The aristocratic House of Borromeo were merchants in San Miniato around 1300 and became bankers in Milan after 1370. Vitaliano de' Vitaliani, who acquired the name of Borromeo from his uncle Giovanni, became the count of Arona in 1445. His descendants played important roles in the politics of the Duchy of Milan and as cardinals in the Catholic Reformation. In 1916, the head of the family was granted the title Prince of Angera by the King of Italy.

Borromeo
Noble family
Motto: Humility to the Name
(Latin: Humilitas nomini)
Country Duchy of Milan

Golden Ambrosian Republic
Transpadane Republic
Cisalpine Republic
Italian Republic
Kingdom of Italy
Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia

Kingdom of Italy
Current region Italy
 European Union
Place of originRome
Founded1445; 579 years ago (1445)
FounderVitaliano I
Current headVitaliano XI
Titles
Style(s)Don or Donna
Estate(s)Rocca d'Angera
Palazzo Borromeo, Milan
Castel of Peschiera Borromeo
Borromean Islands
Villa Borromeo, Arcore
Deposition1797 (1797)
Cadet branchesBorromeo Arese

The best known members of the family were the cardinals and archbishops of Milan, Carlo (1538–1584), who was canonized by Pope Paul V in 1610, and Federico (1564–1631), who founded the Ambrosian Library. The figure of the Borromean rings, which forms part of the family's coat of arms, is well known in the diverse fields of topology, psychoanalysis, and theology.

History

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Around 1300 this was one of a number of merchant families in San Miniato to carry the name "'Buon Romei'" (or 'Borromei') because of their origins in the city of Rome.[1]

The first member of the family to come to prominence was Filippo who, backed by Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV and Gian Galeazzo Visconti (later to become duke of Milan), led the Ghibellines of San Miniato in their 1367 revolt against the Florentine Guelphs. In 1370 he was taken prisoner by the Florentines and decapitated. He left five children who had taken refuge in Milan at the time of the revolt. The sons Borromeo and Giovanni founded the Borromei Bank in Milan, with other family members running banks in Venice and Florence.

 
The Borromeo Palace at Milan

Filippo Buonromei married Talda di Tenda, sister of Beatrice di Tenda (the hero of a tragic opera by Vincenzo Bellini and wife of the Milanese duke Filippo Maria Visconti). Filippo's daughter Margherita Borromeo († 1429) married Giacobino Vitaliani († 1409), a patrician from Padua, their son Vitaliano Vitaliani (1390-1449) was adopted in 1406 by his childless uncle Giovanni Borromeo, the owner of the Milan bank. The Vitaliani family traces its origins back to Giovanni dei Vitaliani in the 11th century and had been Lords of Bosco, Bojone und Sant'Angelo since c. 1100. In 1418 Vitaliano I Borromeo became treasurer of his uncle, Duke Filippo Maria, who also made him Count of Arona in 1446.[2][3] He acquired the fiefs and castles of Arona and in 1449 of Angera on the banks of Lago Maggiore (The castle of Angera is still today owned by the family.). Ever since, the Borromeos were the leading land owners (and at times Milanese governors) around the Lago Maggiore.

Vitaliano Borromeo († 1449) had built a castle at Peschiera Borromeo near Milan in 1437. In 1450 Francesco I Sforza was backed by the family in his struggle to become heir and successor of the Visconti dukes and used the castle as a base for his siege of Milan. When he became duke, his gratitude for the family's services overwhelmed them with rewards and honours, among which was the title of a count of Peschiera for Vitaliano's son Filippo Borromeo (1419–1464) in 1461. Filippo expanded the bank as far as Bruges and London. The business was run at least until 1455.[4]

In 1520 Ludovico Borromeo built the castle Rocca Vitaliana at Castelli di Cannero, a fortification against the Old Swiss Confederacy. Giberto II Borromeo († 1558), Milanese governor at the Lago Maggiore, married Margherita Medici di Marignano, the sister of Pope Pius IV and of condottiero Gian Giacomo Medici, Duke of Marignano. One of their sons, Carlo Borromeo (1538−1584), became a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, archbishop of Milan, and a canonized saint.

 
Lake Maggiore, with the Borromean Islands, the majority still owned by the family, although now open to the public.

The family has owned the Borromean Islands since the 16th century. The islands have beautiful gardens. Two of the islands have grand palaces, still owned by the family. Vitaliano Borromeo built a summer palace on the Isola Bella for his wife Isabella between 1650 and 1671 which was later enlarged by Cardinal Giberto III (1615–1672) and Count Vitaliano VI (1620–1690). Count Carlo IV (1657–1734) had the garden terraces added. The family still owns the majority of the Borromean Islands.

The "State" of the Borromeo

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Between the fourteenth century and the seventeenth century, the Borromeo were able to gain control of many fiefs in the Valdossola/Lake Maggiore area. They organised them as an almost independent state within the Duchy of Milan obtaining sovereignty, jurisdictions and control over the local army and fortresses.[5] The "State" was subdivided in ten podesterie: Mergozzo, Omegna, Vogogna, Val Vigezzo, Cannobio, Intra, Laveno, Lesa, Angera and Arona. The podestà of Arona was the main justice administrator for the Borromeo counts over the area and was independent of both the Novara and Milan jurisdictions, the former controllers. The "state" was quite extended, it occupied almost half of the modern Province of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola with an extension of around one thousand square kilometres. The "Borromeo's State" ended in 1797 with the invasion of Milan by Napoleon Bonaparte who revoked all the Borromeo's privileges and jurisdictions over this area; so the Borromeo maintained there only their ample estates as the Borromean Islands.[6]

Cardinals

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Seven cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church were members of the Borromeo family:

Styles

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  • Count of Arona, by decree of the duke of Milan dated 26 May 1446 for Vitaliano Vitaliani, adopted Borromeo (1390–1449).[9]
  • Count of Peschiera in 1461 for Filippo Borromeo (1419–1464)
  • Marquess of Angera, in 1623 by Philip IV of Spain for Cardinal Federico Borromeo (1564–1631), confirmed in 1896 by the King of Italy for Conte Giberto Borromeo Arese
  • Prince of Angera, in 1916 by the King of Italy for Conte Giberto Borromeo Arese (in Primogeniture)

Family members

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Current members

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Current members include the daughters of Count Ferdinando Borromeo, a cadet son of Prince Vitaliano Borromeo. These are the four sisters:

Notes

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The Latin word "humilitas" in gothic writing, from the tomb of cardinal Federico Borromeo at Milan Cathedral
  1. ^ "Home". borromeo.it.
  2. ^ "LagoMaggiore.Net - Hotel Alberghi Campeggi sul Lago Maggiore". www.lagomaggiore.net.
  3. ^ "Borromean Rings: Family Crest". Archived from the original on 21 April 2008.
  4. ^ "The Borromei Bank Research Project". Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  5. ^ Pietro Canetta, La famiglia Borromeo, Tamburini, Milano 1937.
  6. ^ AA. VV., Le Isole Borromee e la Rocca di Angera, pp. 152-157, Silvana, Milano 2011.
  7. ^ Florida International University, Biographical Dictionary section, Pope Innocent X (1644-1655), Consistory of February 19, 1652 (VI)
  8. ^ Florida International University, Biographical Dictionary section, Pope Clement XI (1700-1721), Consistory of March 15, 1717 (XII)
  9. ^ Count of Arona[permanent dead link], decree of the Duke of Milan dated 26 May 1446

References

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Further reading

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