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Giovanni Borgia (Infans Romanus)

Spanish priest


Spanish priest

FieldValue
birth_date
death_date
noble familyHouse of Borgia

Giovanni Borgia (March 1498 – 1548), known as the Infans Romanus ("the Roman child"), was born into the House of Borgia. Speculations about the child's parentage involve either Lucrezia Borgia with her alleged lover, Perotto Calderon or Cesare Borgia, or Pope Alexander VI as his father. Cesare Borgia's biographer Rafael Sabatini says that the truth is fairly clear: Alexander fathered the child with an unknown Roman woman.

History

Pope Alexander VI issued two papal bulls, both dated to 1 September 1501, assigning different fathers to Giovanni Borgia. The second bull appears to supplement and correct the first. In the first, addressed to "Dilecto Filio Nobili Joanni de Borgia, Infanti Romano", the pope declared Giovanni Borgia to be a child of three years of age, the illegitimate son of Cesare Borgia and an unnamed woman. The second declared Giovanni Borgia instead to be the son of Pope Alexander VI himself and runs: "Since you bear this deficiency not from the said duke, but from us and the said woman, which we for good reasons did not desire to express in the preceding writing". The pope was forbidden by canon law to publicly recognize children and did not wish that Giovanni Borgia should suffer in his inheritance as a consequence.

Giovanni Borgia was supposed by many to be the child of Alexander and his mistress, Giulia Farnese. He appeared as a companion of Lucrezia Borgia, who named him as her younger half-brother. Pope Alexander VI, in two bulls excommunicating members of the Savelli and Colonna families and confiscating their properties, was able to name Giovanni Borgia as heir to the duchy of Nepi, a property important to the Borgia family. Giovanni Borgia was also named duke of Palestrina on 17 September 1501. Alessandro Farnese governed Camerino in the name of Giovanni.

Giovanni Borgia was passed from guardian to guardian. In 1508 he was with Isabella of Aragon at Bari. Eventually he ended up with Lucrezia Borgia in Ferrara. Giovanni Borgia held several other titles, including the signory of Vetralla.

He served as a minor functionary in the Papal Curia and at the court of France.

He had three daughters.

References

References

  1. Williams, George L., ''Papal Genealogy: the Families and Descendants of the Popes''. McFarland. 2004, p. 70 {{ISBN. 978-0-7864-2071-1
  2. Sabatini, Rafael. (1912). "Life of Cesare Borgia". Amazon Digital Services LLC - KDP Print US.
  3. [https://www.britannica.com/biography/Lucrezia-Borgia Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Lucrezia Borgia". ''Encyclopedia Britannica'']
  4. [https://books.google.com/books?id=yC-CDY5hJ-8C&dq=Giovanni+Borgia+%28Infans+Romanus%29&pg=PA733 Davey, Richard. "Review of Corvo's 'Chronicles of the House of Borgia'", ''The Speaker'', March 29. 1902]
  5. 9780429560309
  6. [https://books.google.com/books?id=BpcuAAAAYAAJ&dq=Giovanni+Borgia+%28Infans+Romanus%29&pg=PA286 Fyvie, John. ''The Story of the Borgias'', E. Nash, 1912]
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