Which borgia son dies




















Trying to rid Alexander VI of his illness and re-balance his humours, the doctors let his blood. According to sources, the doctors marveled at how much blood flowed freely from the Pope's body, up to 13 ounces. The ebbs and flows in his fever caused his doctors to diagnose him with " tertian ague ," or malaria, with symptoms reappearing every 48 hours. Depending on the severity of this type of malaria , the Pope could have experienced convulsions, difficulty breathing, and blackwater fever - if he suffered from malaria at all.

By the fourth day of his illness, the Pope had already tried various medicines with little improvement. He continued to vomit and excrete green substances , growing weaker and weaker. On the fifth day, August 18 , Alexander VI confessed, heard mass from his bed, took the Eucharist, and then lost consciousness. By late evening, he received his last rites and died shortly thereafter.

At the time of the Pope's death, five Cardinals were present, along with bishops, grooms, and members of his papal curia. Right before the Pope died, an order was issued that declared no one could leave the Vatican. Regardless, many people managed to leave, taking valuable treasures with them, including Cesare's right-hand man, Don Michelotto.

On Cesare's orders, Michelotto and his men drew daggers upon the Cardinals and forced them to open the cabinets where the papal riches lay. They seized chests of money and as much silver as they could carry. Because they left the cabinets open, others began to take items after Michelotto and his men departed.

Servants took clothes and anything they found, leaving only a few chairs, pillows, and rugs behind. As he was dying, Alexander VI never called out for any of his children, including his son Cesare and his daughter Lucretia - sources vary on the exact reason why, but it was likely due to his sick delirium or generally selfish personality. The ill Cesare also never visited his father and there is no indication that anyone other than clergy members spent time with the sick Pope.

Two illegitimate children of Pope Alexander VI, the first things many think when they hear the names of these siblings are that they were incestuous, murderous and evil incarnate. Following the murder of his brother in , Cesare Borgia became the sole Borgia heir. This was a problem for Pope Alexander VI , who wanted his family to start a dynasty and go down in history.

Realising this, Cesare and Alexander came to the agreement that the former would be better off out of the Church and in a secular role — something that Cesare would have been very pleased with. Cesare made his case to the College of Cardinals who, surprisingly, were against his leaving. He cast off his crimson vestments, only to become one of the most feared warlords of his day.

As he left the party with his brother and uncle, he met with a strange, masked man. It was the last time anyone would see him alive. But as the day wore on, Pope Alexander started to panic.

Duly alarmed, the pope sent his men out into the streets of Rome to search for Juan. While standing guard on the riverbank, he described seeing a rider on a white horse appear with a body slung across the saddle, accompanied by four men on foot.

Their grisly deed completed, they all retreated down an alley and into the night. After receiving this information, Pope Alexander ordered the river be searched, and in short order the body of Juan Borgia was pulled from the Tiber. He had a total of nine stab wounds, dispersed across his neck, head, legs, and torso. He was fully clothed, and a purse containing 30 ducats was still attached to his belt, thus ruling out robbery as a possible motive.

So who was responsible? Suspects abounded and rumors spread, not only within the Vatican and in the streets of Rome but eventually within the courts of Europe. Cesare and Juan had long had a fierce, intense rivalry, to the point of hatred.

Cesare was resentful at having been forced to follow his father into the church and had always preferred a military career, which Juan had been given instead, and promptly made a hash of. There was also the third Borgia brother, Jofre. In July , Borgia married Alfonso of Aragon, the year-old Duke of Bisceglie and son of the late king of Naples, and they had a child together.

On July 15, , Alfonso was stabbed several times, but he survived. Borgia's new husband was initially hesitant because of the Borgia reputation. The couple soon moved out of Rome to Ferrara, escaping the endless scheming of her father and brother, and the pair had several children many of whom died young. Over the next several years, Borgia gained a reputation as a patron of the arts, and she presided over a famed and flourishing artistic community.

In , Borgia withdrew from public life and turned to religion. It is speculated that her withdrawal was in response to the news that Rodrigo, her son by Alfonso of Aragon, had died.

On June 24, , ten days after giving birth to a stillborn girl, Borgia died at the age of Borgia has primarily been remembered as a member of the scandalous Borgia family — the daughter of the corrupt and scheming Pope Alexander VI and the sister of the immoral and most likely murderous Cesare Borgia.



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