Maximilian (Massimiliano) Sforza (25 January 1493 – 4 June 1530) was a Duke of Milan from the Sforza family, the son of Lodovico Sforza. He ruled 1512–1515,[1] between the occupations of Louis XII of France (1500–1512), and Francis I of France in 1515. After the French victory at the Battle of Marignano, Massimiliano was imprisoned by the returning French troops. He waived his rights to Milan for the sum of 30,000 ducats and continued to live in France.[2]
When he was three his father tried to arrange a marriage between him and Mary Tudor, the younger daughter of King Henry VII of England. However, Henry VII rejected the proposal as Massimiliano's father was hoping that Henry would help him against the French, which was not in Henry's interest.
Ancestors[]
Maximilian Sforza's ancestors in three generations
Muzio Sforza | |||||||||
Francesco I Sforza | |||||||||
Lucia da Torsano | |||||||||
Ludovico Sforza | |||||||||
Filippo Maria Visconti | |||||||||
Bianca Maria Visconti | |||||||||
Agnese del Maino | |||||||||
Maximilian Sforza | |||||||||
Niccolò III d'Este | |||||||||
Ercole d'Este I | |||||||||
Ricciarda da Saluzzo | |||||||||
Beatrice d'Este | |||||||||
Ferdinand I of Naples | |||||||||
Leonora of Naples | |||||||||
Isabella of Taranto | |||||||||
See also[]
Citations[]
References[]
- Alexander, J. J. G., Italian Renaissance Illuminations, (1978) ISBN 9780701122706
- Frieda, Leonie. The Deadly Sisterhood: A Story of Women, Power and Intrigue in the Italian Renaissance, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, (2012)
- Perry, Maria, Sisters to King Henry VIII, (1998)
The original article can be found at Maximilian Sforza and the edit history here.