Marquess of Groppoli

The Marquessate of Groppoli, in Tuscany and Liguria, was the property of the Brignole-Sale family, an illustrious patrician family of Genoa who ruled from 1592 to 1774.

Marquessate of Groppoli
Arms of the Brignole family
Creation date1577 (first creation)
1592 (second creation)
MonarchRudolph II, Holy Roman Emperor (first creation)
Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany (second creation)
Peerage Holy Roman Empire
Grand Duchy of Tuscany
First holderFrancesco I de' Medici (first creation)
Giulio Sale (second creation)
Present holderJohn Lyon-Dalberg-Acton, 5th Baron Acton
Heir apparentHon. Robert Peter Lyon-Dalberg-Acton
Remainder toThe 1st Marquess' heirs of the body lawfully begotten.
StatusExtant
Former seat(s)Palazzo Giulio Sale, Palazzo Rosso, Palazzo Bianco and Villa Brignole Sale in Genoa and Groppoli Castle in Mulazzo
Anton Giulio Brignole-Sale, by Anthony van Dyck 1627
Giovanni Francesco II Brignole-Sale, Doge of Genoa 1746-48, by Hyacinthe Rigaud 1739
Rodolfo II Brignole-Sale, Doge of Genoa 1762-64, by Giovanni Battista Chiappe
Anna Pieri, wife of the 9th Marquess, by Anton von Maron 1792

It was originally an imperial fief, part of the former lands of the Malaspina di Mulazzo family, and later became a fief of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany.

The commune covered an area of 12 km². It was inhabited by 131 families and had a total population of 712 in 1833.[1]

The Marquessate of Groppoli

Due to its strategic, military and commercial position, the Marquessate served as a hinge between Liguria, Lombardy and Tuscany. As such the Republic of Genoa and the Medici family competed to extend their dominance over the region. In the medieval period Groppoli formed a part of the lands held by the Malaspina family. The imperial fief of Groppoli was acquired by Count Landi of Piacenza, as the inheritance of his wife Briseide, daughter of Azzone Malaspina, and in 1549 Landi sold it to Cosimo I de' Medici. After a five-year dispute in the Imperial Aulic Council it returned to the hands of Giovan Cristoforo Malaspina.[2] In 1576 it became autonomous again as a result of the division between the brothers Antonio Maria, Octavian, Giovannni Gaspar and Caesar, sons of Giovan Cristoforo Malaspina. But the fief did not remain in the hands of Antonio Maria for long and in March 1577 he sold it for 21,000 scudi to Francesco I de' Medici, who received the imperial investiture the following year.[3]

On 4 July 1592 Ferdinando I de' Medici granted the marquessate to Giulio Cibo Sale[4] for 'the sincere devotion shown on several occasions to the Florentine court' and a payment of 30,000 scudi in gold.[5] Giulio was installed in the fief, which included the castle and the surrounding territory, which could be inherited by males and females, provided that the marquisate was kept undivided.[6] The new feudal lord was granted the rights and privileges of hunting, fishing, gabelle, tolls, mills, etc., but was forbidden from granting pardons and making a military levy.

Giulio's only daughter and heiress Geronima married into the Brignole family and in 1607 the lands and title passed to her two-year-old son Anton Giulio, who took the name Brignole-Sale.

The Marquessate was governed at a distance and ruled by the functionaries of the Brignole-Sale family who sometimes abused their powers, especially in the early 18th century.[7]

The Marquessate was in effect independent and entered into the orbit of the Republic of Genoa. It was occupied from 1746 to 1748 by the Austrians, while Gian Francesco II Brignole-Sale was Doge of Genoa. In 1749, the Doge Gian Francesco II Brignole Sale, breaking with the policy of his predecessors, decided to directly administer his lands and dispense justice himself in an attempt to detach the Marquessate by refusing to apply the laws of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. At his death in 1760, his brother Rodolfo II Brignole-Sale inherited the Marquessate and from then on the Grand Duchy of Tuscany unceasingly attempted to recover Groppoli.

