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Legendary Italian Warrior Exhumed

Legendary Italian Warrior Exhumed | Italia Mia | Scoop.it

Italian researchers have exhumed the tomb of Giovanni de' Medici, one of the most celebrated condottieri (mercenary soldiers) of the Renaissance, in a bid to understand the life and death of the charismatic 16th century army commander.

Also known as "Giovanni dalle Bande Nere" for the black bands of mourning he wore after the death of Pope Leo X, this member of one of the lesser branches of the wealthy Florentine Medici family is buried in the Medici Chapels in Flo rence with his wife, Maria Salviati.

The couple married in 1516, when she was 17 and he was 18. The marriage produced only one child: Cosimo I, who reigned as the first Grand Duke of Tuscany, creating the Uffizi and the magnificent Boboli Gardens as well as finishing the Pitti Palace.

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On Monday, "a large rock that covered the burial chamber of the family was raised to reveal two zinc boxes with the bones of the married couple,” Florence's superintendency said.

Led by Gino Fornaciari, professor of forensic anthropology and director of the pathology Museum at the University of Pisa, the research consists of a "thorough analysis" which includes medical, paleopathological and anthropological investigations of the remains.

"We aim to better understand the cause of death and the kind of surgery carried on the Medici warrior," the superintendency said.

Although he had acquired a reputation for invincibility, Giovanni of the Black Bands (1498-1526) died at only 28 after being hit by a cannon ball in a battle in Lombardy on Nov. 25, 1526. He was fighting the Imperialist troops marching to the sack of Rome.

As the ball crashed the right leg above the knee, the condottiero was taken to the palace of marquis Luigi Alessandro Gonzaga in Mantua. Gangrene soon set in, and Gonzaga's surgeon Maestro Abramo decided to intervene by partly amputating the leg.

According to a report by the poet Pietro Aretino, Giovanni's close friend and eyewitness to the event, 10 men were summoned to hold down the warrior during the surgery.

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Udine, the Heart of the Friuli

Udine, the Heart of the Friuli | Italia Mia | Scoop.it

The Friuli is a wonderful, wild part of Italy, where the people speak their own language, a blur of Germanic and Italian with many more ancient words thrown in. You can see it in the roadsigns and here it in the shops.

Friuli is also mostly hilly or mountainous; Udine is clumped around a small hill set in a totally flat plain. The story is that Attila needed a mound from which to spy movement on the plain when he invaded Italy, so he had his soldiers carry earth in their helmets and heap it into a mound of the height he wanted.

Well you can certainly see the plains around from the great viewpoint where its old castle stood and where a forlorn building that once was a proud Renaissance palace, now looking more like an abandoned hospital, sits now. To think, it houses one of the oldest Halls of Parlement in Europe, but it was used as a prison.

The delights of Udine are down the hill, in the old streets around the covered market, the cathedral and the arcaded shopping streets. Here you see the industrious wealth of these somewhat reserved people, their excellent foodstuffs and delectable restaurants.

Udine is well worth a short visit, especially if you are in the region to see places like Gorizia, Aquileia and Treviso.

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