Watching a family fall from its covertly won pedestal due to clear pettiness and shortsightedness is as baffling as it is a good story. In the end, there are a lot of questions that follow the lines of “What if?” and “If this hadn’t happened, then…”
Their main point of failure was forgetting their roots in every way. They forgot they were new to the royal scene, they forgot that they were bankers, and “republican,” and then Popes, and Italian. They tried to emulate foreign leaders, courts, traditions, and bloodlines. Perhaps if they had concentrated on consolidating bloodlines within Italy, they might have risen as kings of Italy. They could have done that with the Church and banking instead of trying to base their legacy on the divine purpose of a superior bloodline.
That is just my scheming. It’s rather easy to see the facts on the pages of books and point out the right course of action. It’s another thing to live through it.
The book also led to many side quests on my behalf. A household that stood out was the Orsini.
How many Orsini popes were there?
One Google search later: five popes
“The House of Orsini is an Italian noble family that was one of the most influential princely families in medieval Italy and Renaissance Rome. Members of the Orsini family include five popes: Stephen II (752–757), Paul I (757–767), Celestine III (1191–1198), Nicholas III (1277–1280), and Benedict XIII (1724–1730).”
I would like a book to see what the Orsini did right that the Medici didn’t, except I already looked it up, and it seems that they have ignored this particular family in all aspects that did not involve their popes or feud with the Medici. I’m not above thinking about kidnapping a couple historians to do it. 🤔
Welcome to my basement, fellow intellectuals! Food will be served in accordance with answers for my hungering questions. Bathroom is in the corner.
Meh, too much work. An email to an institution or famous historian will do.
______Ratings______
Knowledge: 4 📜📜📜📜 A lot of knowledge.
Complexity: 2.5 🧘🏼♀️🧘🏼♀️💫 Moderately complex. You must know old kingdoms, the gist of certain wars, an understanding of how popes are elected prior to reading. She mentions said topics, but does not go into depth.
Interest: 5 🧚♀️🧚♀️🧚♀️🧚♀️🧚♀️ An ocean of interest.
Overall Star Rating: 5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Excellent: great pacing, well-developed writing , and overall enjoyment.
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🚨🚨🚨MILD SPOILERS 🚨🚨🚨
~~~>The Good Chapters:
▫️I don’t like Lorenzo much, he is definitely the mom-manager (dad-manager?) of the family.
▫️2 popes back to back is amazing power move. What I would give to be inside the rooms where such machinations took place.
▫️1 Medici pope not even being related to the Medici (just having the name), it’s not a well known fact even if I feel it should be.
▫️Another Medici Pope dying immediately after being elected was another stroke of bad luck this family did not need.
▫️Cosimo (not the duke, the banker) is the jump started of this family. Lorenzo gets the credit as the flashies family member rotten does
~~~>The In-between Chapters:
🔹Cancel culture came for the Medici more than once and they still made it out. Idk if that is impressive or concerning lol.
~~~>The Bad Chapters:
▪️ before I finished this book, I told my father that the only Medicis with a brain were the Cosimo’s. Well if Cosimo III wasn’t dead already I would ask him to lower my casket (I’m getting cremated) one more time so he could let me (and the Medici family) down one more time.
I have since redacted that statement. Did it hurt? My pride, yes. My feelings? Maybe.