Antoniotto II Adorno (c. 1479 – 12 September 1528) was Doge of the Republic of Genoa from 1522 to 1527. Adorno was the last of the Genoese doges elected for life.
Antoniotto II Adorno | |
---|---|
45th Lifetime Doge of the Republic of Genoa | |
In office 31 May 1522 – August 1527 | |
Preceded by | Dogeship vacant |
Succeeded by | Dogeship vacant |
Personal details | |
Born | 1479 Genoa, Republic of Genoa |
Died | Milan, Duchy of Milan | 12 September 1528
Biography
editMember of the patrician Adorno family, considered one of the most influential in the history of the republic, Antoniotto is particularly remembered for having sent the members of the Fregoso family out of Genoa.
An enemy of doge Giano II di Campofregoso, in 1512 he allied with King Louis XII of France in the course of the Italian Wars between France and Spain, and attacked Genoa. The defeat suffered by the French at Novara forced him to take refuge in Milan. Antoniotto tried two further attacks against Genoa in 1513 and 1514, both without success.
When the new doge, Ottaviano di Campofregoso, during the French occupation of Lombardy (September 1515), allied with Francis I of France, Antoniotto switched to the Spanish party. The Spanish victory at the battle of Bicocca (1522) granted him the position of doge. In the same year he had the port of Savona destroyed in retaliation for their rebellion against the Republic of Genoa. He held the title, with little popular support, for five years until, attacked by the French general Odet de Foix and by Andrea Doria, he left Genoa.
He retired to Milan, where he died in 1528.
Popular culture
editHe is a character in the opera Die Gezeichneten (first performed 1918) by Austrian composer Franz Schreker.
Sources
edit- "Adorno, Antoniotto II". Enciclopedia Biografica Universale. Enciclopedia Treccani.