In 1773, the people of Groppoli, unhappy with the fiscal policies of the Brignole-Sale family, revolted and besieged the 15th century castle.

In 1774, when Rodolfo's son succeeded, he was dispossessed of his authority and power. Thereafter the Marquessate was directly administered by Tuscany.

List of Marquesses of Groppoli

  • Giulio Sale, 1st Marquess of Groppoli (d. 1607), succeeded by his grandson,

Giulio had a daughter and heiress named Geronima who married her first cousin Gio Francesco Brignole, Doge of Genoa.[8] Following Giulio Sale's death in 1607 the Grand Duke of Tuscany made a second investiture of the Marquessate on 27 June 1610. In accordance with the will of Giulio Sale the remainder was limited to the male line only:

  • Anton Giulio Brignole-Sale, 2nd Marquess of Groppoli (1605-1662),[9] succeeded by his son,
  • Rodolfo I Brignole-Sale, 3rd Marquess of Groppoli (1631-1683), succeeded by his brother,
  • Gio Francesco I Brignole-Sale, 4th Marquess of Groppoli (1643-1694),[10] succeeded by his son,
  • Anton Giulio II Brignole-Sale, 5th Marquess of Groppoli (1673-1710),[11] succeeded by his son,
  • Gio Francesco II Brignole-Sale, 6th Marquess of Groppoli (1695-1760),[12] Doge of Genoa and 7th King of Corsica,[13] [14] succeeded by his brother,[15]
  • Giuseppe Brignole-Sale, 7th Marquess of Groppoli (1703-1769),[16] succeeded by his brother,

His only surviving child was Maria Caterina Brignole, who married Honoré III, Prince of Monaco and became ancestor of the Princes of Monaco. However she did not succeed to the Marquessate, which passed to her father Giuseppe's brother,

In 1774 the Marquessate was annexed to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany and the heirs were left with the title only:

  • Anton Giulio III Brignole-Sale, 9th Marquess of Groppoli (1764-1802), succeeded by his son,
  • Rodolfo III Brignole-Sale, 10th Marquess of Groppoli (1784-1832), ordained in 1806 and renounced the title, succeeded by his brother,
  • Anton Giulio IV Brignole-Sale, 11th Marquess of Groppoli (1786-1863),[18] succeeded by his daughter (became dormant)

Under the terms of the second investiture of 27 June 1610 (which limited the title to the male line) the Marquessate became extinct at his death. However, under the terms of the original investiture of 1592 the title was able to pass through the female line (the 2nd Marquess having succeeded in this way). When the 11th Marquess died in 1863, Italian law would have required that the succession to the title by his daughter Maria be confirmed by the new King of Italy. Since Maria made no such request, the title became dormant:

Maria married Raffaele de Ferrari, Duke of Galliera. At her death the succession to the title is somewhat unclear since her only surviving son, the well-known stamp collector Philipp von Ferrary, renounced his titles. It appears then that at the death of the Duchess of Galliera in 1888 the dormant title passed to John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton, the heir at line of the Brignole-Sale family (the only grandchild of Pellina Brignole-Sale, sister of the 11th Marquess and wife of Emmeric, Duc de Dalberg):

In 1946, the Kingdom of Italy was replaced by a republic. Under the Italian Constitution adopted in 1948, titles of nobility are not legally recognised.[20]

