The Medici Palace
The first important conversion work on the palazzo was performed
when the Medici family acquired it. Giovanni, second son of Lorenzo
the Magnificent and later Pope Leo X, after being appointed
cardinal at only 17 years of age, decided to take up residence in
Rome in 1492 and purchased the building in 1505. He had the
building converted on the basis of a design by Giuliano di Sangallo
and installed here what remained of his father's library after the
family's expulsion from Florence. The palace became the Roman seat
of the Medici family as well as a centre of humanistic culture.
After becoming pope, Giovanni made his cousin, Giulio, cardinal of
the Church and brought him to Rome. After Giovanni's death, Giulio
inherited the building.
Giulio became pope in 1523, with the name of Clement VII
(incidentally, this was the pope who rejected in 1533 Henry VIII's
request for an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, a
decision which led to the breaking of the English Church from Rome
a year later). Pope Clement bought out the legitimate inheritor of
the building, Lorenzo's granddaughter Caterina, by providing her
with the dowry which enabled her to marry the dauphin of France. At
Giulio's death his nephew Alessandro inherited the building.
At the death of Alessandro and of his widow Margaret of Austria -
the Madama after whom the palazzo was by then called -, Caterina,
who had in the meanwhile become the queen mother of France, again
inherited the palazzo, which in 1589 passed to Ferdinand I de'
Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, by virtue of a clause in the
marriage contract stipulated with Christine of Lorraine,
granddaughter of Caterina.
A few years later the building became property of a third Medici
pope, Leo XI, who was pontiff for a few days in 1605.
