Antoniotto Adorno

The Most Serene Prince Antoniotto Adorno (1340 – Finale Ligure, 1398) was the 6th doge of the Republic of Genoa and rose four times to this supposedly lifelong position, making him the person most often elected to the Doge office in the history of the republic.

Antoniotto Adorno
6th Lifetime Doge of the Republic of Genoa
In office
June 17, 1378  June 17, 1378
Preceded byDomenico di Campofregoso
Succeeded byNicolò Guarco
In office
June 15, 1384  August 3, 1390
Preceded byLeonardo Montaldo
Succeeded byGiacomo Fregoso
In office
April 6, 1391  June 16, 1392
Preceded byGiacomo Fregoso
Succeeded byAntoniotto di Montaldo
In office
September 3, 1394  November 27, 1396
Preceded byAntonio Guarco
Succeeded byposition temporarily vacant
Personal details
Born1340
Genoa, Republic of Genoa
DiedJune 5, 1398
Finale Ligure, Republic of Genoa

Early career

Antoniotto was the son of Adornino Adorno and Nicolosia della Rocca. Like most the previous doges, Antoniotto was a merchant by trade; he was also reputed to be well-versed in law and literature and he is known to have pleaded at least in one case as an attorney.[1] He began his political career as the governor (vicar) of Chivari in the early 1370s. In 1373, he took part in the successful invasion of the kingdom of Cyprus aboard his own private galley.

Four times in office

First dogeship

On June 17, 1378, his partisans stormed the dogal palace and forced Domenico di Campofregoso to relinquish his position. Antonietto was elected doge by popular acclamation but, the same evening, his co-conspirator, Nicolò Guarco compelled him to resign and became the new doge in his place. Antoniotto had to leave the city and find refuge at the court of the Viscontis of Milan, sworn enemies of the Republic.[1]

He remained in exile in Savona until April 1383. Once he had returned to Genoa, he quickly started to conspire to oust doge Guarcò. The same year he managed to force his former accomplice out of office but he failed to win the ensuing elections; he was, however, allowed to remain in Genoa and entered the council of the Ancients. On June 15, 1384, at the death of doge Leonardo Montaldo, Antonietto was finally elected doge. One of his first decisions was to have Niccolò Guarco imprisoned in Lerici.[1]

Grosso minted in 1396 while Antoniotto Adorno, was governor of Genoa for the sake of the king of France, Charles VI.

Second dogeship

On the diplomatic stage Antoniotto Adorno pursued a strategy of appeasement in accord with the mercantile interests of the city. He gave refuge to the controversial pope Urban VI in 1386, and the following year he obtained a peace treaty with the Aragonese king and mounted with him an assault against Barbary raiders under the command of his brother, Raffaele. In June 1388, the Christian fleet conquered Jerba and in 1390 another expedition benefiting from French and English support was launched against Mahdia. After over a year of siege, the doge and the sultan of Tunis came to terms and the latter agreed to stop offensive actions against Genoese trade.[1]

Doge Adorno also strove to maintain the peace in Genoa and in the colonies. He broke an agreement between the embittered maona of Cyprus and the king of the island. However, despite his best effort, the Genoese political life remained highly volatile. On August 3, 1390, he was forced out of office by the armed partisans of Giacomo Fregoso, son of the former doge Domenico di Campofregoso. But Giacomo was bookish and seemed to have little appetite for politics, so on April 6, 1391, Antoniotto came back to the dogal palace, took Giacomo to dinner, brought him home and assumed the dogeship anew.[1]

Third dogeship

Antoniotto resumed his politics of appeasement in the region. On January 20, 1391, he brokered a peace treaty between Milan and its enemies, Venice, Florence and Bologna. However, his failure to subdue the old rival neighbour, Savona, triggered a rebellion on June 15, 1392 and forced him to flee the city. Backed militarily by Gian Galeazzo Visconti, he attempted to re-conquer his position but was defeated by the new doge, Antoniotto Montaldo.[1]

Fourth dogeship

Despite this set back, he managed to force the new doge to give him the control of the city, albeit at the condition he would not try to regain his former office. Yet on September 3, 1394, Antoniotto Adorno secretly gathered an assembly and was elected doge for the fourth time.[1]

A new danger arose when, on November 17, 1394, confronted with internal strife and rather than remaining under Genoese domination, the neighbouring city of Savona gave itself to the king of France. Antoniotto confronted with the danger of the rise of a French-backed Savona, in his turn offered the sovereignty of Genoa to the king. Charles VI had entrusted his Ligurian expansion to his brother, Louis of Orléans. But the latter quickly arose hatred among the Genoese noblemen as he tried to manage directly the affairs of the city. A riot led by Antoniotto Adorno and Antoniotto Montaldo rapidly forced him to relinquish his new estate and on November 27, 1396, Antoniotto abandoned the dogeship to become governor in the name of the king.[1]

End of life

On March 18, 1397, Antoniotto relinquished his position of governor and went into retirement on the estates of the marquis Del Carretto in Finale Ligure. There he contracted the plague and died on June 5, 1398.[1]

Descent and titles

Antoniotto Adorno married twice, with Luchina Savignone then with Ginevra Doria, and had 15 children. Through his daughter Brigida, he is also the ancestor of the Pisan patrician families Adorni, Adornetto and Adorni Braccesi.[1]

Besides the dogeship, Antoniotto was also baron of the kingdoms of Sicily and Jerusalem, lord of Grimault, Saint-Tropez, Arroscia and Scrivia.

gollark: Just stop wanting that.
gollark: I'm mostly procrastinating.
gollark: Look, if I had to know about things before talking about them, then no.
gollark: And it *is* an adjective since you're not using the noun, oh bee.
gollark: I should probably relearn basic ancient greek grammar for no particular reason.

References

  1. Oreste, Giuseppe (1960). "Dizionario biografico degli Italiano". Retrieved March 1, 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.