See also

References

  1. Dizionario geografico, fisico, storico della Toscana contenente la. Presso l'autore eeditore. 1835.
  2. http://www.storiapatriagenova.it/Docs/Biblioteca_Digitale/SB/396b22c37e8bbc6c44c30828fc127900/d0126993af8c2e0951009cdb15b0b84c.pdf
  3. http://www.storiapatriagenova.it/Docs/Biblioteca_Digitale/SB/396b22c37e8bbc6c44c30828fc127900/d0126993af8c2e0951009cdb15b0b84c.pdf
  4. Cibo was the Sale family’s Albergo. Albergo was a term used during the Renaissance to indicate an organizational structure in which several families linked by blood or a common interest banded together. See also, Our Italian Surnames, pp. 28-29, by Joseph Guerin Fucilla (1949), “In Genoa after the revolution of 1528 all the families that had any political rights were obliged by law to merge with the twenty principal families. When the law was revoked some of them returned to their original cognomen as in the case of Giulio Cibò who re-adopted the former family name of Sale.”
  5. http://www.storiapatriagenova.it/Docs/Biblioteca_Digitale/SB/396b22c37e8bbc6c44c30828fc127900/d0126993af8c2e0951009cdb15b0b84c.pdf
  6. The title was granted to “Giulio figlio di Niccolò Sale nobile genovese,” and “ai suoi figliuoli descendenti maschi e femmine in infinito e alli suoi eredi e successori di qualunque sorte, ai quali avesse dato, donato o lasciato tanto per atti tra vivi che per ultima volontà, con questo però che uno solamente fusse il Marchese pro tempore e che il detto marchesato fusse sempre indivisibile e reservato all’Altezza sua serenissima e suoi successori nel Granducato il supremo e diretto dominio et altro” ('to his children and descendants male and female forever and all his heirs and successors of any sort, to which he gave, donated or bequested both inter vivos [between the living] or by last will, with one proviso, however, that only one should be Marquess pro tempore [at any time] and the said Marquessate should always be indivisible and his serene Highness and his successors in the Grand Duchy reserved direct dominion et alia') http://www.archiviodistato.firenze.it/asfi/fileadmin/risorse/allegati_pubblicazioni_online/istituzioni_1/ist1_vivoli.pdf
  7. http://www.storiapatriagenova.it/Docs/Biblioteca_Digitale/SB/396b22c37e8bbc6c44c30828fc127900/d0126993af8c2e0951009cdb15b0b84c.pdf
  8. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Giovan Francesco in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  9. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Anton Giulio in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  10. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Giovan Francesco in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  11. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Anton Giulio in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  12. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Giovan Francesco in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  13. There was a short-lived kingdom on the island of Corsica formed when the islanders crowned the German adventurer Theodor Stephan Freiherr von Neuhoff as King of Corsica in 1736. Following his downfall the island was annexed to the dominion of Genoa and the doges also became Kings of Corsica. This ended when Pasquale Paoli proclaimed the Corsican Republic in 1755.
  14. Theodore Von Neuhoff, King of Corsica: The Man Behind the Legend, p. 74, by Julia Gasper (2013), "At their accession, the doges of Genoa were crowned kings of Corsica. The ceremony, in which the crown was placed on their heads, not by the clergy but by fellow members of the Senate, took place every two years."
  15. It is possible that after the death of Gian Francesco II, his two younger brothers, Giuseppe and Rodolfo divided his inheritance. It is known that Ridolfo and his elder brother Giuseppe disputed the possession of Palazzo Rosso in Genoa. Finally the palace passed to Giuseppe but it is possible that in exchange he gave up the Marquessate of Groppoli. This is all the more likely since Giuseppe had only one daughter, married to prince Honoré III of Monaco and Giuseppe feared above all that his detestable son-in-law (and wife's lover!) would inherit from him. Moreover, since the Grand Duke had abolished the imperial fiefs, the Brignoles were in fact seceded from their overlord and it is reasonable to imagine that an old doge like Rodolfo had the prestige and necessary support to make this situation last a few more years.
  16. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Giuseppe Maria in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  17. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Rodolfo in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  18. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Antonio in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  19. "BRIGNOLE SALE, Maria, duchessa di Galliera in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  20. "How Professional Genealogists Determine Ancestral Nobility in Italy". Italiangenealogy.com. 24 October 2015. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.