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EUR 82 - 309 Zanhotel Centergross
Zanhotel Centergross is less than 20 minutes´ drive from historic Bologna and the BolognaFiere Exhibition Centre. Rooms offer air conditioning a… MoreEUR 62 - 350 Hotel Marconi
Surrounded in lush greenery and boasting a tranquil atmosphere, this gleaming white property offers a comfortable base for both leisure and business g… More | ||||||||||||
Bentivoglio (in Italian family of princely rank, long supreme in Bologna and responsible for giving the city its political autonomy during the Renaissance.
During the fourteenth century, the family belonged to one of the workingmen's guilds at Bologna, and the family had gained power as pro-papist Guelphs and Ghibellines|Guelph leaders in the fourteenth century.
Amid the faction-conflicts of the commune Giovanni I Bentivoglio, with the help of the Visconti, declared himself signore and Gonfaloniere di Giustizia on March 14, 1401. When the Visconti turned hostile, Giovanni was defeated and killed on June 26, 1402 at the Battle of Casalecchio and was interred in the church of San Giacomo Maggiore.
During the next few decades, the city's political status -and the family's fortunes- remained unpredictable. The son of Giovanni I, Anton Galeazzo (or Antongaleazzo, c. 1385-1435), was a lecturer in civil law (legal system)|civil law who assumed power in Bologna in 1420, but was quickly overthrown. Anton Galeazzo became a condottiero, and was assassinated by papal officials on December 23, 1435 due to fears over his growing power (he had returned to Bologna on December 4). During his reign the Bentivoglio received the fief of Castel Bolognese.
Annibale I, a putative son of Anton Galeazzo (his mother, Lina Canigiani, was said to be uncertain of the boy's paternity and the matter was decided by dice), led a city revolt against the Papacy in 1438. He tried to make peace with the Visconti family and to convince the Pope not to place Bologna under his dominion. In 1442, the Visconti condottiere Niccolò Piccinino imprisoned Annibale and his supporters at Varano; Annibale was freed by Galeazzo Marescotti in 1443. When Annibale returned to Bologna, the powers of government were confirmed upon him, a sign that the city recognized the family’s political importance. Annibale, however, was assassinated by his rival Battista Canneschi, with the support of Pope Eugene IV, on June 24, 1445.
He was succeeded by Sante I (feudal type, creating a communal senate composed of the landowning nobility, the new rich, and the papal nobility. Bologna also strengthened its relations with Venice, Milan, and Florence.
Sante was succeeded by Giovanni II Bentivoglio (1443-1508), who ruled as virtual tyrant of Bologna. He was expelled by Pope Julius II in 1506.
A son of Giovanni II, Annibale II (1469-1540), married Lucrezia d'Este, an illegitimate daughter of Duke Ercole I of Ferrara, in 1487. He served as a condottiero. In rebellion against Julius II, he reentered Bologna in 1511 with the help of the French and ruled for only a year. He was hated by other rival families, such as the Ghisilieri and the Canetoli, and was subsequently assassinated.
In exile, the Bentivoglio|Bentivoglio family established themselves in Ferrara and produced several important prelates.
Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio (1579-1641), though a disciple of Galileo, was one of the Inquisitors-General who signed his condemnation.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Bentivoglio". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Cardinal Cornelio Bentivoglio (1668-1732).Power base
The Church of San Giacomo Maggiore, originally built in the mid-13th century, was adopted in the 15th century by the Bentivoglio family as the center of their power base in the surrounding neighborhood, and they embellished the church accordingly. It included the tomb of Anton Galeazzo Bentivoglio by Jacopo della Quercia and the Bentivoglio family's own private chapel, the altar of which has some striking artwork by Lorenzo Costa depicting family victories over other Bolognese dynasties. Sources
Claudio Rendina, I capitani di ventura, Newton Compton, Rome, 1998.
C.M. Ady, The Bentivoglio of Bologna: A Study in Dispotism, Oxford 1937