Giovanni I Pico

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Giovanni I Pico (died c. 1451) was an Italian nobleman and condottiero. He was lord of Mirandola and Concordia from 1399 until his death.

The son of , in 1406 he allied himself with Niccolò III d'Este, lord of Ferrara. In 1420 he abandoned the loyalty to the Ferrarese to serve under the Visconti dukes of Milan until the of 1428. Later he fought again for the Visconti until 1447. Thanks to his loyalty to the Holy Roman Empire, emperor Sigismund granted him the title of count of Concordia.

In 1429 he had his cousin , with whom he shared the seigniory of Mirandola and Concordia, assassinated. Giovanni held the lordship jointly with his other cousin until his death. Giovanni had two sons with Caterina Bevilacqua of Verona: Gianfrancesco, who succeeded him, and Niccolò.

Sources[]

Litta, Pompeo (1835). Famiglie celebri di Italia. Pico della Mirandola. Turin.


Preceded by
Lord of Mirandola and Concordia
1399-1451
Succeeded by
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