Giuliano de’ Medici, duc de Nemours | Biography, Legacy, & Facts | Britannica

Giuliano de’ Medici, duc de Nemours

Italian ruler
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Giuliano de' Medici, duc de Nemours
Giuliano de' Medici, duc de Nemours
Born:
1479
Died:
March 17, 1516, Florence [Italy] (aged 37)
House / Dynasty:
Medici family

Giuliano de’ Medici, duc de Nemours (born 1479—died March 17, 1516, Florence [Italy]) was the ruler of Florence from 1512 to 1513, after the Medici were restored to power.

The republicans of Florence, with the aid of the French, had driven out Giuliano’s brother Piero di Lorenzo de’ Medici in 1494. The republicans, however, fought among themselves, and the French alliance, to which the republic remained faithful, led to the political isolation of Florence when Pope Julius II organized his Holy League against France’s king Louis XII. In 1512 the pope demanded that Florence enter the league, dismiss its current leaders, and allow the exiled Medici to return. Florence was forced to submit by a Spanish army, which sacked Prato. Giuliano, who returned with his Medici kin in September 1512, used harsh measures to suppress a conspiracy but generally showed moderation during his short reign. In 1513, however, his elder brother Cardinal Giovanni became pope as Leo X, and Giuliano, appointed gonfalonier of the Holy Roman Church, went to join him in Rome. In 1515 he received the French title of duc de Nemours. His premature death left his illegitimate son, Ippolito, in the care of Leo X and then with his successor, Pope Clement VII, another Medici; Ippolito would later became a cardinal.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.