Clarice Orsini

{{short description|Wife of Lorenzo de' Medici}}

{{Infobox nobility|

| name=Clarice Orsini

| title=Lady of Florence

| image=Clarice Orsini de Medici.JPG

| caption=

| spouse=Lorenzo de' Medici

| issue=Lucrezia de' Medici
Male twins
Piero de' Medici
Maddalena de' Medici
Contessina Beatrice de' Medici
Giovanni de' Medici, Pope Leo X
Luisa de' Medici
Contessina de' Medici
Giuliano de' Medici, Duke of Nemours

| full name=

| noble family=Orsini (by birth)
Medici (by marriage)

| father=Jacopo Orsini, Lord of Monterotondo and Bracciano

| mother=Maddalena Orsini

| birth_date=1453

| birth_place=Monterotondo, Papal States

| death_date={{Death date and age|df=y|1488|07|30|1453}}

| death_place=Florence, Republic of Florence

| burial_date=1 Aug 1488

|}}

Clarice Orsini (1453 – 30 July 1488){{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=7}} was the daughter of Jacopo Orsini, and Maddalena Orsini; both from the Orsini family, a great Roman noble house,{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=18-19}} and was the wife of Lorenzo de' Medici.

Life

Clarice and Lorenzo married 4 June 1469,{{sfn|Pernis|Adams|2006|p=73}} with a four-day celebration.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=19}} The marriage was arranged by Lorenzo's mother Lucrezia Tornabuoni, who wanted her eldest son to marry a woman from a noble family to enhance the social status of the Medicis.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=18-19}} Their marriage was unusual for aristocrats in Florence at the time in that they were nearly the same age.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=19}} Clarice's dowry was 6,000 florins.{{sfn|Pernis|Adams|2006|p=73}}

The political nature of her marriage meant that she was often called upon by each side of her family to influence the other.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=44}} This included Lorenzo helping her brother Rinaldo get selected as Archbishop of Florence.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=59}} She was also called on by others throughout the area to support their requests to her husband.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=51}} People sought her support in easing taxes and releasing family members from exile or prison.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=51,62}} She would also use her network to gather information about political and military events away from where she was, including troop movements and battles.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=61-62}}

Clarice's religious upbringing was a bit in contrast with the humanist ideals of the age popular in Florence.{{cite book |first=Ingeborg |last=Walter |title=Lorenzo il Magnifico e il suo tempo |year=2005 |publisher=Donzelli Editore |isbn=978-88-7989-921-5 |page=66 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=POTaDEJ2YWgC&pg=PA66 |language=it}} Nevertheless, sources and letters suggest that there was a great deal of affection and respect between her and Lorenzo.{{cite book |last1=Hare |first1=Christopher |title=The Most Illustrious Ladies of the Italian Renaissance |date=December 2008 |isbn=9781605204758 |pages=61|publisher=Cosimo }}{{cite book |last1=Hook |first1=Judith |title=Lorenzo de' Medici : an historical biography |date=1984 |publisher=H. Hamilton |isbn=0241112184 |page=36 |quote="More solid evidence of a warm and close relationship would seem to exist in the regular annual production, interrupted only by miscarriages, of new inmates for the Medici nursery, and in the concern shown for each other in the correspondence of husband and wife. When Lorenzo was away, Clarice worried ceaselessly about his health and his state of mind, and regularly dispatched presents, food and comforts to him. He, for his part, wrote to her regularly and, no matter how tired he was, normally with his own hand, always addressing these letters to 'my very dear wife'. This warm and close relationship could only be strengthened by the common delight which both parents took in their seven offspring."}}

Of the ten children born to them, four died in infancy.

During the Pazzi conspiracy, which was aimed at murdering Lorenzo and his younger brother Giuliano, Clarice and her children were sent to Pistoia. (The Pazzis succeeded in murdering Giuliano, but Lorenzo survived the attack, thus the conspirators' plan to replace the Medicis as de facto rulers of Florence failed).

