Mastino II della Scala
Mastino II della Scala | |
---|---|
Born | 1308 Verona |
Died | Verona | 3 June 1351
Noble family | Scaliger |
Spouse(s) | Taddea da Carrara |
Issue | Cangrande II della Scala Cansignorio della Scala Paolo Alboino della Scala Beatrice Regina della Scala |
Father | Alboino I della Scala |
Mother | Beatrice da Correggio |
Mastino II della Scala (1308 – 3 June 1351) was lord of Verona. He was a member of the famous Scaliger family of Northern Italy.
He was the son of Alboino I della Scala and Beatrice da Correggio. At the death of Cangrande I, he and his brother Alberto II were associated with the rule of Verona. Soon, however, Mastino's independent attitude overshadowed his brother's presence. In the first part of his reign, abandoning the careful policy of balance held by his father, he conquered Brescia (1332), Parma (1335) in Lombardy and Lucca (1335) in Tuscany.
However, the extension of Mastino's power spurred the creation of the League of all the other local powers (Florence, Siena, Bologna, Perugia and Venice). In the first year of war, he managed to resist, but in 1336 the League was joined by Azzone Visconti of Milan, the Este of Ferrara, the Gonzaga of Mantua and the Papal States. Surrounded by every side, he could only ask for a treaty of peace through the intermediation of Emperor Louis IV of Bavaria, which he obtained in 1339. His territories were restricted to Verona and Vicenza, the remaining part split among the victorious enemies.
An attempt to recover part of his lands with the German mercenaries that had remained in Vicenza after the war, led by Lodrisio Visconti, was unsuccessful.
He died in Verona in 1351. He is buried in the Gothic mausoleum near the church of Santa Maria Antica, in one of the Scaliger Tombs.
Family
[edit]In 1328 he married Taddea da Carrara (daughter of Jacopo I of Padua) and Anna Gradenigo (daughter of Pietro Gradenigo).
Issue
- Verde (d. 1394) married Niccolò II d'Este,Marquis of Ferrara[1][2]
- Cangrande (1332–1359) Married to Elisabeth of Bavaria daughter of Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor
- Alboino (1333–1375)
- Cansignorio (c. 1334–1375) Married to Agnes of Durazzo
- Beatrice Regina della Scala (1331 – 18 June 1384), who married Bernabò Visconti on 27 September 1350
- Caterina[2] married to the condottiero Aldrighetto di Castelbarco
- Altaluna,(1338-?)[2] who married Louis of Bavaria[2]
- Veronese, who married Giacomo Trissino[2]
- Giovanni
His illegitimate children include:
- Fregnano[2] (died 1394[1])
- Margherita[2] Became a nun.[1]
- Aimonte[2] (?- -?) Prior at San Giorgio in Braida[1]
- Pietro[2] (1330-1392), Bishop of Lodi
- A daughter married in 1342 to Giacomo Pepoli[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Oberbayern, Historischer Verein Von (1871). Oberbayerisches Archiv Für Vaterländische Geschichte (in German). Verlag d. Hist. Vereins. ISBN 978-0-341-58959-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Simonyi, Ludwig von (1847). Geschichte der Lombardischen und Venezianischen Städte: seit dem Congresse von Pontida bis zum J. 1420, jener Mantuas bis 1708 oder Geschichte ihrer Selbstherrschaft bis zur Vereinigung mit Mailand und Venedig (in German). Aus der Buchdrückerei des Alois Pirola.
- Varanini, G.M. (1988). Gli Scaligeri 1277-1387. Milan: Mondadori.