House of Visconti

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Coat of Arms of the Visconti of Milan depicting the biscione, a serpent who appears to be swallowing a human. The serpent prior to biblical times was a sign of goodness. The human in the mouth of the snake is proposed to be a Saracen who were perceived as evil in Christian history. The symbol therefore depicts the triumph of Good over Evil.
Coat of Arms of the Visconti of Milan depicting the biscione, a serpent who appears to be swallowing a human. The serpent prior to biblical times was a sign of goodness. The human in the mouth of the snake is proposed to be a Saracen who were perceived as evil in Christian history. The symbol therefore depicts the triumph of Good over Evil.

Visconti was the family name of two important Italian noble dynasties of the Middle Ages. Two distinct Visconti families are known: the first one (chronologically) in the Republic of Pisa in the mid twelfth century, who achieved prominence first in Pisa, then in Sardinia, where they became rulers of Gallura; the second and most important one rose to power in Milan, where they left a permanent historical mark ruling the city from 1277 to 1447 and leaving several collateral branches still extant.

Any link between the two families in Pisa-Gallura and Milan has yet to be proved.

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[edit] Visconti of Pisa and Sardinia

The first Visconti of note in Pisa was Alberto, who bore the title patrician. Alberto's son, Eldizio, bore the titles patrician and consul from 1184 to 1185. It was Eldizio's sons, Lamberto and Ubaldo I, who brought the family to the height of its influence in Pisa and Sardinia. Both of them carried the title of patrician and each served a term as podestà.

In 1212, there was complete anarchy in Pisa as various factions, pro- and anti-Visconti, warred over the political authority. In mid-January 1213, William I of Cagliari led a coalition of anti-Visconti forces to victory in battle near Massa over the combined forces of Lucca and the Visconti under Ubaldo. Afterwards, Pisa divided power between four rectores, one of which was a Visconti. The Visconti of Sardinia continued to take a part in Pisan politics to the end of the century, but their influence there was greatly diminished after 1213.

In Sardinia Eldizio had married a daughter of Torchitorio III of Cagliari, who became the mother of Lamberto and Ubaldo. In 1207, Lamberto married Elena, the heiress of Barisone II of Gallura, thus securing control over the northeastern corner of Sardinia with his capital at Civita. In 1215, he and Ubaldo established their hegemony over the Giudicato of Cagliari in the south of the island as well. Through advantageous marriages, Lamberto's son, Ubaldo II, even secured power in Logudoro for a time. By mid century, Pisan authority was unopposed in Sardinia thanks to the Visconti, who were allied by marriage with the other great families of Pisa (Gherardeschi and Capraia) and Sardinia (Lacon and Bas-Serra).

The Visconti of Gallura used a cock as their symbol (Gallura meaning 'land of cocks'), whereas the later Visconti of Milan used a serpent swallowing a Saracen, or, according to another version, on the contrary giving life to a child. This symbol is still closely connected with Milan.

[edit] Visconti rulers of Gallura

[edit] Visconti of Milan

The effectual founder of the Visconti of Milan, Ottone, wrested control of the city from the rival Della Torre family in 1277.

The family, once risen to power, loved to claim legendary versions about its origins. Fancy genealogies were "cool" at the time, while established facts reflect quite sober and almost humble beginnings in the lesser nobility. The branch of the Visconti family that came to rule Milan was originally entrusted with the lordship of Massino (nowadays Massino Visconti), a hamlet in lovely position over Lago Maggiore, where they were in charge since the twelfth century as archiepiscopal vassals.

It is thought that the Milanese Visconti had their origins in a family of capitanei (cfr. the modern surname Cattaneo) whom archbishop Landulf of Milan (978-998) had granted certain feudal holdings known as caput plebis (at the head, likely in geographical and not hierarchical sense, of the pieve, an ecclesiastical lesser subdivision). A document from the year 1157 says the Visconti were holders of the captaincy of Marliano (today Mariano Comense); late chronicler Galvano Fiamma confirms this version. Decades before that, surely before 1070, they had gained the public office of viscount, to be later inherited down the male line (Biscaro, ASL, "I maggiori dei Visconti di Milano"). Soon the family dispersed into several branches, some of which were entrusted fiefs far off from the Lombard metropolis; the one which gave the Medieval lords of Milan is said to be descended from Umberto (d. in the first half of the 12th century).

The Visconti ruled Milan until the early Renaissance, first as Lords, then, from 1395, with the mighty Gian Galeazzo who almost managed to unify Northern Italy and Tuscany, as Dukes. Visconti rule in Milan ended with the death of Filippo Maria Visconti in 1447. He was succeeded, after a short-lived republic, by his son-in-law Francesco I Sforza, who established the reign of the House of Sforza.

[edit] Visconti rulers of Milan

[edit] Visconti of Milan family tree

Descendants of Uberto Visconte ( † mid-13th century)
  1.  Ottone{1207-1295}
     archbishop of Milan (1262)
     Lord of Milan (1277-78) and (1282-85).
  2.  Andreotto (13th century)
    1.  Teobaldo Visconti (1225-1275)
      1.  Matteo I Visconti
          capitano del popolo of Milan (1287-1298)
          lord of Milan (1287-1302) and (1311-1322)
        1.  Galeazzo I
           lord of Milan (1322-1327)
          1.  Azzone
             lord of Milan (1329-1399)
        2.  Marco († 1329)
        3.  Giovanni
           archbishop of Milan (1339)
           lord of Milan (1339-1354)
           lord of Bologna and Genoa (1331-1354).
          1.  Giovanni da Oleggio (presumed)
             lord of Bologna (1355-1360)
        4.  Luchino
           lord of Milan (1339-1349)
          1.  Luchino Novello (died 1399)
        5.  Stefano (died 1327)
          1.  Matteo II
             lord of Milan (1354-1355)
          2.  Galeazzo II
             lord of Milan (1354-1378)
            1.  Gian Galeazzo
               lord of Milan (1378-1395)
               Duke of Milan (1395-1402)
              1.  Valentina
                 married (1387) Louis of Orléans
              2.  Giovanni Maria
                 Duke of Milan (1402-1412)
              3.  Filippo Maria
                 Duke of Milan (1412-1447)
                1.  Bianca Maria (illegitimate, by Agnese del Maino)
                    in 1441 married to Francesco I Sforza, later duke of Milan
          3.  Bernabò
             lord of Milan (1354-1385)
      2.  Uberto il Pico (1280?-1315)
        1.  Vercellino
           podestà of Vercelli (1317) and Novara (1318-1320).
          1.   Line of the Visconti di Modrone, Marquesses(1694) and later Dukes (1813) of Vimodrone, whose members include Luchino Visconti and Eriprando Visconti.

[edit] Visconti of Modrone

From Uberto, brother of Matteo I, came the lateral branch of Dukes of Modrone. To this family belonged Luchino Visconti, one of the most prominent film directors of Italian neorealist cinema.

[edit] Other members