Early years Born in
Rome, he was the son of Giovanni Corrado
Orsini and Clarice Orsini di Franciotto di Monterotondo. His maternal grandmother, Violante di Vicino Orsini di Foglia, had been transmitted the rights to the fief of Bormarzo by her father, Pierfrancesco I Orsini, also known as Vicino, who was lord of Bomarzo. His maternal grandfather,
Cardinal Franciotto Orsini, Lord of Monterotondo, was educated in the house of
Lorenzo de' Medici, who had married his aunt
Clarice Orsini. After the death of his wife, Franciotto was made a cardinal by his uncle
Giovanni de' Medici, who had become pope as Leo X. Vicino Orsini inherited the duchy of Bomarzo seven years after the death of his father, thanks to an intercession in 1542 by Alessandro Farnese (
Pope Paul III), after a dispute over inheritance with his younger brother, Maerbale. He spent the majority of 1542 living in Venice and frequenting its intellectual circles, where he met
Francesco Sansovino, with whom he became close friends.
Marriage He married Alessandro Farnese's great-niece, Giulia Farnese, in the early 1540s. According to
Casa Cesarini. Ricerche e documenti by Patrizia Rosini, Vicino Orsini married Giulia Farnese on 11 February 1545 in Rocca di Giove. According to the same book Giulia was named after her great-aunt because her mother Isabella had been raised and protected by her when she lost her mother. This book gives the year of Giulia's death as 1560, while
Bomarzo: Ein Garten gegen Gott und die Welt by Renate Vergeiner gives it as 1564. According to
Bomarzo: Ein Garten gegen Gott und die Welt, the two married in 1541. The article
The Collection of Corradino Orsino by Lothar Sickel places the wedding in January 1541. Giulia was the daughter of Galeazzo Farnese, Duke of Latera, and Isabella, daughter of Giuliano dell'Anguillara and Girolama Farnese. Giulia's maternal grandmother, Girolama Farnese, was the sister of
Alessandro Farnese (Pope Paul III), and
Giulia Farnese, the mistress of
Rodrigo Borgia (Pope Alexander VI). Girolama was born in 1466 and was murdered with a sword in Stabiae Castle on 1 November 1504 (or 1505) by her stepson Giovanni Battista dell'Anguillara for alleged infidelity. Her first marriage had been to Puccio Pucci, whom she married on 10 November 1483. Puccio Pucci died in 1494, and she married her second husband, Count Giuliano dell'Anguillara on 15 February 1495. From this marriage came the daughter Isabella (Elisabeth) della Anguillara, who later married Galeazzo Farnese, the grandson of Bartolomeo, and the children of that marriage were the daughters Violante and Giulia Farnese. Vicino's wife Giulia Farnese was thus related to Pope Paul III twice over, the only child of his tragically murdered sister, and as the daughter of the grandson of his brother Bartolomeo, the line that inherited the family title and holdings. In a book published in 1556,
Le Imagine del tempio della signora Giovanna Aragona, by Giuseppe Betussi, Giulia Farnese Orsini is referred to as amongst the most virtuous ladies of Italy, on account of her constancy, having remained faithful to Vicino during the long periods when he was absent at war.
Military career Vicino's career as a condottiero began in 1545 when he was called upon by Alessandro Farnese (
Pope Paul III), to assist with the fortifications of the
Borghi of the City of Rome. He was taken prisoner in 1546, while leading Pontifical troops assisting the army of the Holy Roman Emperor,
King Charles V, against the
Protestant Principates. He was released the following year. He was again taken prisoner and released in 1556, when the
Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis ended the French-Spanish Wars in Italy. mouth at the Park of the Monsters.
Park of the Monsters Orsini retired to Bomarzo where he surrounded himself with writers and artists, and devoted himself to an
Epicurean style of life. Here he had a family and, starting from 1547, created the famous
Park of the Monsters (aka 'Sacro Bosco' or 'Garden of Bomarzo'), whose enigmatic constructions and sculptures are one of the most suggestive examples of late Renaissance art in Italy. After the death of his wife he dedicated the park to her memory.
Children He and his wife had five sons, Corradino, Marzio, Alessandro, Scipione and Orazio (died in the famous
Battle of Lepanto in 1571), and two daughters, Faustina and Ottavia. Faustina Orsini (1557–1594) married Fabio
Mattei. Fabio inherited the Palazzo Nuovo (Palazzo Mattei di Paganica) on his father's death in 1566. He remained close to
Cardinal Odoardo Farnese after the marriage. It was with Fabio Mattei that the latter commissioned
Annibale Carracci to paint the Pietà installed in the Mattei family chapel in
San Francesco a Ripa at Easter 1603 (even though the chapel itself was not completed for a number of years), and Fabio bequeathed some works of art to Odoardo when he died in 1612. He evidently devoted himself to charitable pursuits within the
SS Trinità after the death of his wife in 1594. Her portrait was painted by
Scipione Pulzone. ==Artistic tributes==