Originally
from Latium, the Farnese are first mentioned in the
thirteenth century because of the fights between the
quarrelsome feudal lords of the region. Men of arms
and action, with no inclination for either diplomacy
or politics, they distinguished themselves in the service
of other, more powerful, families and managed to build
up a considerable territory wedged in the Papal States,
between lake Bolsena, the swampy coastland of Maremma
and the Tyrrhenian sea, which Paul III later turned
into the dukedom of Castro.
Paolo Farnese was the first representative of the
house to enter the Church in 1482. In 1509, Pope
Julius II granted Cardinal Alessandro Farnese the
bishopric of Parma and several more investitures
over a short period of time. Those appointments,
together with his unscrupulous political manouvres,
led the clever bishop to the papal throne on 13 October
1534, with the name of Paul III, the first and only
pope in the Farnese family.
On 26 August 1545, Paul III separated the cities
and territories of Parma and Piacenza from the Papal
States and created a dukedom for his son Pier Luigi.
Pier Luigi had an enemy in Charles V of Spain, who
plotted his death with Ferrante Gonzaga, governor
of Milan: on 10 September 1547 the duke was stabbed
to death by a group of city nobles, who thus wanted
to avenge the abuses of their new lord.
The murder was however pointless,
since power remained in the hands of the Farnese
family: Pier Luigi's son Ottavio (1556-1586) transferred
the capital of the dukedom from Piacenza to Parma,
and after his death the two cities came under the
rule of the warrior Alessandro (1586-1592), conqueror
of the Flemish provinces which had rebelled against
Madrid, and courageous commander in the crucial battle
of Lepanto (1571). His successor, Ranuccio I (1592-1622),
is best remembered for his cruelty: he ordered the
public execution in Parma of more than one hundred
people suspected of plotting against him (under Ranuccio
I, the dukedom of Parma and Piacenza annexed the
territories of Colorno, Sala Baganza and Montechiarugolo).
His son Odoardo (1622-1646) embarked
on unsuccessful military campaigns, made the mistake
of siding with the French against the Spanish, the
pope's traditional allies, and was powerless against
the devastations caused by the plague, of which about
13,000 people in Piacenza died, and the incursions
of Spanish and German mercenary troops.
The House of Farnese continued its
decline under Ranuccio II (1646-1694), who lost the
Castro territories, and Francesco (1694-1727), who
married the German princess Dorotea Sofia of Neuburg.
On his sudden death, he was succeeded by his brother
Antonio (1727-1731), the last of the Farnese dukes,
a portly man weighed down by the political and military
games of the great European powers. The main branch
of the dynasty died with him. In 1732, the dukedom
of Parma and Piacenza came under the rule of Charles
of Bourbon, son of Elisabetta Farnese, Queen of Spain,
and Philip V. |