Colonna Family

Colonna Family

▪ Roman family
      noble Roman family of great antiquity and importance, descended from the 10th-century counts of Tusculum. The first to take the name Colonna (“de Columna”) was Piero, the son of Gregorio, Count of Tusculum, who on Gregorio's death (c. 1064) received the castle of Colonna in the Alban Hills, together with Palestrina and other places, as his share of the inheritance. Like other Roman families, the Colonna gained power and wealth through papal favour and by the 13th century were already providing cardinals and senators of Rome. Thereafter, the Colonna were consistently prominent in the politics of the church and the city of Rome.

      Throughout the Middle Ages, they figured among the most unruly and potent of the Roman baronial dynasties; their feuds with the Caetani and Orsini dominated the local history of a region where feudal power long remained unsubdued. Of more than local importance, however, was their bitter quarrel with the Caetani pope, Boniface VIII, who tried to extirpate the family and drove them into alliance with his enemy, the French king Philip IV the Fair; Sciarra Colonna (d. 1329) led the armed attack on Boniface at Anagni on Sept. 7, 1303. On the pope's death the Colonna recovered their lands and influence, and for many years subsequently Rome was harassed by their struggle for power with the Orsini (Orsini Family), which divided the nobility into two contending factions. These conditions gave rise to Cola di Rienzo's (Cola Di Rienzo) popular dictatorship, which was a check to all the Roman magnates and notably the Colonna, over whom the tribune won a bloody victory at Porta San Lorenzo in Rome on Nov. 20, 1347. The check, however, was temporary; Colonna power was undiminished and soon after was signally increased by the election at Constance of Cardinal Oddone Colonna as Pope Martin V. During his pontificate (1417–31), Martin obtained the grant of fiefs for his family in southern Italy and enriched them with vast estates in papal territory, including Frascati, Paliano, Genazzano, and many other places.

      Their power was challenged by Martin's successor, Eugenius (Eugenius I, Saint) IV, and for well over a century the fortunes of the Colonna continued to be disturbed by conflict with the popes; but from the later years of the 16th century they lived in unbroken peace with the papacy, and many members of the family rose to eminence as prelates, soldiers, and statesmen in the service of the church as well as other powers, particularly Spain.

      The surviving branches of the family comprise the Colonna di Paliano, the Colonna di Stigliano, and the Barberini-Colonna di Palestrina.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Colonna family — Colonna redirects here. For other uses, see Colonna (disambiguation). Arms of the Colonna family. The Colonna family is an Italian noble family; it was powerful in medieval and Renaissance Rome, supplying one Pope and many other Church and… …   Wikipedia

  • Colonna, Lazio — Colonna   Comune   Comune di Colonna …   Wikipedia

  • Colonna (disambiguation) — Colonna is an Italian word for column. The name Colonna may refer to : Places Italy Colonna, Lazio, a comune in the Province of Rome Colonna, City of Rome, a rione in Rome Capo Colonna, a cape of Calabria. Palazzo Colonna, a palatial block… …   Wikipedia

  • Colonna (RM) — Infobox CityIT img coa = official name = Colonna name = Colonna region = Latium province = Province of Rome (RM) elevation m = 343 area total km2 = 3.5 population as of = Dec. 2004 population total = 3553 population density km2 = 1015 timezone =… …   Wikipedia

  • COLONNA, Vittoria — (1492 1547) One of the most celebrated women of the Italian Renaissance, Vittoria Co lonna was famous for her poetry, her close friendship with Michelangelo,* and her connection with the Italian reform movement. She was a member of the… …   Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620: A Biographical Dictionary

  • Colonna (Adelsgeschlecht) — Wappen der Familie Colonna Die Colonna waren ein bedeutendes römisches Adelsgeschlecht. Der Name stammt von dem an den Albaner Bergen gelegenen Ort Colonna. Im Hoch und Spät Mittelalter vom 11. bis zum 16. Jahrhundert übten die Colonna durch ihre …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Colonna — • A celebrated family which played an important role in Italy during medieval and Renaissance times Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Colonna     Colonna      …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Colonna Madonna — Madonna Colonna Artist Raphael Year 1508 Type Oil on poplar Dimensions 52 cm × 38 cm (20 in × 15 in) Location …   Wikipedia

  • Colonna, Vittoria — ▪ Italian poet born 1492, Marino, near Rome [Italy] died Feb. 25, 1547, Rome       Italian poet, less important for her poetry than for her personality and her associations with famous contemporaries, particularly Michelangelo.       Of a noble… …   Universalium

  • COLONNA —    an illustrious Italian family, to which belonged popes, cardinals, and generals …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”