Well, it is incredibly seamy. BTW, if you're wondering where the advantage lay for Pope Alexander VI., otherwise known as Rodrigo Borgia, in granting Louis XII his suit: an alliance, a dukedom and a bride of royal blood for son Cesare. Charlotte d'Albret, who marred Cesare Borgia, was Louis XII' niece. If you remember how even centuries later aristos like Liselotte are upset when their son marries a bastard daughter of Louis XIV (even a royal bastard is still a bastard), you can imagine that the illegitimate son of a Spanish Pope (his being Spanish upset a whole lot of Italian aristocrats way more than his being standard Renaissance corrupt) getting to marry into the French Royal family was really a major coup.
Edited 2021-06-20 07:16 (UTC)
Re: Harold Acton: Last of the Medici I: How to make really bad marriages
I realize that this was pretty common at the time with the Popes and such, but I still find it hilarious that the Pope is doing this to get an advantage for his son. :D
Re: Harold Acton: Last of the Medici I: How to make really bad marriages
WELP yes of course you are required to post on these things for me :D That is... well, it seems to me that it would require very little changing to become a Modern AU, let's say :P
Re: Harold Acton: Last of the Medici I: How to make really bad marriages
Btw, I saw this, and I thought, "I'm pretty sure I'm contractually obligated to copy-paste the entire thing for
Re: Harold Acton: Last of the Medici I: How to make really bad marriages
Re: Harold Acton: Last of the Medici I: How to make really bad marriages
I realize that this was pretty common at the time with the Popes and such, but I still find it hilarious that the Pope is doing this to get an advantage for his son. :D
Re: Harold Acton: Last of the Medici I: How to make really bad marriages