The Scotti is an aristocratic family centered around Piacenza in Northern Italy. The family is also known as also known as Douglas Scotti for claiming descendancy from the Scottish Clan Douglas.
History
editLegne holds that a knight from the Douglas Clan came from Scotland to fight the under Charlemagne and against the Lombards. After his service, he putatively settled in Piacenza. However little documentation affirms this legend.
The first documentation of a Scotti is of Rainaldo in 1184 serving as a consul of the collegio dei mercanti (guild of merchants). The Guelph-leaning Scotti family was often in conflict or competition with the Ghibelline Piacentine family of the Anguissola. The Scotti were successful and had affiliations with merchants and bankers throughout Europe from Portugal to Flanders.
Among the most prominent members of the family, Alberto Scotti became signore (Lord) of Piacenza roughly during 1280–1290. In 1302, he was one of the leaders of an alliance that exiled the Visconti Family from Milan, but continued conflicts led to his exile from Piacenza in 1304. Although the shifting fortunes had him return to control of Piacenza for periods during the following two decades, in 1317 he was captured and died in Crema in 1318. Alberto's son Francesco was able to regain Piacenza in 1335, but for less than a year, when he was expelled by the Visconti family.
In 1414, the heirs of Giacomo Scotti were granted the title to the counties of Castell'Arquato, Fiorenzuola, and Vigoleno by the Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, who also allowed them to name themselves the name of Scotti Douglas.
In the church of San Giovanni in Canale, Piacenza, is a burial monument of Scotti used since the 14th century.[1]
In 1475, Giovanni Maria Scotti, Count of Vigoleno, married Aloisia Gonzaga, daughter of Francesco I Gonzaga-Novellara. Other prominent members of the family include:
- Brantino Scotti (14th century), jurist
- Antonio Scotti (14th century) treasurer of Estorre Visconti, Lord of Monza;
- Francesco Scotti (14th century), podestà of Bologna;[2]
- Alberto II Scotti (15th century), Lord of Fiorenzuola;
- Caterina Scotti (?-1468) of Agazzano, Spouse of Rolando Pallavicino called "il Magnifico"
- Pier Maria Scotti (1481–1521) Called "conte Buso", condottieri;
- Gianbernardino Scotti (1478–1568), cardinal;
- Ranuccio Scotti Douglas (1597–1659), Bishop of Fidenza[3]
- Domenico Maria Scotti Douglas, Count of Sarmato (1751–1854); Commissioned the palazzo Scotti in via San Siro a Piacenza
- Luigi Scotti Douglas (1796–1880), general of the Kingdom of Two Sicilies
- Paolo Scotti Douglas della Scala, Count of San Giorgio, Governor of Piacenza in 1854
Note
edit- ^ "Chiesa di San Giovanni in Canale". Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- ^ Poggiali, Cristoforo (1759). Memorie Storiche di Piacenza. Vol. 6. Piacenza. p. 384.
- ^ "Archbishop Ranuccio (Ranuzio) Scotti Douglas †". Retrieved 1 May 2020.
Bibliography
edit- Benvenuti, Francesco Sforza (1887). Dizionario biografico cremasco. Bologna: Forni editore. benvenuti.
- Corradi, Marco (2018). Santi monaci e cavalieri scozzesi a Piacenza e nelle sue valli. Piacenza: Edizioni LIR.
- Giarelli, Francesco (1889). Storia di Piacenza dalle origini ai nostri giorni Volume II. Piacenza: Vincenzo Porta Librajo. Giarelli.
- Elena Nironi; Valentina Inzani (2011). "Il labirinto e il filo di Arianna. Come muoversi tra carte confuse e disperse - Guida al fondo Scotti Douglas di Fombio e di Sarmato". Archivio di Stato di Piacenza. Nironi.
- Gamberini, Andrea (2005). Il cartulario degli Scotti di Piacenza fra memoria familiare e cultura pattista, chapter Uno storico e un territorio: Vito Fumagalli e l'Emilia occidentale nel Medioevo. CLUEB. Gamberini.
- Zanardi Landi, Carlo Pietro (2000). Sarmato, storia e leggenda. Piacenza: TEP edizioni d'arte. Zanardi.
Sources
edit- Guccio Nauesi: Istoria genealogica delle famiglie nobili toscane, et umbre, Firenze 1671
- Touring Club of Italy: Toscana, Umbria, Marche, Milano 2002
- Antonio Musarra: 1284 La battaglia della Meloria, Roma 2018
- Mainly extracted from Italian Wikipedia with sources.