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Giulio Cybo (1525 – 18 May 1548) (or Cibo) was an Italian noble of Genoese ancestry, who was briefly marquis of Massa and lord of Carrara from 1546 to 1547, ousting his mother Ricciarda Malaspina. However, in a few months she managed to regain power and Giulio ended up beheaded the following year in
Milan Milan ( , , ; ) is a city in northern Italy, regional capital of Lombardy, the largest city in Italy by urban area and the List of cities in Italy, second-most-populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of nea ...
, exemplarily condemned to death for treason by the emperor Charles V. Giulio sometimes also styled himself "Giulio Cibo Malaspina",See Giulio's correspondance, often signed "Julio Cibo Malaspina", in thus taking his mother's family name as well, and with the double surname he has frequently been reported in subsequent historiography.


Family and Massa-Carrara succession

Born in Rome, he was the elder son of Ricciarda Malaspina, sovereign marquise of Massa and Carrara, and Lorenzo Cybo, count of Ferentillo, a grandson of Pope Innocent VIII and
Lorenzo de' Medici Lorenzo di Piero de' Medici (), known as Lorenzo the Magnificent (; 1 January 1449 – 9 April 1492), was an Italian statesman, the ''de facto'' ruler of the Florentine Republic, and the most powerful patron of Renaissance culture in Italy. Lore ...
. Upon the death of her father in 1519, Ricciarda had become the aspiring heir to his fiefs of Massa and Carrara. His will, drawn up shortly before his death, had established as his heir in the first instance Ricciarda's eldest surviving son (if any). In the meantime, she was named "lady and mistress and usufructuary and heiress of his ntonio Alberico'sinheritance and assets, as long as she is of age to conceive and bear children". Given the dubious legitimacy of the will due to the possible violation of the inheritance rights of Antonio Alberico's grandnephews, who were already alive at the time, and her consequently insecure position, Ricciarda secretly appealed for Emperor Charles V's superior intervention in her favour. Thus, on 16 July 1529, she succeeded in getting invested with the two fiefdoms suo jure, with a truly unusual imperial decree: in derogation of the
Salic law The Salic law ( or ; ), also called the was the ancient Frankish Civil law (legal system), civil law code compiled around AD 500 by Clovis I, Clovis, the first Frankish King. The name may refer to the Salii, or "Salian Franks", but this is deba ...
, it gave her the right to transmit her titles not only to her male descendants, but, in their absence, also to females, always respecting the newly established principle of primogeniture. With a second decree dated 7 April 1533, she even obtained the right to nominate her own successor. The content of the imperial decrees was in clear conflict with the will and, on coming of age, Giulio would begin to undermine his mother's position by referring to the latter.


Rivalry with his mother

In 1543, when he was eighteen, Giulio was sent to Barcelona where, with the support of the Genoese admiral
Andrea Doria Andrea Doria, Prince of Melfi (; ; 30 November 146625 November 1560) was an Italian statesman, ', and admiral, who played a key role in the Republic of Genoa during his lifetime. From 1528 until his death, Doria exercised a predominant influe ...
, he entered the court of Emperor Charles V, becoming first a "gentleman of mouth", then an "imperial chamberlain". He was in Italy and Flanders following the imperial armies, and accompanied the emperor's right-hand man, Ferrante Gonzaga, on a mission to England. The following year, however, embittered because the allegedly insufficient financial allowance provided to him by his mother had prevented him from pursuing his desired military career, Giulio returned to Italy. He first settled temporarily in the fortress of Carrara, with his uncle Cardinal Cybo, then at Agnano with his father, then in Rome. Here, as the firstborn, he demanded of the imperious Ricciarda the transfer of the marquisate, but the noblewoman flatly refused, considering herself legitimately invested with it in a personal capacity, with also the right, granted to her by the 1533 imperial decree, to autonomously choose her successor. She even let it slip that her choice might fall on her beloved secondborn. A fierce fight ensued between mother and son, which at first seemed to turn in Giulio's favour, but which in the end had a tragic outcome for him. After a failed attempt to force his mother out in 1545, the following year Giulio challenged her again for control of the marquisate. With the backing of
Cosimo I de' Medici Cosimo I de' Medici (12 June 1519 – 21 April 1574) was the second and last duke of Florence from 1537 until 1569, when he became the first grand duke of Tuscany, a title he held until his death. Cosimo I succeeded his cousin to the duchy. ...
and Andrea Doria, he seized power by force, occupying the lands of Massa and Carrara with troops led by his father Lorenzo. Ricciarda immediately appealed to the emperor, and Charles V decided to temporarily confiscate the marquisate placing it in the hands of his plenipotentiary in Italy, Ferrante Gonzaga, and then, at Giulio's request, in those of Cardinal Cybo.Petrucci, Franca (1981).
Cibo Malaspina, Giulio
. In '' Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani'', volume 25, Enciclopedia Italiana
Giulio's recalcitrance in complying with the imperial decrees and the suspicions aroused in Cosimo I by his increasingly close ties with the Doria family, induced the Duke of Florence to have him arrested in Pisa on 17 March 1547 and to keep him in prison until the 20th when he finally accepted to place the marquisate in the hands of his uncle. In the meantime, in December 1546, Giulio had married Peretta Doria (1526–1591), daughter of Tommaso and sister of , prominent members of the Genoese House of Doria. Giulio had been promised a large dowry, with which he imagined funding his conquest of power. In fact, he kept on exerting heavy pressure upon his mother, with promises, threats and new acts of force, and, mainly thanks to the intercession of his uncle the Cardinal, he finally obtained the stipulation of an onerous contract with her for the purchase of government rights over the marquisate, remaining the sovereignty in her possession. The burdens of the contract, however, were absolutely beyond his means and he planned to cover the large debt arising from it –amounting to 40,000 ducats– half from the funds he was able to raise, and half from his wife's entire dowry. Andrea Doria, the head of the family, refused to proceed with the payment of the dowry, initially blaming the family's financial difficulties in that period and then arguing that he had practically already paid what he owed for the dowry, by financing Giulio's attempts to seize the marquisate by force. At that time Andrea Doria was a very high magistrate ("perpetual censor") of the
Republic of Genoa The Republic of Genoa ( ; ; ) was a medieval and early modern Maritime republics, maritime republic from the years 1099 to 1797 in Liguria on the northwestern Italy, Italian coast. During the Late Middle Ages, it was a major commercial power in ...
, an ally of Emperor and King of Spain Charles V, to whom the petty Massese state, as an imperial fief, was also linked by a bond of loyalty. On 27 June 1547, pending Giulio's payment of the entire agreed amount, Ricciarda retook possession of the marquisate.


