Boncompagni

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Coat of arms of the Boncompagni.

The Boncompagni is an Italian noble family from Assisi.

History

The family is documented for the first time in 1133, when one Rodolfo Boncompagni, descendant of Saxon nobles, was appointed by Lothair II as lord of Assisi. In the early 14th century the family moved from Umbria to Bologna, where they gradually increase their wealth and influence.

In 1572 Ugo Boncompagni, a professor of law in the University of Bologna and a Catholic cardinal, became pope as Gregory XIII. For his son Giacomo Boncompagni, he acquired from Francesco Maria II della Rovere the Duchy of Sora, which thenceforth became a family possession. The family also included other five cardinals in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Gregorio II Boncompagni was lord of Piombino in 1706-1707.

The family later merged with the Ludovisi family. The 20th century mathematician Baldassarre Boncompagni-Ludovisi was a member of the family.

Sources

  • Alonzi, L. (2003). Famiglia, patrimonio e finanze nobiliari. I Boncompagni (secoli XVI-XVIII). Manduria-Bari-Rome: Lacaita. 
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