House of Visconti In 1395,
Gian Galeazzo Visconti was titled
Duke of Milan by
King Wenceslaus, who sold the title under the payment of circa 100,000
florins. Since that moment, all the following rulers of Milan were styled as dukes.
House of Sforza (1st rule) After the death of Filippo Maria in 1447, the main line of Visconti went extinct. Benefited by political chaos, a cabal of wealthy citizens, academics and clerics declared the Duchy dissolved and proclaimed the oligarchical
Golden Ambrosian Republic. The republic was never recognized and the neighboring states of
Venice and
Savoy tried to expand their fiefdoms in Lombardy, as well as
France. Taking advantage of the state's weakness and the resurgent
Guelph-Ghibelline conflict, the commander-in-chief of the Milanese forces,
Francesco I Sforza, defected from Milan to Venice in 1448, and two years later, after several side switches and cunning strategies, Sforza entered the city during
Annunciation. He was then declared the new Duke of Milan by the City Council, using as a claim his marriage with
Bianca Maria Visconti, illegitimate daughter of Filippo Maria.
House of Valois (1st rule) In 1494, Ludovico Sforza usurped the throne of Milan, after probably poisoning his nephew Gian Galeazzo. After the threats of the Venetians, Ludovico solicited French king
Charles VIII to descend into Italy, starting the
First Italian War. After Ludovico's betrayal and alliance with the
League of Venice in 1495, the French were defeated in the
Battle of Fornovo and were unable to expand in Italy. Charles VIII's top general and cousin,
Louis II, Duke of Orléans (future Louis XII), was humiliated and due to his personal hate toward Ludovico Sforza, started to claim the Duchy of Milan for himself, quoting his paternal descendance from
Valentina Visconti and Gian Galeazzo's last will. After Louis XII's ascension to the French Throne in 1499, he started the
Second Italian War to conquer Milan and Naples. With French armies near Pavia, Ludovico and his loyalists left Milan on 17 September 1499 to flee toward Germany. This left Louis XII as the only Duke of Milan, entering the city on 6 October 1499.
House of Sforza (2nd rule) Ludovico Sforza was captured on February 1500, dying in prison in 1508. His son
Massimiliano became the Sforza claimant to the Milanese Throne, which he finally re-gained in January 1513, six months after the Swiss army's entrance in Milan.
House of Valois (2nd rule) After their defeat in the
Battle of Marignano in 1515, the Swiss retired from Milan and Massimiliano was imprisoned by the returning French troops. He waived his rights to Milan for the sum of 30,000 ducats and continued to live in France.
House of Sforza (3rd rule) By November 1521, the French situation had deteriorated considerably.
Emperor Charles V,
Henry VIII of England, and
Pope Leo X signed an alliance against Francis on 28 November.
Odet de Foix, Viscount of Lautrec, the French governor of
Milan, was tasked with resisting the Imperial and Papal forces; he was outmatched by
Prospero Colonna, however, and by late November had been forced out of Milan and had retreated to a ring of towns around the
Adda River. For the third time and last time, the Sforza were restored to power.
House of Habsburg In 1535, after the death of the heirless Francesco II Sforza, Emperor Charles V annexed the Duchy as a vacant imperial state in order to avoid other claims by the French or the collateral branches of Sforza.
House of Habsburg-Spain In 1540, the Duchy was secretly given as a gift to Charles V's son
Philip, Prince of Asturias. This was made official at the abdication of Charles V in 1555. In 1556, Philip became
Philip II of Spain and Milan entered in
personal union with the
Spanish Crown.
House of Bourbon-Anjou In September 1700, Charles became ill; by 28 September he was no longer able to eat and Portocarrero persuaded him to alter his Will in favour of Louis XIV's grandson,
Philip of Anjou. When Charles died on 1 November 1700, the throne was offered to Philip, who was proclaimed King of Spain on 16 November 1700. This was accepted by Britain and the
Dutch Republic, among others. Disputes over division of territories and commercial rights led to the
War of the Spanish Succession in 1701.
House of Habsburg-Austria (then Habsburg-Lorraine) After the
Treaty of Rastatt of 1714, Emperor
Charles VI officially gained the Duchy of Milan, a possession considered vital to the security of Austria's southern border. Since that moment, Milan was a permanent possession of the Austrian branch of the Habsburg dynasty. ==See also==