
Girolamo Riario
Girolamo Riario (
1443 -
14 April 1488) was Lord of
Imola and
Forlì in the 15th century.
Biography
Born in
Savona, Riario was the son of Paolo Riario and Bianca della Rovere. He was a nephew of
Pope Sixtus IV, who granted him the
seignory of
Imola, as a
dowry for his marriage with
Caterina Sforza (daughter of
Galeazzo Maria Sforza,
Duke of Milan) in 1473.
Four years later, just after the marriage had been celebrated, Girolamo took control of
Forlì, ousting the
Ordelaffi.
In 1478 he was one of the plotters behind the
Pazzi conspiracy, a plot to
assassinate two prominent members of the
Medici family in
Florence. In addition to conspiring, he was an intended beneficiary, once
Lorenzo and
Giuliano de' Medici had been killed. In 1484, after the death of Sixtus IV, Catherine briefly occupied
Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome on his behalf. Girolamo was Captain General of the Church.
Riario promoted several further plots against the Medici, but they all failed. In 1488 he was the last of the main
Pazzi conspirators left alive, and was himself assassinated in a conspiracy led by two members of the
Orsi family from Forlì, supposedly over a financial dispute. On 14 April, Checco and Ludovico Orsi entered the government palace, and one of them attacked Riario with a sword. Despite the presence of the Count's guards, a total of nine assassins slashed Riario to death, eventually flinging his corpse into a local piazza, where a crowd gathered in support of the assassins. The assassins then proceeded to loot the palace.
Although assassinations were not altogether uncommon in
Renaissance Florence, they still had repercussions. Despite writing to Lorenzo de' Medici, who no doubt approved of the result of the assassination, they received no written support by the Medici family. Support, both military and popular, eventually sided with Riario's widow, and the Orsi brothers fled, taking what they could with them. Their remaining assets and family were soon destroyed by angry mobs.
Riario's body had been recovered from the piazza by a local friar, and once Riario's widow proved vindicated, she had the body cleaned up and laid in state for three days in the church of San Francesco.
Girolamo had five sons,
Ottaviano, who officially inherited the lordship of Imola, Cesare, Giovanni Livio, Galeazzo, Francesco, and a daughter,
Bianca by his wife, Caterina.