Florence had been under informal
Medici control since 1434. During the
War of the League of Cognac, the Florentines rebelled against the Medici, then represented by
Ippolito de' Medici, and restored the freedom of their republic. Following the Republic's surrender in the
Siege of Florence,
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor issued a proclamation explicitly stating that he and he alone could determine the government of Florence. On 12 August 1530, the Emperor created the Medici hereditary rulers (
capo) of the
Republic of Florence.
Pope Clement VII intended his relative
Alessandro de' Medici to be the ruler of Florence, but also wanted to give the impression that the Florentines had democratically chosen Alessandro as their ruler. The title "Duke of Florence" was chosen because it would bolster Medici power in the region. In April 1532, the Pope convinced the
Balía, Florence's ruling commission, to draw up a new constitution, which formally created a hereditary monarchy. It abolished the age-old
signoria (elective government) and the office of
gonfaloniere (titular head-of-state elected for a two-month term) and replaced it with three institutions: • the
consigliere, a four-man council elected for a three-month term, headed by the "Duke of the Florentine Republic". • the Senate, composed of forty-eight men, chosen by the
Balía, was vested with the prerogative of determining Florence's financial, security, and foreign policies. Additionally, the senate appointed the commissions of war and public security, and the governors of Pisa, Arezzio, Prato, Voltera and Cortona and ambassadors. • the Council of Two Hundred was a petitions court; membership was for life. ==Alessandro's reign==