Medici Essays

  • Medici: Cosimo De Medici

    2435 Words  | 5 Pages

    Cosimo di Medici Cosimo di Giovanni de Medici was given the title Pater Patriae of Italy at his death and was also known as the primus inter pares. He was the founder of the Medici dynasty, who were during the Renaissance the de facto rulers of Florence. Even though Cosimo Medici was a powerful man, he was not an official ruler. Medici’s government also consisted of a council who would many times resist the laws that Medici put forth. This paper will look at the accomplishments of Cosimo di Medici. Cosimo

  • Machiavelli's 'Medici, The Magnificent'

    814 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Medici, masters of Florence, originated from a back room of a war shop managing a small scale operation: The Medici Bank. Through loyal clients and by ambitious risk taking the Medici family gained a great deal of power. Many of the techniques this family used to climb up the ranks in social hierarchy were credited to Niccoló Machiavelli, who prescribed his teachings in The Prince. In this book, addressed to Lorenzo de’ Medici, the Magnificent, Machiavelli discusses the qualities and actions

  • The Medici Bank

    2025 Words  | 5 Pages

    Giovanni di Bicci de’ Medici founded the Medici bank in 1397 after splitting from his nephew to establish a bank branch in Florence. As the new bank grew and expanded, so did the wealth and power of the Medici family. When Cosimo il Vecchio de’ Medici, Giovanni’s son, took over the banking business in 1434, the increasing economic power of the Medici family allowed them to establish themselves as effective rulers of Florence while keeping the republican system of government nominally intact. The

  • Medici Enlightenment Essay

    753 Words  | 2 Pages

    Medici Enlightenment In the era of the renaissance, money was dangerously unsafe, the transportation of funds between metropolitans was unclear and confusing, each city had their own rules while other cities currency was unstable, and bartering. This brought frustration and corruption throughout the means of currency during this era. Coped with the daunting challenge to bring order, a family by the name Medici rose to power by establishing the fundamentals of common banking to light. Consequently

  • Cosimo De Medici

    890 Words  | 2 Pages

    Among these families is the house of Medici, who can ultimately be held accountable for the patronage of artists such as Michelangelo and Botticelli. Although the Medici family was responsible for such sponsorships, they were ultimately evil because of their gain of power through deception, absolute control, and plutocracy. This can be proven by the lives of Cosimo de’ Medici, Lorenzo de’ Medici, Giovanni de’ Medici, and Giuliano de’ Medici. Firstly, the Medici were evil because of their usage of

  • The Medici 's Influence On Art

    1207 Words  | 3 Pages

    splendid and exquisite art were created in the service of the rich and ruthless Medici family. There is no denies that the Medici had turned Florence in to one of the most beautiful cities in the world with their money. The Medici could be regarded as the very first collectors of great modern art, with their complicated emotions involved, such as their guilt, ambition of authority, and sexual lust. In the end, the Medici did not just collect paintings and sculptures; they had changed the very nature

  • The Medici Influence and the Italian Renaissance

    1195 Words  | 3 Pages

    amici” or of mutual favors from “friends of friends” the Medici family was able to usher in a new Italian era: the Renaissance (Medici). While not the only wealthy and ambitious family in Florence, the Medici’s were driven in their pursuits and did not achieve their success in the noblest of ways. Giovanni di Bicci de’Medici, the Patriarch of the Medici Dynasty, founded and controlled one of the most influential businesses in Italy, the Medici Bank. Giovanni’s development of the limited liability concept

  • Lorenzo de Medici

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    powerful city in all of Italy. Lorenzo de Medici was the baby that would control the city of Florence and lead Florence into a great state of royalty. Born into a family of powerful bankers that ruled Florence Lorenzo would soon enough lead the city and soon be called "il Magnifico". From mentoring of childhood to the ruling of adulthood Lorenzo was a light to the people in Florence. Through Lorenzo's childhood he was mentored from his grandfather Cosimo de Medici to follow in his footsteps to control

  • The Power of The House of Medici

    622 Words  | 2 Pages

    The House of Medici, or the Medici family, was a very influential and extremely powerful family during the time of the Renaissance in Italy. The Renaissance took place starting in the late 14th century. During this time, the people started to take interest in and have an appreciation for the classical times. The beginning of this powerful family really begins with Giovanni di Bicci deˈ Medici. He was born in the year 1360 in Florence, Italy. Originally from the Tuscan hillside, the Medici family immigrated

  • Catherine De' Medici

    677 Words  | 2 Pages

    Catherine de’ Medici played an important role in Sixteenth Century France. She has been blamed for starting the French Wars of Religion, yet it is impossible to blame one person for a war. Catherine de’ Medici’s full name is Caterina Maria Romula di Lorenzo de Medici. She was born in Florence, Italy, on April 13, 1519. Lorenzo II de' Medici, Duke of Urbino, and Madeleine de la Tour d’Auvergne, Countess of Boulogne, were her parents. Even though she was a female, they still adored her. Unfortunately

