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    • 3 July

      • On 3 July, 24-year-old Alfonso and 13-year-old Lucrezia were married in the chapel in the Palazzo Pitti (or according to another version in the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella), by the bishop of Cortona, Giovan Battista di Simone Ricasoli.
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  2. Third marriage: Alfonso d'Este (Duke of Ferrara) Alfonso d'Este Possible portrait by Bartolomeo Veneziano (c. 1510) After the death of Lucrezia's second husband, her father, Pope Alexander VI, arranged a third marriage. She then married Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara, in early 1502 in Ferrara. She had eight children during this marriage and ...

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  3. Jun 5, 2019 · Lucrezia Borgia and Alfonso d'Este were married by proxy at the Vatican on December 30, 1501. In January, she traveled with 1,000 in attendance to Ferrara, and on February 2, the two were married in person in another luxurious ceremony.

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  4. Dec 27, 2021 · This time it was Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara. The two married in 1502, and this time, the marriage would be longer and more fruitful. Together, the couple had eight children, even though neither spouse was faithful.

  5. Alfonso d'Este solemnly entered Florence on 18 May 1558. On 3 July, 24-year-old Alfonso and 13-year-old Lucrezia were married in the chapel in the Palazzo Pitti [8] (or according to another version in the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella [9] ), by the bishop of Cortona, Giovan Battista di Simone Ricasoli.

    • 3 October 1559 – 21 April 1561
    • Sarah Roller
    • She was illegitimate. Born on 18 April 1480, Lucrezia Borgia was the daughter of Cardinal Rodrigo de Borgia (who would later go on to be Pope Alexander VI) and his chief mistress, Vannozza dei Cattanei.
    • She was only 13 at the time of her first marriage. Lucrezia’s education and connections meant she would marry well – in a way that was advantageous to both her family and her prospects.
    • Lucrezia’s annulment was tainted with accusations of incest. Giovanni Sforza was furious about the annulment – particularly given it was to be on grounds on non-consummation – and accused Lucrezia of paternal incest.
    • She was extremely beautiful by the standards of her day. Lucrezia’s allure came not just from her wealthy and powerful family. Contemporaries described her as having long blonde hair, white teeth (not always a given in Renaissance Europe), hazel eyes and a natural grace and elegance.
  6. Two years after the death of Alfonso dAragon, Lucrezia had her third and final marriage. She got married to Alfonso d’Este, who was yet another young man of high ancestry. The son and heir to Ercole I d’Este, Duke of Ferrara, in northern Italy.

  7. Jun 8, 2018 · Once again politics determined Lucrezia's marriage to the twenty-four-year-old widower Alfonso d'Este, eldest son of Ercole d'Este, Duke of Ferrara. Lucrezia was eager for the marriage. She regarded Rome as a prison and thought she would have a better chance of leading her own life in Ferrara, away from her ambitious father and brother.

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