Pope Sixtus IV
Sixtus IV, born
Francesco della Rovere (
July 21,
1414 -
August 12,
1484) was
Pope from
1471 to 1484, essentially a Renaissance prince, the Sixtus of the
Sistine Chapel where the team of artists he brought together introduced the Early
Renaissance to Rome with a masterpiece. (Michelangelo's ceiling was added in a later phase.).
Pope Sixtus IV appoints Bartolomeo Platina prefect of the Vatican Library, ca 1477 (fresco) (Vatican Museums)
He was born to a modest family in Albisola, near Savona, Liguria. He joined the
Franciscan Order, an unlikely choice, and his intellectual qualities were revealed while he was studying philosophy and theology at the University of Pavia. He went on to lecture at many eminent Italian universities. He was made Minister General of the Franciscan order in 1464. In 1467 he was made a
Cardinal by
Pope Paul II.
With his election, and after some ineffective sorties against the Turks in
Smyrna, where fund-raising energy was more successful than half-hearted attempts to storm
Smyrna and some attempts at unification with the
Russian Orthodox Church, he turned to temporal issues and dynastic considerations. Sixtus continued the fruitless arguing with
Louis XI of France, who continued to uphold the
Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges (1438), that provided royal consent to papal decrees before they were promulgated in France, a cornerstone of the independence of the
Gallican Church that could never be shifted, while Louis maneuvered to replace
Ferdinand I of Naples with a French prince, which the Pope as a princely strategist could not permit.
Like a number of Popes, Sixtus was guilty of nepotism. In the fresco (
illustrated, left) he is accompanied by his
Della Rovere and
Riario nephews, not all of whom were made cardinals: the apostolic pronotary Raffaele Riario (on his right), the future pope
Julius II (pontiff from 1503 to 1513) standing before him, and Girolamo Riario and Giovanni della Rovere behind the kneeling Platina, author of the first Humanist history of the Popes. In his territoral aggrandizement of the
Papal States his nephew Cardinal Raffaele Riario, for whom the Palazzo della Cancelleria was constructed, was a leader in the 1478 failed
"Pazzi conspiracy" to assassinate
Lorenzo de' Medici and his brother and replace them
Florence with the other nephew,
Girolamo Riario. The archbishop of Pisa, a main organizer of the plot, was hanged on the walls of the Florentine
Palazzo della Signoria, and Sixtus replied with an interdict and two years' of war with Florence. He also encouraged the Venetians to attack
Ferrara, which he wished to obtain for another nephew. The angered Italian princes allied to force Sixtus to make peace, an act which annoyed Sixtus immensely.
As a temporal prince, who constructed stout fortresses in the
Papal States Sixtus committed himself rather scandalously to Venice's aggression against the duchy of
Ferrara, which he incited the Venetians to attack in 1482; their combined assault was interdicted by an alliance of Sforza Milan, Medici Florence, and ther King of Naples, his hereditary ally and usual strongarm of the Papacy. For refusing to desist from the very hostilities that he had instigated (and for being a dangerous rival to Della Rovere Papal ambitions in the
Marche, Sixtus placed Venice under interdict in 1483.
Sixtus consented to the
Spanish Inquisition issued a Bull in 1478 that established an Inquisitor in in
Seville, under political pressure from
Ferdinand of Aragon, who threatened to withhold military support from his kingdom of
Sicily. Nevertheless, Sixtus quarrelled over protocol and perogatives of jurisdiction, was unhappy with the excesses of the Inquisition and took measures to condemn the most flagrant abuses in 1482. In ecclesiastical affairs, Sixtus IV instituted the feast (December 8) of the
Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary. He formally annulled (1478) the reformist decrees of the
Council of Constance.
As a civic patron in Rome, Sixtus must be admired. The
Sistine Chapel was sponsored by Sixtus as was the Sistine Bridge to facilitate the integration of with the heart of old Rome., he also had San Vitale rebuilt in 1475 and refounded, enriched and enlarged the
Vatican Library. He had
Regiomontanus attempt the first sanctioned reorganization of the Julian calendar and called
Josquin des Prez to Rome for his music. His bronze funerary monument in
St Peter's Basilica, like a giant casket of goldsmith's work, is by
Antonio Pollaiuolo
External links
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