  • The Medici Effects by Frans Johansson

    1356 Words  | 3 Pages

    raised in Sweden and received his bachelor’s in Environmental Science then earned his MBA. Johansson was just what I had been searching for, someone who was applying concepts in ways that would help me throughout my own career. The book’s title The Medici Effect makes reference to one of the most innovative and creative families that have existed in history; their influences can still be seen to this day. In the introduction the author talks about Peter’s Café that exists in Horta, a port city in the

  • The Medici Family During the Renaissance

    1902 Words  | 4 Pages

    prosperous city; it made fortunes off of wool and banking trades. A certain Florentine family contributed to the vast wealth as well. The Medici family was no doubt the foundation of prosperity for Florence. The Medici Family was one of the most powerful families of Renaissance Florence. They were a banking family. The first Medici bank, started by Giovanni di Becci de’ Medici, was a small scale business run in the bathroom. The bank grew through Giovanni’s extraordinary salesmanship and financial caution

  • Analyzing The Documentary The Medici, Godfathers Of The Renaissance

    502 Words  | 2 Pages

    This documentary The Medici, Godfathers of the Renaissance was between 1300 and 1600, where the Western world dramatically changed. It was “The Renaissance” also known as “rebirth” of Europe-Roman classical. In the city of Florence, the Medici family would rise to rule the Europe in many ways. They impacted religion, art, politics, science and architecture over the time the cultural changed. The Birth of a Dynasty, where a continent was torn apart by war, plagues and dominated by Catholic Church

  • The Failure Of The Medici Bank

    1112 Words  | 3 Pages

    By this time the Medici bank had attracted the attention of the papacy in Rome as a legitimate and substantial financing operation. The papal treasury was not allowed to directly deal with the exchange of funds collected from foreign countries and had to rely on international banking operations such as the Medici’s to convert the currencies when needed. As the church was exorbitantly wealthy they acted more of a lender to the Medici business and they could maintain consistent and guaranteed profits

  • The Medici Family Research Paper

    730 Words  | 2 Pages

    the 15th and 16th century Florence was ruled almost completely by a powerful family known as the Medici that was the first family to gain control not through war, marriage or inheritance but commerce. Beginning with Giovanni di Bicci de’ Medici (1360-1429) in the 1300’s we see the first growth of the families wealth, Giovanni invests large amounts of his money made through the foundation of the Medici bank into political interests that begins the Medici’s rise to power. From this time on there is

  • Medici Family Research Paper

    1227 Words  | 3 Pages

    PROSPERITY, PEACE AND PROGRESSION: The Medici Family Story 1389-1464 THE MEDICI FAMILY The Medici family is officially in power. It is 1434 and the House of Medici has been looked up to since the 13th century, but now the Medici family is influencing major change. Due to the family’s support in arts and humanities the Renaissance has taken place. During the renaissance civilians primary focus was the idea that everyone should be educated and participate in arts and science. This

  • Raphael's Lorenzo De' Medici

    1147 Words  | 3 Pages

    Christie's London announced on May 21, 2007 that Lorenzo de' Medici (1518), a portrait of sound provenance by renowned Italian Renaissance master Raffaello Sanzio, called Raphael (1483-1520), will be available for purchase as part of its Important Old Master and British Pictures auction on Thursday, July 5, 2007. On display at the esteemed auction house's King Street salerooms, beginning June 30, will be Raphael's painting, one of a handful by the artist still privately held. Owned by Ira Spanierman

  • The Italian Renaissance: Cosimo And Lorenzo Medici

    523 Words  | 2 Pages

    Leonardo and other Renaissance artists would not have been as successful or have the impact that they had if it were not for Patronage. Again, the influence the Medici family had upon the to the Italian Renaissance cannot be stated enough. Particularly Cosimo and Lorenzo Medici used their family’s financial capital to achieve political power, but also affect many Italians perception of reality. The Renaissance was about the move away from scholasticism toward humanism, but to not fully devoid the

  • Lorenzo De Medici And The Renaissance

    1321 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lorenzo de Medici is one of the most important figures in the history of Italy. He lived and reigned during the golden age of the Renaissance in Florence in the late fifteenth century. Although not from a royal family or appointed to the throne, he held much political power as the ruler of Florence. Unlike the rulers of his day, he was among the few to directly immerse in the arts by commissioning works with some of the artists that led one of the most important eras in the world: the Italian Renaissance

  • Influence of the De Medici Family

    1293 Words  | 3 Pages

    The influence of a few people or ideas can affect a culture for a lifetime. The de Medici family was a powerful family that captured the ideals and principles of the Florence Renaissance and were able to use them to increase their influence during the time. Their influence in this time created many positive effects, some of which are still felt today. The family used their influence during this time to impact Florence and other European countries through their patronage of the arts, and political