Baglioni | |
---|---|
Noble family | |
Founded | Middle Ages |
Final ruler | Rodolfo II Baglioni |
Deposition | 1540 (in Perugia) |
The House of Baglioni is an Umbrian noble family that ruled over the city of Perugia between 1438 and 1540, when Rodolfo II Baglioni had to surrender the city to the papal troops of Pope Paul III after the Salt War.[1] At that point, Perugia came under the control of the Papal States.[2]
Descendants of the family exist to the present day, including the French branch of Baglion de la Dufferie,[3] which once owned the Château de la Motte-Husson in the Mayenne department of France, which is the setting for the Channel 4 programme Escape to the Chateau.
Title | Name | From | To | Consort |
Seigneur di Cannara, Spello e Bettona | Malatesta I | 1416 | 1437 | Iacopa Fortebracci |
Signore di Perugia | Braccio I | 1438 | 1479 | Toderina Fregoso, Anastasia Sforza di Santa Fiora |
Signore | Guido I | 1479 | 1500 | Costanza Varano |
Signore | Rodolfo I | 1479 | 1500 | Francesca Baglioni di Castel di Piero |
Signore | Astorre I | 1479 | 1500 | Lavinia Colonna |
Signore | Federico, detto Grifonetto | 15 July 1500 | Zenobia Sforza di Santa Fiora | |
Signore | Carlo I il Barciglia | 15 July 1500 | ||
Signore | Gian Paolo I | 1500 | 1520 | Ippolita Conti |
Signore | Adriano I il Morgante | 1500 | 1502 | |
Signore | Gentile I Baglioni | 1520 | 1527 | Giulia Vitelli |
Signore | Malatesta IV | 1527 | 1531 | Monaldesca Monaldeschi Malatesta II and III |
Signore | Orazio II | 1527 | 1528 | Francesca Petrucci Orazio I |
Signore | Rodolfo II | 1531 | 1540 | Costanza Vitelli |