Pope Julius II dies on February 21, …
Years: 1513 - 1513
Pope Julius II dies on February 21, 1513.
His successor, the second son of Lorenzo de'Medici, called Giovanni, had been made a cardinal in his boyhood and become head of his family before he was thirty.
A pious man, he assumes the papacy at thirty-eight as Leo X.
He continues his predecessor’s great artistic projects and patronage of Raphael, but initiates little new work.
Leonardo accompanies Pope Leo X's brother, Giuliano de'Medici, to Rome, where he stays on, increasingly absorbed in theoretical research.
Pietro Bembo had resided between 1506 and 1512 in Urbino, and it was here that Bembo had begun to write his most influential work, a prose treatise on writing poetry in Italian, Prose della volgar lingua, although it will not be published until much later.
Bembo also accompanies Giulio de' Medici to Rome, where he is soon after appointed Latin secretary to the Pope.
Raphael is employed, while in Rome, not only by Popes Julius and Leo but also by a number of private patrons, particularly the Sienese banker, Agostino Chigi.
In Chigi's suburban residence (now known as the Villa Farnesina), Raphael executes, in 1513, a wall fresco of the sea nymph Galatea, classical in theme as well as style.
Titian, however, refuses an invitation to become painter to the papal court.
Locations
People
- Agostino Chigi
- Leonardo da Vinci
- Pietro Bembo
- Pope Clement VII
- Pope Julius II
- Pope Leo X
- Raphael
- Titian
Groups
Topics
- Humanism, Renaissance
- Renaissance literature
- Renaissance, Italian
- Renaissance Papacy
- Western Art: 1504 to 1516