Fieschi conspiracies and death

Giulio had previously loyally supported Andrea Doria. In January 1547, on the occasion of a revolt led by his brother-in-law Giovanni Luigi Fieschi, he had not hesitated to send a small military expedition to help Doria; which, however, had been stopped along the way by the news of the failure of the rebellion. After Doria refused to pay him the dowry, however, Giulio's attitude changed radically and, in the second half of the year, he joined a plot against Doria set by Giovanni Luigi's brother, Ottobuono Fieschi and other Genoese refugees in Venice, and also backed by the Florentine Strozzi family, now in the service of France, and by the new Duke of Parma, Pier Luigi Farnese. More or less behind the scenes there were probably the latter's father Pope Paul III and the French. The aim was to enter the city and assassinate Doria, the Spanish ambassador and other members of the Doria party. These events were supposed to trigger a popular revolt and the plan was to be completed by the arrival of French troops from Piedmont. The plot was discovered before action was taken and Cybo was arrested in Pontremoli on 22 January 1548. Despite attempts to save him by his mother and his distant cousin Cosimo I of Tuscany, he was found guilty of treason and beheaded in
Milan Milan ( , , ; ) is a city in northern Italy, regional capital of Lombardy, the largest city in Italy by urban area and the List of cities in Italy, second-most-populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of nea ...
in May 1548. Upon his mother's death in 1553, the states of Massa and Carrara were ultimately inherited by his younger brother Alberico I, who, in compliance with Ricciarda's testamentary provisions, took the new surname Cybo Malaspina adding her family name to his father'sCalonaci, Stefano (2006).
Malaspina, Ricciarda
. In '' Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani'', volume 67, Enciclopedia Italiana
(as his brother had done on his own initiative about ten years earlier). Giulio Cybo was initially buried in the Milanese church of Sant'AngeloIt must have been evidently the ancient building, demolished few years after Giulio's death and rebuilt not far away. (belonging to the
Order of Friars Minor The Order of Friars Minor (commonly called the Franciscans, the Franciscan Order, or the Seraphic Order; Post-nominal letters, postnominal abbreviation OFM) is a Mendicant orders, mendicant Catholic religious order, founded in 1209 by Francis ...
, to whom Giulio wrote to his uncle to make a donation). By order of Alberico I, his body was finally transferred to Massa in 1573, and buried in the crypt of the
cathedral A cathedral is a church (building), church that contains the of a bishop, thus serving as the central church of a diocese, Annual conferences within Methodism, conference, or episcopate. Churches with the function of "cathedral" are usually s ...
beside the remains of his parents.


See also

* History of Genoa * Italian Wars


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cybo, Giulio 1525 births 1548 deaths 16th-century executions by Spain 16th-century Italian nobility People from the Duchy of Massa and Carrara Executed Italian people Nobility from Genoa Lords of Carrara Marquisses of Massa People from the Province of Massa-Carrara Giulio People executed by the Duchy of Milan People executed in the Holy Roman Empire by decapitation