Gondi Family

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Gondi Arms: "D'or aux deux masses d'armes, de sable, posées en sautoir et liées de gueules"

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Vincent de Paul and the Gondi Family

In 1625 in Paris, at the request of Madame de Gondi (Françoise-Marguérite de Silly), Vincent de Paul formally set up the Congregation of the Mission to give missions to the neglected people of the French countryside. Vincent de Paul had previously been tutor to the Philippe-Emmanuel and Marguérite de Gondi's children, and the family was very much intertwined with Vincent's life both before and after 1625. Below are some details of the Gondi Family.


Gondi Arms

The Gondi Arms are shown on the top right of this page. The Heraldic French "Descriptif" of the Arms might be translated as: "On a background of gold two combat maces, black in colour, set in the form of a St. Andrew's Cross, and tied with red."


Gondi Origins

Evidence of the existence of the Gondi family can be found in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in Florence, Italy. The Gondi family  were merchant bankers and prominent financial partners of the Medici. Unlike the Medici, who were probably originally poor coal merchants, the Gondi were of the old Florentine nobility, tracing their line traditionally back to 805 to the legendary Philippi, said to have been enobled by Charlemagne himself. With Orlando Bellicozzo, a member of the Great Council of Florence in 1197, the Gondi emerge into history, receiving their patronymic from Gondo Gondi, sitting on the Great Council of Florence in 1251, and being signatory to a treaty between Florence and Genoa in that year. In the fourteenth century several members of the family sat on the Great Council. Simon de Gondi renounced, for himself and his house, the Ghibellines, a faction which supported the Holy Roman Empire, and, in 1351, he loaned the Republic 8000 golden florins in a time of extremity. He held extensive lands around Valcava, in the Mugello Valley in Tuscany, 35 km north of Florence, where the church of S. Cresci, and a chapel which belonged to the Gondis (S. Margherita, formerly S. Martino) bore the Gondi arms. Of Simon's seven children, his grandson, another Simon, was the first of the Gondi to be the Grand Prior of the Republic. He held this position on three occasions. His daughter Maddalena, who married Giovanni Salviati, became the grandmother of Cosimo I de' Medici; thence were descended all the Catholic crowned heads of pre-Napoleonic Europe. Carlo de Gondi was a staunch backer of Piero de' Medici, and when the Medici came to be Grand Dukes, the Gondi received empty but honorary titles of Senators.

By the fourteenth century, the Gondi Family were participating internationally in the import-export business. What is known of the earlier members of the family has been gleaned largely from business records, and is therefore somewhat patchy, with little historical detail of individuals of the family in Italy available.


Gondi Arms, Villa "La Quiete", Valcava in the Mugello Valley, Tuscany, Italy

Gondi Genealogy

In the Genealogy below, the numbers in brackets after some names refer to the notes following the Table.



(1) Simone de Gieri Gondi (d.1403): Recognised in 1352 as one of Florence's wealthiest citizens - he owned sizeable properties, and the tower in Florence mentioned below in Memories of the Gondi Family. However, his descendants did not all follow him in his success - their fortunes in Italy waxed and waned with individuals.

(2) Giuliano de Gondi (1421-1501): Left monuments to the family in Florence to honour himself and his family. Two of these are the Gondi Chapel (Capella Gondi) in the Church of Santa Maria Novella (near the Stazione Firenze SMN), and the Palazzo Gondi (see below).

(3) Antonio de Gondi (1443-1486): Antonio was the brother of Giuliano (Note (2)) and a merchant in business with the same Giuliano. After Antonio died, and all his sons were of majority age, his property was eventually divided between his four sons (one son, Francesco had died, and another, Piero, had become a Dominican Monk). The youngest son, also named Antonio, was sent to look after the family's business affairs in Lyons, France.

(4) Guildobaldo Antonio de Gondi (Antoine) (1486-1560): Son of Antonio de Gondi (Note (3)), he was sent to Lyons, France, in 1506 to look after the family's business affairs there. He remained in France, married a noblewoman in 1516 (Marie-Catherine de Pierre-Vive), and bought a seigniory in 1521. He became a banker, a large property owner in Lyons, was active in political affairs, and was eventually employed by both the church and the throne as a financial agent. In 1533, when Catherine de Medici passed through the city of Lyons after her recent marriage to Henry of Valois, she took Antoine into her service as maitre d'hotel for her husband, at that time the Dauphin of France. Antoine retained this position when Henry became King of France (Henry II), with Catherine as Queen. Henry II and Catherine de Medici were the parents of Marguérite de Valois who later figured in Vincent de Paul's life when he first came to Paris. Antoine died in 1560 in Paris, a nobleman and a courtier. His children remained in France, one son became bishop of Paris (Pierre) and Cardinal (de Gondi), another was the Duc de Retz (Albert).

(5) Albert de Gondi (1522-1602), son of Antoine (Note (4)), married Catherine of Clermont, the Baronness of Retz, and he himself gained the title of Baron of Retz. Retz, or Rais as it is also known, is the southern part of Brittany - south of Nantes and the River Loire estuary. Both Albert and his brother Charles became advisers of Queen Catherine de Medici. With the assistance of Catherine de Medici, Albert managed to have his Baronecy elevated to a Duchy, so that he became the first Duke of Retz. Albert had seven children - Charles, Henri, Philippe-Emmanuel (General of the Galleys), Jean-François, Claude-Marguérite, Louise and Jeanne. Albert's son Henri was Bishop of Paris and the first Cardinal de Retz. Another son, Jean-François, was the first Archbishop of Paris.

