal, Julius II fathered at least one illegitimate daughter, Felice. He made four members of the Della Rovere family cardinals, only one of whom achieved any importance. From the marriage of the Pope’s only brother, Giovanni, to the daughter and heiress of Duke Federigo of Montefeltro descended the dukes of Urbino.

    • Hans Kühner
  4. child birth: ♂ Niccolo Della Rovere . 5 December 1443 child birth: Albisola Superiore, ♂ Giuliano Della Rovere (Pope Julius II) [Della Rovere] b. 5 December 1443 d. 21 February 1513. 1457 child birth: Albisola Superiore, ♂ Giovanni Della Rovere [Della Rovere] b. 1457 d. 6 November 1501. 1477 death: From grandparents to grandchildren

  5. www.gwleibniz.com › britannica_pages › pope_julius_iiJulius II. - G. W. Leibniz

    Giuliano was the son of the impoverished Rafaello della Rovere, Pope Sixtus IV's only brother. In 1468 he became a Franciscan, and in 1471 Sixtus IV made him a cardinal. In this office Giuliano displayed all of the attributes of cupidity and corruption of an unscrupulous Renaissance prince.

  6. Della Rovere. Della Rovere [1] – włoski ród arystokratyczny pochodzący z Savony [1] i panujący w księstwie Urbino w latach 1508–1631. Twórcami potęgi rodziny byli Francesco i Giuliano della Rovere, którzy kolejno w latach 1471–1484 i 1503–1513 panowali jako papieże Sykstus IV i Juliusz II .

  1. People also search for