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Today we're looking at the Borgias one
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of the most influential and in fact
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infamous families from what we would
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today call the Renaissance papacy and
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we're looking at them in part of course
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because they are quite famous even today
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needless to say if you get a Showtime
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show named after you the tales of the
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exploits of your dynasty are certainly
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well-known so the goal here is to unpack
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myth from fact and tell what we do know
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about this dynasty and to say a few
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things about its place in history and we
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can begin with a couple of the myths at
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least the popular understanding of the
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Borgias of course poisoning and murder
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and incest and all kinds of things are
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alleged to be part of this family
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dynasty this is one of those times when
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the papacy particularly when it's under
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the pores of rule seems to be without
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any spiritual fervor or seriousness at
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times it seems as if it's a lordship
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like any other in medieval Europe and
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hence the legacy now the problem here of
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course is the way the story always grows
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with the telling this tends to happen
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whenever someone is infamous
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particularly when it is centuries ago
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the story seems to discontinue to get
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larger and larger and all the rumors
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that were ever written down become
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recorded in the modern world as mere
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fact so in this case the story of the
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Pope from the Borgia family Alexander
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the six the fact that he is known to
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have had mistresses and sexual liaisons
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has come down to us today with the story
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that he hosted regular orgies there in
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the papal apartments some of these
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claims are certainly true but again
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telling which ones are true and which
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ones are false or which ones are merely
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embellished about 500 years later can be
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quite a task one of the interesting
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things about this though is the Borges
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when they get control of the papacy or
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whenever they get enormous influence in
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the papacy become synonymous with the
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many things they were considered to be
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wrong with the papacy during the
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Renaissance in fact Alexander the six
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himself is in part one of the central
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targets for Luther's condemnation of the
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papacy
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now he had ceased to be Pope before the
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Reformation began but you might say that
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during Luthor's time in the monastery as
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he was coming under some serious doubt
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and as he was beginning to question some
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of the central tenets of the Catholic
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Church it didn't help that the man who
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was notoriously the leader of that
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Catholic Church was rumored even in his
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own day to be wantin and full of all
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kinds of vices but who were the Borgias
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well the family comes from what we call
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today Spain they come from the area that
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was known as the kingdom of Aragon and
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they had migrated over to the area of
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what we do they call Italy which was in
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this day and age more or less a
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conglomeration of various principalities
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and duchies and other types of things it
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really had sort of carved up into
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different regions and the Borgia
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influence as a family begins to rise
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during the time of the Renaissance now
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the Renaissance is remembered for a lot
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of good things it's remembered for a
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wonderful turn in art people like
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Michelangelo da Vinci it's a return to
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letters and the humanities things we
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still take for granted today as central
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parts of education but the Renaissance
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you might say when it touched the papacy
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began to lead to all kinds of flowering
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of new ideas about how the Pope ought to
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carry himself in the modern world as the
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modern world at least in their day not
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the modern world in ours the idea here
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was is that the Pope was to be seen more
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lordly than spiritual leader and the
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Borgia fit hand in glove with in this
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model the first to take the throne from
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the Borgia family is a man who will
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become calixta the third he ruled from
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1455 to 1458 not very long he is
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actually not by the way featured in the
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show if you're a fan of that show he is
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the uncle to the future Pope Alexander
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the six he made Alexander and another of
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his nephews Cardinals and as one
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historian has said the two of them
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together might have come up to the age
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in the experience level to make one
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Cardinal but they were both made
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Cardinals calixta is not remembered as
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much for the boers dynasty the main
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things he is involved with is an
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attempted crew
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Sade on the Ottoman Turks which is
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really almost an overriding
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preoccupation for him as well as in 1455
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he reopened the case of Joan of Arc and
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actually had her declared innocent just
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a bit too late you might say the real
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story that many are familiar with comes
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with the rise of alexander the six to
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the papacy alexander is in the show by
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the way he is Jeremy Irons character his
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birth name is Rodrigo it is under
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Alexander that some monumental things
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begin to happen for example columbus
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sailed the ocean blue right as he took
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the throne in 1492 this is going to have
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some pretty controversial impact on the
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west and the new world you see prior to
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Alexander there had been some
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legislation some papal bulls that had
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outlawed and condemned slavery Alexander
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you might say relaxed some of these laws
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he pitched it as conversion of the
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natives but what he managed to do was at
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least crack the door and some would say
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kick the door wide open to the
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enslavement of those in the new world
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particularly in South America this is by
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the way still a controversy in Catholic
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scholarship today as to what extent did
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Alexander allow this or not allow this
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by and large the consensus at least the
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majority consensus within the Vatican
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today is that Alexander did in fact make
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too much allowance for abuses to occur
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and that the enslavement of natives in
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the new world was a result of that again
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it all depends on how severe you want to
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put the blame on Alexander or not
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whether or not it was those who misread
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or conveniently overlooked some of the
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things that Alexander had legislated or
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not or whether Alexander was doing this
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knowing that folks would go the extra
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mile you might say with the enslavement
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and forced conversion of natives in
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either case he is vital for the new
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world in fact in 1494 this Pope
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Alexander drew a line right down the
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middle of the globe at least a known
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globe in which he divided up the lands
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between the Portuguese and the Spanish
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and that's a line that is still in
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effect you might say today when you look
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at the differences of Portuguese
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speaking Brazil and the rest of South
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America being predominantly
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Anna speaking that line was drawn by
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Alexander himself by Rodrigo the big
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thing about Alexander's rain though is
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that you see a real pivot and you see it
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in a number of different ways the monies
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that were brought in to sustain the
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papacy during his reign actually began
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to shift away from monies gained by
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spiritual things like tithes and alms to
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now more what we would call today
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secular aims money has gotten through
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treaties and trades and other types of