Françoise-Marguérite de Silly and Philippe-Emmanuel de Gondi

(6) Philippe-Emmanuel de Gondi (1581-1662): Son of Albert de Gondi (Note (5)), married Marguérite de Silly (Note(7)), and they had three children Pierre, Henri, and Jean-Francois Paul. Philippe-Emmanuel was Comte de Joigny, Marquis de Belle-Isle, Baron de Montmireil, Seigneur de Dampierre, Seigneur de Villepreux and General of the Galleys of France. He joined The Oratory when his wife Marguérite died. His third son Jean-Francois Paul became Archbishop of Paris and the second Cardinal de Retz.

(7) Françoise-Marguérite de Silly (1580-1625): Elder daughter of Antoine de Silly (Seigneur of Rochepot), and Marie Lannoy. By her father, Marguérite was Baronness of Montmirail, Damoiselle of Commercy and Sovereign of Euville (Lorraine, Meuse). By her mother, Marie de Lannoy, Marguérite was Dame of Folleville, Paillart, Serevillers and Gannes. Marguérite had a younger sister Madeleine.

Memories of the Gondi Family

Palazzo Gondi

Palazzo Gondi (Florence, Italy): The Gondi family owned a tower in the Santa Maria Novella quarter of Florence Then, in the Via de'Gondi, Centro storico, the construction of the Palazzo Gondi was begun in 1501 after a design by Giuliano di San Gallo, employed by Giuliano Gondi. The building was not completed till after the death of Giuliano Gondi, The cortile is surrounded by graceful columns supporting arches, but is most remarkable for the staircase, with its fine balustrade, and curious variety of delicate ornamentation in animals and foliage. At the head of the interior staircase, leading to the principal apartments, is the statue of a Roman senator, taken from the supposed Temple of Isis. A magnificent chimney-piece, the work of Giuliano di San Gallo, adorns the large entrance-hall, round which are hung a number of family portraits.



Capella Gondi

Capella Gondi (Florence, Italy): The Gondi Chapel in the Church of Santa Maria Novella (near the Firenze SMN Railway Station) is probably more visited to view the crucifix of Filippo Brunelleschi than to remember the Gondi Family. The Gondi Chapel is situated to the left of the high altar of the main church, and is dedicated to St Luke since the first stone of the new church of Santa Maria Novella was laid here on October 18, 1279, the feast day of St Luke. The walls of the Chapel were originally entirely covered with frescoes, but in 1503, when the Gondi family became patrons of the chapel, they had the decoration changed to white marble, porphyry mirrors, fine black marble columns and white marble seats. In the arch near the end wall is Brunelleschi's famous Crucifix. The Arms of the House of Gondi (see graphic at top of this page) are on the marble slab on the floor to the left of the Chapel altar. The Gondi Arms can also be seen in a window on the north side of the Chapel.


Chateau des Gondis

Chateau des Gondis (Folleville, France):The Chateau des Gondis at Folleville (Picardy, northern France), known now as the Chateau de Folleville, was built at the end of the fourteenth century. It was richly furnished by the Lannoy family (ancestors of Françoise-Marguérite de Silly. (Cf Notes on the Family No. 7, above). In the seventeenth century it passed to the Gondi family. It was in this Chateau that Vincent de Paul would have stayed when he came with Madame de Gondi (Marguérite de Silly) to visit her estates.




Memorial to Albert de Gondi
La Porte de Gondi

Reminders of Albert de Gondi (France): A Memorial to Albert de Gondi (Note (5) above), Duc de Retz and Maréchal de France, can be found in the Chapel of Our Lady of the Seven Dolours in the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris. In 1568, Albert, then adviser of Queen Catherine de Medici, acquired the Seignory of Noisy just west of Paris and Versailles. This Seignory included the village of Noisy and some surrounding land. In 1575, he acquired the Seignory of Versailles, adjacent to Noisy. On the edge of the forest near Noisy he built a Chateau, the remains of which (La Porte de Gondi) can be seen in the picture on the right. Over the next few decades, with visits of members of the royal family, the de Gondi lands and property became places where french royalty stayed when engaging in hunting. A portion of the land was sold by Albert's heir Jean-François de Gondi, Archbishop of Paris, to Louis XIII who built a hunting lodge there in 1623. Louis soon rebuilt the hunting lodge as a Chateau. The Crown later obtained the rest of the Seignory of Versailles from the de Gondi family. Louis XIV, son of Louis XIII, developed his father's Chateau into what is now the Chateau de Versailles (Palace of Versailles). In the time of Louis XIV, the village of Noisy became known as Noisy le Roi, and retains that name today. In 1959, Noisy le Roi chose the Arms of Albert de Gondi as its own Coat of Arms.


Arms of Albert de Gondi

FURTHER RESOURCES

BOOKS AND PERIODICALS

Rybolt CM, John, "Madame de Gondi: A Contemporary Seventeenth-Century Life", Vincentian Heritage, 21, No 1, (2000), 25-43.

Coste CM, Pierre, The Life and Works of St Vincent De Paul, Vol I, (New York: New City Press, 1987)

Goldthwaite, Richard A.., Private Wealth in Renaissance Florence - a Study of Four Families, (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1968), pp 156-186

Koch CM, Bernard, "Généalogie: Gondi-Marillac", Etudes Vincentiennes No.182 , FamVin Francophone Site (Text available on request.)

Román CM, J-M, St Vincent de Paul, a Biography, (London: Melisende, 1999)


WEB LINKS

Gondi bank, Wikipedia, July 2008.