thumb||Bernabò ViscontiBernabò Visconti (also called
Barnabò; 1323 –
18 December 1385) was an Italian soldier and statesman, who was
Lord of Milan.
He was born in
Milan, the son of
Stefano Visconti and Valentina
Doria. From 1346 to 1349 he lived in exile, until he was called back by his uncle
Giovanni Visconti. On 27 September 1350 Bernabò married
Beatrice Regina della Scala, daughter of
Mastino II, Lord of
Verona and Taddea
da Carrara, and forged both a political and cultural alliance between the two cities. His intrigues and ambitions kept him at war almost continuously with
Pope Urban V, the Florentines, Venice and Savoy. In 1354, at the death of Giovanni, he inherited the power of Milan, together with his brothers
Matteo and
Galeazzo. Bernabò received the eastern lands (
Bergamo,
Brescia,
Cremona and
Crema), that bordered the Veronese territories. Milan itself was to be ruled in turn by the three brothers. The vicious Matteo was murdered in 1355 at the order of his brothers, who divided his inheritance between them.
In 1356, after having offended the emperor, he pushed back a first attack upon Milan by the imperial vicar
Markward von Raudeck, imprisoning him. In 1360 he was declared heretic by
Innocent VI at Avignon and condemned by Emperor
Charles IV. The ensuing conflict ended with a dismaying defeat at San Ruffillo against the imperial troops under
Galeotto I Malatesta (
29 July 1361). In 1362, after the death of his sister's husband,
Ugolino Gonzaga, caused him to attack also
Mantua. Warring on several different fronts, in December of that year he sued for peace with the new pope,
Urban V, through the mediation of King
John II of France. However, having Barnabò neglected to return the papal city of
Bologna and to present himself at
Avignon, on
4 March 1363 he was excommunicated once more, together with his children, one of whom,
Ambrogio, was captured by the Papal commander
Gil de Albornoz. With the peace signed on
13 March 1364, Visconti left the occupied Papal lands, in exchange for the raising of the ban upon a payment of 500,000
florins.
left|thumb|300px|Equestrian statue of Bernabò Visconti in the [[Castello Sforzesco,
Milan.]]
In spring 1368 Visconti allied with
Cansignorio della Scala of Verona, and attacked Mantua, still ruled by
Ugolino Gonzaga. The situation was settled later in the year through an agreement between him and emperor. Two years later he besieged
Reggio, which he managed to acquire from Gonzaga in 1371. The following war against the
Este of Modena and Ferrara raised again Papal enmity against the Milanese, now on the part of
Gregory XI. In 1370, he ordered the construction of the
Trezzo Bridge, then the largest single-arch bridge in the world.
In 1373, the pope sent two papal delegates to serve Bernabò and Galeazzo their excommunication papers (consisting of a parchment bearing a leaden seal rolled in a silken cord). Bernabò, infuriated, placed the two papal delegates under arrest and refused their release until they had eaten the parchment, seal, and silken cord which they had served him. He managed to resist, despite also the outbreak of a plague in Milan, whose consequences he suppressed with frantic energy. In 1378 he allied with the
Republic of Venice in its
War of Chioggia against Genoa. His troops were however defeated in September 1379 in the Val Bisagno.
Bernabò, whose despotism and taxes had enraged the Milanese — he is featured among the
exempla of tyrants as victims of Fortune in
Chaucer's
Monk's Tale as "god of delit and scourge of Lumbardye" — was deposed by his nephew
Gian Galeazzo Visconti in 1385. Imprisoned in the castle of
Trezzo, he was poisoned in December of that year.
The funerary monument of Bernabò Visconti, with an equestrian statue, together with that of his consort, had been made beforehand, in 1363. The sculptures by
Bonino da Campione were intended for the church of
San Giovanni in Conca. They now stand in the
Castello Sforzesco in Milan.
Children
thumb|right|Bernabò and his wife, BeatriceBernabò was an ally of
Stephen II, Duke of Bavaria: three of his daughters were married with Stephen's descendants. His issue include:
- Marco (November 1353- 1382), married Elisabeth of Bavaria.
- Rodolfo (d.1388), Lord of Parma
His illegitimate offspring by Donnina del Porri, legitimated in a ceremony after the death of his wife in 1384, were as follows:
- Sagromoro married Achiletta Marliani.
- Soprana married Giovanni da Prato
- Ginevra married Leonardo Malaspina (d.1441)
- Isotta (d. 1388) married Ludwig von Landau (d.1389)
- Ettore (d.1413) married Margherita Infrascati.
- Beroarda married Giovanni Suardi
- Enrica married Franchino Rusca
- Riccarda married Bernard, seigneur de La Salle (d.1391).