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things like this you also see an
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increase beyond even what we saw in
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Middle Ages of papal involvement in
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secular or political enterprise many
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remember of course that Alexander is the
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first to contract Michelangelo to draw
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up plans for new st. Peters of course
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there have been old st. Peter's that had
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stood since the time of Constantine and
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there began in the Renaissance during
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this time first the plans drawn up and
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then the building of what would be new
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st. Peter's which is still there today
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it won't be completed for some time but
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nonetheless it is under Alexander that
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this begins to happen he is also
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responsible for the creation of the
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so-called Borgia apartments that are
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there today in the Vatican one of the
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more testing things though is that the
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papacy under Alexander really pours a
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lot of money into the arts again this is
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the tension that people have they're so
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thankful for the supply the financing of
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people like Michelangelo and others of
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Rafael and all the wonderful Renaissance
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art that we still enjoy today however
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what you see is a real increase in
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opulence that goes hand in glove with
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the way the Borgias styled themselves at
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least in the case of Alexander when it
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came to being Pope and this leads to one
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of the more infamous stories which is
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the story of seven Rolla and we're going
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to have a video on savonarola in his
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critique of the Renaissance papacy later
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but for now you need to know that
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savonarola was a preacher in the city of
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Florence who condemned the opulence
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condemned the luxury that he saw in in
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particular the papacy and the central
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courts in Rome and of course he himself
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comes under fire and he comes under fire
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by the Pope by Alexander and he is
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eventually himself condemned and burned
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but this is part of the broader
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Reformation movement within the church
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savonarola is probably the
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no an example of this that is responding
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to the Borgias and others when they see
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this new style of renaissance papacy and
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it does this in there Alexander also
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broke frankly all kinds of rules when it
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came to the valve celibacy no small
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thing for the Catholic Church when it
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comes to priests in general and
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certainly not a beloved trade of any
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Pope throughout history the Alexander is
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known to have had multiple mistresses at
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least two while he was Pope and he has a
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total of nine children one of his sons
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cheese Airy will live in to become
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Cardinal mo also be one of the infamous
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family members of the Porsches more
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ruling from behind the scenes that
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anything else he won't himself become
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Pope but he has just as much influence
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you might say as his father also
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Alexander's daughter Lucrezia married
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three times all too powerful influential
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people is known as a very very vital and
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influential figure in this dynasty she
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as well featured very largely in the
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Showtime series for that reason really
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this is a family tree of influence it
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feels a bit like a Mafia family the
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family ties the lineages of all these
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folks one great example of this in fact
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is for those of you who are video game
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pants Giovanni Borgia it was actually
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murdered in 1497 he actually appears in
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the Assassin's Creed video games as a
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result in fact in general I don't know
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for sure but I think all of the scenes
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that are set in Italy during those games
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are based around this time in the
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Renaissance papacy with lots of
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intrigues and families in this type of
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thing after the death of Alexander in
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1503 you have a real tide turn with the
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Borgia family there is Pius the third he
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was elected in large part by the
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influence of Cesare he lasts on the
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throw in a matter of weeks in fact it
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really is only about a month he's one of
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the shortest-lived Pope's in all of
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papal history the man to come to the
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throne after though is Julius the second
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not a Borgia but a man himself who is
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actually an enemy of the Borgias a man
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willing to style himself as one of these
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more ostentatious pokes it's julie's the
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second for example who contracts
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Michelangelo for the Sistine Chapel
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ceiling he actually mount san
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army himself later and we'll go and
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recapture Bologna at the head of that
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army in 1506 and it is julie's the
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second after the reign of the Borgias
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who will be the Pope in Rome when Martin
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Luther comes for his pilgrimage there in
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15 10 now the borders didn't tuck their
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tail and ron francis borgia another one
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of the family becomes eventually the
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general of the Jesuit Order the new
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fashioned Jesuit Order that was just
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coming into being in the 16th century he
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has canonized himself by the way in 1670
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and several other the family members
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will be made Cardinals later in the 16th
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century now the big question is why the
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portions is it just a salacious sexy
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tale of wanton aggression and power and
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sex and money well I'm sure that's part
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of it this is the reason why we still
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know the story of into the eighth and
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others whenever there is a tale that
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seems to indicate people of power
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bypassing all the normal rules of
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society and really pivoting things in a
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new direction it does always raise the
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question of how we were to understand
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this the boers is you might say just to
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put it in a nutshell we're a powerful
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family during the time of the
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Renaissance however the Borgias are not
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actually the worst per se of this entire
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era and here I'm actually reflecting on
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an article that was in history today
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actually this month April 2017 I'll put
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a link in the description below it says
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give the boers as a break was the title
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of this article and it's a fair enough
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article because what the point of it is
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is it saying the Borgias are using one
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of these scapegoat families where it
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seems as if all the problems of a
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multitude of folks throughout multiple
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decades or if not centuries get stacked
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up on one or two individuals as the only
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example of this type of abuse the fact
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is is when it comes to the problems of
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the Renaissance papacy the Borgias are
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more of a serious case in point than
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they are a problem of just this one
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family and in fact given its dovetailing
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with the Reformation giving its
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dovetailing with the way Luther will
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actually site and at least have in mind
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very often
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a pope like Alexander the sixth it can
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be all too easy to stand everything up
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on this one family but again as this
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article says the Borgias and their
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influence was not all that out of sync
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with what you're seeing in the wider
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world of the Catholic leadership there
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in the city of Rome families of this
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kind had taken over in their fights and
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their struggles and their turmoils
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became synonymous with the Pope himself
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and to the Porsches not a great family
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not to be remembered as Saints by any
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means but when we understand who the
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Borgias are we realize that they are the
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epitome of the Renaissance papacy and
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why there was such a strong call for a
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reformation
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you