Carlo de' Medici


Carlo di Cosimo de' Medici was an Italian priest. A member of the powerful Medici family, he became a senior clergyman and collector.

Early life

Born in Florence, he was the illegitimate son of Cosimo de' Medici and a slave-woman named Maddalena, who was said to have been purchased in Venice.
Maddalena is noted to have been a Circassian slave bought in Venice as a "certified virgin" in 1427, the Venetian slave traders being important participators in the Black Sea slave trade at the time.
It is widely accepted that Maddalena was a Circassian, and Carlo's "intense blue eyes" and other "marked Circassian features" has been seen as a trait inherited by his Circassian mother.
However, it has been once suggested that his mother might have been a black African, because of the apparently dusky skin depicted in Mantegna's portrait of Carlo, which however it is more likely due to aging of the pigments or other similar causes.

Career

His father directed him to take on a religious life. After becoming canon of the cathedral at Florence in 1450, he was appointed rector of Pieve di [Santa Maria (Cèllole)|Pieve di Santa Maria] in Mugello and the Pieve of San Donato di Calenzano.
He became Abbot of San Salvatore at Vaiano, outside Prato. He was also Papal Papal [income tax|tax collector] and nuncio in Tuscany. Carlo was Provost and dean of the collegiate Church of Prato as early as 1460. Prato in 1463 became a territorial prelature and Carlo the first prelate. A cultured man, he collected medallions. He died in Florence in 1492.

Portrayals

Carlo was portrayed by Andrea Mantegna in a head-and-shoulders portrait wearing the clerical garb of a protonotary apostolic in 1466. He also appears in the funeral scene of Filippo Lippi's Stories of St. Stephen and St. [John the Baptist (Lippi)|Stories of St. Stephen and St. John the Baptist] in the Prato Cathedral, in which he is depicted standing behind the Pope. He may also be portrayed as one of the figures in Benozzo Gozzoli's paintings of the journey of the Magi in the Magi Chapel in Florence.
In the historical fantasy series Da Vinci's Demons, Carlo was played by actor Ray Fearon. He is depicted as a missionary whom the cruelty of the world has made doubt the Church and its message.
He appears in seasons two and three of Medici, played by Callum Blake. His mother is played by Sarah Felberbaum in the first season.