Clarice returned to Rome several times to visit her relatives; she also visited Volterra, Colle Val d'Elsa, Passignano sul Trasimeno, and other places in the 1480s.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=31}} During these visits, she was treated as a representative of her husband, an unusual role for a woman in that time and place.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=31-32}}

On 30 July 1488 she died in Florence, and was buried two days later.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=24}} Her husband was not with her when she died, nor did he attend the funeral,{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=24}} because he himself was very ill and was in Bad Filetta near Siena to get cured.

The fact that Lorenzo was away from home when she died, affected even more his mood. Piero da Bibbiena, private chancellor of the Magnificent, wrote the following letter to the Florentine Ambassador in Rome :

{{quote|Yesterday morning at 2 pm Clarice died. If you hear Lorenzo blamed for not being present at the death of his wife, excuse him. It seemed necessary...that he brought water from the Villa; and no one thought that she would die so soon.}}

In a letter to Pope Innocent VIII he wrote that he dearly missed his late wife.Ingeborg Walter: Der Prächtige – Lorenzo de’ Medici und seine Zeit. München 2005, S. 250. The content of Lorenzo's letter to the Pope is the following:

{{quote|The death of my dearest and sweetest wife Clarice, that recently happened to me, it is of so much damage, prejudice, and pain for infinite reasons, that it has overcome my patience and resistance to the troubles and persecutions of fate, for which I did not think that I would be so affected. And this, to be deprived of such sweet habits and companionship...made me feel, and currently makes me feel, as if I'm lost.}}

Issue

Clarice and Lorenzo had ten children:

Their children were taught by Angelo Poliziano for a time.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=24}} In 1478, he wanted to teach the children humanism, Latin, and Greek, but Clarice insisted on their lessons being more religious, and being delivered in Italian.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=24,86}} She had also removed the family and their teacher from Florence after the scare of the Pazzi conspiracy, and he chafed under the exile.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=24}} In May 1479, she tried to dismiss the tutor over another change in the curriculum, though Lorenzo continued to pay him.{{sfn|Tomas|2003|p=24}}

Ancestry

{{ahnentafel

|collapsed=yes |align=center

|boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc;

|boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9;

|boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc;

|boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc;

|boxstyle_5=background-color: #9fe;

| 1 = 1. Clarice Orsini

| 2 = 2. Jacopo Orsini, Lord of Monterotondo and Bracciano

| 3 = 3. Maddalena Orsini

| 4 = 4. Orso Orsini, Lord of Monterotondo

| 5 = 5. Lucrezia Conti

| 6 = 6. Carlo Orsini, Lord of Bracciano

| 7 = 7. Paola Orsini

| 8 = 8. Francesco Orsini, Lord of Monterotondo

| 9 = 9. Costanza Annibaldeschi

|10 = 10. Aldobrandino Conti, Signore of Valmontone

|11 = 11. Caterina di Sangro

|12 = 12. Giovanni Orsini, Lord of Bracciano

|13 = 13. Bartolomea Spinelli

|14 = 14. Giacomo Orsini, Count of Tagliacozzo

|15 = 15. Isabella Marzano

|16 = 16. Giordano Orsini, Lord of Monterotondo

|17 = 17. Anastasia Orsini

|18 = 18. Nicola Annibaldeschi

|19 =

|20 = 20. Giovanni Conti

|21 =

|22 =

|23 =

|24 = 24. Francesco Orsini

|25 = 25. Giacoma Carraciolo

|26 = 26. Nicola Spinelli

|27 = 27. Simona della Marra

|28 = 28. Giovanni Orsini

|29 = 29. Nicoletta Orsini

|30 =

|31 =

}}

References

{{reflist|30em}}

Sources

  • {{cite book|last1=Pernis|first1=Maria Grazia|last2=Adams|first2=Laurie|title=Lucrezia Tornabuoni De' Medici and the Medici Family in the Fifteenth Century|year=2006|publisher=Peter Lang Publishing, Inc.|location=New York|isbn=978-0820476452 }}
  • {{cite book | last=Tomas | first=Natalie R. | title=The Medici Women: Gender and Power in Renaissance Florence | publisher=Ashgate | location=Aldershot | year=2003 | isbn=0754607771}}