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Italian Renaissance Medal - Ludovico Maria Sforza

Ludovico Maria Sforza / Procession of Horsemen Being Received

c. 1488


Bronze, 40.9 mm Ø, 22.0 g

Attributed to Cristoforo Foppa Caradosso, c. 1488.

Obverse: Bust of Ludovico Sforza facing right, with long hair, wearing armor on which the breastplate features a female figure running right carrying a trophy consisting of a shield, spear, and helmet. Around, LVDOVICVS · MA · SF · VICO · DVX · BARI · DVC · GVBER · (Ludovico Maria Sforza Visconti, Duke of Bari, Governor of the Duchy).

Reverse: Figures on platform, one seated in chair, and mask at platform edge. In front is a procession of horsemen. In the background, the fortified harbor of Genoa with ships. Around, OPTIMO · CONSCILIO · SINE · ARMIS · RESTITVTA (Restored Without Arms by the Excellency of Counsel). Incised on platform, P. · DE/CRETO (By Public Decree).

Ludovico Maria Sforza (1452-1508), called Ludovico il Moro, was the fourth son of Francesco I Sforza. While his young nephew Gian Galeazzo Sforza was Duke of Milan, Ludovico became regent in 1481, and later became duke after his nephew's suspicious death in 1494. Ludovico was a patron of Leonardo da Vinci, who worked in Milan from 1482-1499, and commissioned the famed mural painting of The Last Supper in the refectory of the Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie.

This medal refers to the acquisition of Genoa by Ludovico in 1488, when the Doge of Genoa, Cardinal Paolo di Campofregoso, ceded power to him. The reverse inscription and inscription on the dais allude to Ludovico's peaceful efforts to recover Genoa and the choice of the Genoese citizens by public deliberation to return to the protection of Milan. The reverse design has been traditionally interpreted as Paolo di Campofregoso, seated on the dais, receiving Ludovico and the procession of horsemen. However, Pollard identifies the figure seated on the dais as Gian Galeazzo, receiving the Genoese delegation being led by Ludovico. In either case, the scene is imagined, as neither Ludovico nor Gian Galeazzo went to Genoa to receive homage. The twin lighthouses from the harbor of Genoa, shown in the background of the reverse, would become a favorite impresa of Ludovico.

References: Hill 1930, no. 654; Pollard 2007, no. 216; Toderi and Vannel 2000, no. 2

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