Everything about Ottavio Farnese totally explained
Ottavio Farnese (
9 October 1521 -
september 18 1586) was Duke of Parma and Piacenza from 1556 to 1586 and
Duke of Castro in 1545-1547 and from 1547 until his death.
Biography
Born in
Valentano, he was the second son of
Pierluigi Farnese, Duke of Parma and
Piacenza, grandson of
Pope Paul III, and brother to Cardinal
Ranuccio Farnese.
On
November 4 1538 he married
Margaret of Austria, the illegitimate daughter of
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. Ottavio was 15 years old, while Margaret, recently widowed by the death of
Alessandro de' Medici, was 16. At first she disliked her youthful bridegroom, but when he returned wounded from an expedition to
Algiers in
1541 her aversion was turned to affection.
Farnese had become lord of
Camerino in
1540, but he gave up that
fief when his father became duke of
Parma in
1545. After the Parmesan nobility assassinated Pierluigi Farnese in
1547, troops of the Emperor occupied
Piacenza. Pope Paul III attempted to regain Piacenza; he set aside Ottavio's claims to the succession of Parma, where he appointed a
papal legate, giving him back Camerino in exchange, and then claimed Piacenza from the emperor — not for the Farnese, but for the Church.
Farnese attempted to seize Parma by force, and having failed, entered into negotiations with
Ferrante Gonzaga. This rebellion on the part of his grandson is believed to have hastened the Pope's death on
10 November 1549. During the
interregnum that followed, Ottavio again tried to induce the governor of Parma to give up the city to him, but met with no better success; however, on the election of Giovanni Maria Giocchi to the papacy as
Julius III, the duchy was conferred on him in
1551.
This didn't end Farnese's quarrel with the Emperor Charles V, for Gonzaga refused to give up Piacenza and even threatened to occupy Parma, so that Ottavio was driven into the arms of
France. Julius III, who was anxious to be on good terms with Charles V on account of the
council of Trent which was then sitting, ordered Farnese to hand Parma over to the papal authorities once more, and on his refusal hurled censures and admonitions at his head, and deprived him of his Roman fiefs, while Charles did the same with regard to those in
Lombardy. A French army came to protect Parma, war broke out, and Gonzaga at once laid siege to the city. But the duke came to an arrangement with his father-in-law, by which he regained Piacenza and his other fiefs. The rest of his life was spent quietly at home, where the moderation and wisdom of his rule won for him the affection of his people.
At his death in 1586 his son
Alessandro succeeded him.
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